Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Georgia women

Biographies

 * Willette Alona Allen (1862–1941) educator, kindergarten movement
 * Annie Ogburn Anderson (1877–1962) first woman judge in Georgia law
 * Ruby M. Anderson (1893-1978) Educator gwa
 * Elena Diaz-Verson Amos (1926–2000) philanthropist nge
 * Madeleine Kiker Anthony (1903–1989) historic preservation gwa
 * Clarice Cross Bagwell (1914–2001) educator gwa
 * Sarah Randolph Bailey (1885–1972) Girl Reserves for black girls gwa
 * Dicksie Bradley Bandy (1890–1971) textile industry, historic preservation gwa
 * Laura Belle Barnard (1907-1992) missionary nge
 * Sally Smalley Bell (born 1953?) basketball referee sports
 * Jacqueline Harrison Barrett (born 1940) sheriff woc
 * Minna McLeod Beck (1880–1959) artist, educator, author
 * Sarah Amanda Clayton Blake founder of an Atlanta beauty school
 * Ruth Blair (1889–1974) state historian of Georgia
 * Adrienne Bond (1933–1996) poet, writer nge
 * Vinnie Ream Boyd (1879–1970) monologist, lecturer
 * Connie Bowlin (born 1955) civil aviation gahof
 * Margaret O. Bynum (1921–1982) educator gwa
 * Carolyn H. Byrd (born 1949) business executive woc
 * Jessie M. Candlish (1877-1964) longtime administrator of Egleston Hospital for Children
 * Henrietta Canty (1929–2002) represented Atlanta in Georgia General Assembly 1975-1980, 1990-1998
 * Carolyn Mackenzie Carter (1919–2010) photojournalist gwa
 * Betty Jean Clark (1944/1945-2011) Georgia General Assembly 1973-1990
 * Maud Barker Cobb (1870-1925) librarian
 * Laura Mays Coble (born 1962?) golf sports
 * Julia L. Coleman (1889–1973) educator gwa
 * Wessie Gertrude Connell (1915–1987) librarian gwa, nge
 * Anne Margaret Cooke or Anne Reid Cooke or Anne Cooke Reid (1907-????) theater educator, wife of Ira De Augustine Reid, granddaughter of Wilson Cooke woc
 * Nina Pearl Cox (1892–1956) first woman school superintendent in Georgia
 * Bessie Kempton Crowell (1893–1981) first woman elected to Georgia Legislature, alongside Viola Ross Napier in 1922
 * Constance Curry (1933–2020) author, civil rights activist
 * Edna Cain Daniel (1875–1957) writer, journalist gnhof
 * Rosemary Daniell (born 1935) writer nge
 * Janice Daugharty (born 1944) writer nge
 * Sallie Ellis Davis (1877–1950) educator gwa
 * Miriam Howard Dubose (1862–1945) women's suffrage wikisource
 * Kathryn Dunaway (1906–1980) anti-ERA campaigner
 * Willie Snow Ethridge (1898-1982) writer, journalist, civil rights activist
 * Vera “Punkin” Flock (1918–1978) trapshooting sports
 * Edith Lenora Foster (1906–1996) librarian, writer, historian gwa
 * Nettie Bess Fouche (1888-1978) first woman superior court clerk in Georgia
 * Frances Smith Foster (born 1944) former Emory professor of women's studies woc
 * Mary Louise Fowler (1907–1979) tennis sports
 * Charlotte Fogg Frye (1893–1983) woman pilot gahof
 * Marie Davis Gadsden (1919–2012) philanthropic administrator woc
 * Frances Poole King Garlington (1904–1991) trapshooting sports
 * Anne Richardson Gayles-Felton (born 1923) educator
 * Amilee Chastain Graves (1910–1983) publisher, politician gwa
 * Dinah M. Gretsch (born 1950) guitar manufacturing music
 * Eleanor Guest (1940-1997) singer
 * Terri Moody Hancock (born 1960?) golf sports
 * Anne Paradise Hansford (born 1924) basketball sports
 * Ethel Hillyer Harris (18??–19??) author, journalist wikisource
 * Judia C. Jackson Harris (1873–after 1949) educator woc
 * Julia Collier Harris (1885–1967) writer, journalist gwa, gnhof, gwhof
 * Beverly J. Harvard (born 1950) police chief woc
 * Evelyn Hanna (1900–1982) writer nge
 * Geneva Haugabrooks (1888-1977) businesswoman, funeral home operator
 * Louise Frederick Hays (1881–1951) historian gwa
 * Sarah Harper Heard (1853–1919) traveling library gwa
 * Patsy Jo Hilliard (born 1937) first woman and first Black mayor of East Point, Georgia woc
 * Marion Stegeman Hodgson (1921–2016) WASP gahof
 * Cora Catherine Calhoun Horne (1865–1932) activist, grandmother of Lena Horne woc
 * Edith Elizabeth House (1903-1987) first woman law grad at UGA, first woman US Attorney in Florida law
 * Annie Hornaday Howard (1882–1965) author, journalist
 * Helen Augusta Howard (1865–1934) suffragist - Currently a REDIRECT, but history contains the start of an article.
 * May duBignon Stiles Howard (1894–1983) health care gwa
 * Anne Wallace Howland (1866–1960) librarian
 * Dorothy Hubbard (born 19??) first woman mayor of Albany, Georgia
 * Anna Colquitt Hunter (1892–1985) historic preservation gwa
 * Edith Jacqueline Ingram Grant (1942–2020) first black ordinary judge; first black probate judge in Georgia woc law
 * Vara A. Majette (1875-1974) lawyer, author, artist
 * Lenna Gertrude Clarke Judd (1865–1939) clubwoman, philanthropist
 * Gwen Muriel Kesler (born 1925) music industry executive music
 * Annie Laurie Fuller Kurtz (1884–1946) writer of history
 * Love Moreland Leigh (1867–1956) creator of "Love Leigh" dolls
 * Shirley A. R. Lewis (born 1937) President of Paine College in Augusta woc
 * Mary Thomas Lumpkin (1857–1932) organized first garden club in Georgia
 * Rufe McCombs Maulsby (1918–2012) first elected judge in Georgia, without a prior appointment law
 * Bettye J. McClendon (1933-2019) basketball sports
 * Mary Lamar Knight McConnell (1899–1996) journalist for UPI
 * Heather Stepp McCormick (born 1972) gymnastics sports
 * Carrie L. McDaniel (1878–1952) first woman elected to a political office in Georgia
 * Emily C. McDougald (1848/1849–1938) women's suffrage
 * Lula Dobbs McEachern (1874–1949) educator, missionary gwa
 * Lucy Barrow McIntire (1886–1975) civic activist gwa
 * Mary Latimer McLendon (1840–1921) women's suffrage nge
 * Aurelia Roach McMillan (1865-1957) educator wikisource
 * May Melton (1923–2014) newspaper publisher gnhof
 * Madge Hilburn Methvin (1900–1982) newspaper publisher gnhof
 * Sue Methvin (1898–1965) concrete products manufacturer
 * Sue Harper Mims (1842–1913) Christian Scientist in Atlanta
 * Susie Jane Tillman Moore (1868–1951) first woman elected to Georgia Senate (in 1932)
 * Ruth Hartley Mosley (1886–1975) philanthropist gwa
 * Sarah McLendon Murphy (1892–1954) children's activist gwa
 * Liz Murphey (1933-2005) coach sports
 * Marie Antoinette Graves Nash (1892-1984) Gate City Day Nursery Association - free kindergarten for Black children
 * Isa-Beall Williams Neel (1861–1953) educator nge
 * Jean League Newton (1919–2000) architect, daughter of Ellamae Ellis League
 * Beulah Rucker Oliver (1888–1963) educator gwa
 * Passie Fenton McCabe Ottley (1870–1940) clubwoman, philanthropist
 * Nina Anderson Pape (1869–1944) educator gwa
 * Monica Jones Kaufman Pearson (born 1947) broadcast journalist music
 * Medora Field Perkerson (1892–1960) author, newspaper columnist
 * Adelaide Wallace Ponder (1925–2015) journalist, won NNA Emma C. McKinney award in 1994
 * Emily Katherine Reid owner/president of Crichton's Business College in Atlanta
 * Barbara "Babs" Janet Hamby Richardson (1928–2006) music industry executive music
 * Dorothy A. Robinson (1938-2017) first woman judge on a court of record; first woman temporary Supreme Court judge law
 * Mary Waterman Phillips Rushton (1896-1984) founder of Rushton Toy Co.
 * Ina Dillard Russell (1868–1963) mother of Richard Russell Jr. nge
 * Patricia A. Russell-McCloud (born 1946) motivational speaker woc
 * Pearl Sandow (1902–2006) baseball fan nge
 * Cynthia Shearer (born 1955) writer gwhof
 * Frances Murray Smith aka Allie Murray Smith (1905-2000) is currently a redirect to her daughter, Rosalynn Carter gwa
 * Jane E. Smith (born 1946) women's rights, ngos woc
 * Missouri H. Stokes (1838–1910) temperance movement, half sister to Mary Ann Harris Gay wikisource
 * Edna P. Lowe Swift (born 1949) first black woman to graduate from Agnes Scott College '71
 * Marian A. Sumner (1912-1999) journalist, won NNA Emma C. McKinney award in 1989
 * May Erwin Talmadge (1885-1973) president of Daughters of the American Revolution (44-47)
 * Mary Telfair (1791–1875) philanthropist nge
 * Brenda Cliette Thomas (born 1964?) basketball, track & field sports
 * Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas (1834–1907) memoirist gwa nge
 * C. Mildred Thompson (1881–1975) historian, educator, feminist nge
 * Ella May Thornton (1885–1971) State librarian of Georgia
 * Sarah Lowe Twiggs (1839–1920) writer wikisource
 * June Wood Wicker (1917–1992) architect
 * Mother Mary Theodore Williams (1868–1931) Catholic nun woc
 * Margaret A. Wilson (1855–1942) founder of "Wrens Nest" memorial
 * Naomi Chapman Woodroof (1900–1989) agriculture scientist nge
 * Nell Kendall Hodgson Woodruff (1892–1968) health care gwa
 * Jean Elizabeth Geiger Wright (1925?–2002) land conservation gwa
 * Dorothy Cowser Yancy (born 1944) first black tenured professor at Georgia Tech woc
 * Carrie Kent, the first African-American woman mayor in Georgia history as the mayor of Walthourville, Georgia

Other women-related articles

 * De Renne Family see nge
 * Equal Suffrage Party of Georgia
 * Frances Virginia Tea Room
 * Garden Club of Georgia see nge
 * Georgia Federation of Women's Clubs
 * Savannah Suffrage Association
 * Women's suffrage in Georgia (U.S. state) (nge)

Photos available
Here are photos already available on Commons for a few of the women listed above.