Virginia Changemakers
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  • Tags: Arts and Literature

Jean Miller Skipwith.jpg
Jean Miller Skipwith, Lady Skipwith, assembled one of the largest libraries owned by a Virginia woman early in the nineteenth century.
Mecklenburg County

Rowland 2.jpg
Kate Mason Rowland is best known for her biography of her great-great-granduncle George Mason.
Richmond

Henry Box Brown.jpg
After his family was suddenly sold out of the state in 1848, he shipped himself in a wooden crate to freedom in 1849.
Richmond

Bessie Niemeyer Marshall.jpg
Bessie Niemeyer Marshall created detailed watercolors of plants as part of a federally funded project that rescued a Petersburg park.
Petersburg

Davis (crop).tif
Born into slavery, Noah Davis raised more than $4,000 to free himself and his family members during the 1840s and 1850s.
Fredericksburg

Micheaux (crop).jpg
Often recognized as the country's first African American filmmaker, Oscar Micheaux established a film office in Roanoke, where he produced at least six silent movies.
Roanoke

Ames 2.jpg
Susie M. Ames's writings made major contributions to understanding the social and cultural life of seventeenth-century Virginia.
Accomack County

Judith Shatin.jpg
Judith Shatin champions music that blurs the line between acoustic and digital.
Charlottesville

McIntosh 2.jpg
As an intelligence agent with the Office of Strategic Services, Elizabeth Peet worked in the China-Burma-India theater during World War II.
Woodbridge

JoAnn Falletta.jpg
A dynamic and compelling conductor, JoAnn Falletta is an advocate for contemporary music.
Norfolk
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