Women in Kentucky - Music

Sarah Ogan Gunning: Sarah Ogan Gunning mastered one of this country’s genuine original art forms, and she infused it with a message of tough vitality as devastating and inspiring as her own life. Gunning was born into a singing family which included Aunt Molly Jackson and Jim Garland. Her mother passed on a large collection of ballads, hymns, love songs, and stories to her 15 children. Sarah’s father taught her spirituals and how to sing them. But the biggest influence on her life and her music may have come from the fact that both her father and her first husband worked as coal miners and were involved in the United Mine Workers of America.

Sarah Ogan Gunning’s repertoire included original songs, well-known mountain tunes to which she wrote original lyrics, and spirituals, all sung a cappella-style. “I am a Girl of Constant Sorrow” and “I Hate the Capitalist System” capture both the style and content that made her unique. In the 1930s and 40s she lived in New York City and sang with the likes of Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, and Burl Ives. Gunning lived in obscurity for a while, and then re-surfaced during the folk song popularization of the 1960s, when folklorist Archie Green encouraged her to record her first album. She began performing again, at venues such as Carnegie Hall, the Smithsonian Folklife Festival, and the Newport Folk Festival. She died in 1983 at a family songfest in Kentucky.

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Women in Sports:

Minnie Adkins
Elizabeth Barret, Anne Lewis, Mimi Pickering, & Justine Richardson
Jane Burch Cochran
Joan Dance
Enid Yandell

Women in Business:

Nelda Barton-Collings
Julia Dinsmore
Laura Freeman
Mattie Mack
Lena Madesin Phillips
Caroline Burnam Taylor

Women in Education:

Helen Lew Lang
Katherine Pettit
Jane Stephenson
Cora Wilson Stewart

Women in Health/Medicine:

Mary Britton
Linda Neville
Ora Framer Porter
Louise Southgate, M.D.

Women in Journalism:

Linda Boileau
Alice Allison Dunnigan

Women in Law:

Pearl Carter Pace
Lt. Colonel Linda Smith

Women in Literature:

Effie Waller Smith

Women in Military:

Lt. Anna Mac Clarke
Capt. Helen Horlacher Evans
Julia Ann Marcum

Women in Music:

Sarah Ogan Gunning
Helen Humes
Lily May Ledford
Reel World String Band
Jean Ritchie
Mary Wheeler

Women as Pioneers:

Esther Whitley

Women in Public Service:

Governor Martha Layne Collins
Emma Guy Cromwell
Rep. Mary Elliott Flanery
Sen. Georgia Davis Powers
Lt. Gov. Thelma Stovall

Women in Reform:

Madeline McDowell Breckinridge
Laura Clay
Eula Hall
Josephine Henry
Belinda Mason
Lois Morris
Eliza Caroline Calvert Obenchain
Charlotte Richardson
Joan Robinett
Mary Sue Whayne
Corinne Whitehead
Evelyn Williams

Women in Religion:

Eldress Nancy Moore
Rabbi Gaylia Rooks

Women in Science:

Sarah Frances Price
Ellen Churchill Semple

Women in Sports:

Terri Cecil-Ramsey
Geri Grigsby
Audrey Whitlock Peterson
Mary T. Meagher Plant