- Source: List of Agnes Scott College alumnae
Agnes Scott College is a women's college in Decatur, Georgia. It was known as the Decatur Female Seminary from 1889 to 1890 and the Agnes Scott Institute from 1890 to 1906.
Academia
Andrea Abrams, anthropologist and associate professor at Centre College
Martha Bailey, 1997, professor of economics and scholar of how access to contraception has shaped women's lives
Anita Barbee,1982, psychologist and professor & Distinguished University Scholar at the University of Louisville's Kent School of Social Work
Tommie Dora Barker, 1909, public librarian and founding dean of Emory Library School
Marilyn Breen, 1966, professor of mathematics at the University of Oklahoma
Mary Brown Bullock, 1966, seventh president of Agnes Scott College and executive vice chancellor of Duke Kunshan University
Chesya Burke, 2013, author of comic books and speculative fiction and assistant professor of English and U.S. Literatures and is the director of Africana Studies at Stetson University
Sue Jinks-Robertson, 1977, professor of genetics and microbiology
Susan M. Phillips, 1967, economist, member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, and dean of the George Washington University School of Business
Loretta Ross, 2007, academic, feminist, and activist who advocates for reproductive justice
Cornelia Strong, 1901, professor, mathematician, and astronomer
Anna Irwin Young, 1910, professor of mathematics, physics, and astronomy
Art and architecture
Jordan Casteel, 2011, award-winning figure painter
Ipek Duben, 1963, contemporary visual artist
Margot Gayle, 1931, historic preservationist and author who helped save the Victorian cast-iron architecture in New York City's SoHo district
Anna Colquitt Hunter, Historic Savannah Foundation founder
Mary E. Hutchinson, non-degreed, artist
Leila Ross Wilburn, 1904, architect
Business
Kay Krill, 1977, president and chief executive officer of ANN INC., parent company of Ann Taylor and LOFT
Entertainment
Michelle Malone, 1990, singer-songwriter and guitarist
Joanna Moore, non-degreed, actress and mother of Tatum O'Neal
Jennifer Nettles, 1997, lead singer of the AMA and Grammy award-winning country music band Sugarland
Saycon Sengbloh, 2000, actress and singer
Amira Unplugged, 2019, singer and rapper
Law
Jean H. Toal, 1965, Chief Justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court
Literature
Kimberly Belle, novelist
Chesya Burke, 2013, author of comic books and speculative fiction and assistant professor of English and U.S. Literatures and is the director of Africana Studies at Stetson University
Mary Norton Kratt, 1958, writer of Charlotte history and Southern novels
Catherine Marshall, 1936, author of the novel Christy
Marsha Norman, 1969, playwright
Agnes White Sanford, 1919, author of The Healing Light
Politics
Teri Anulewicz, 1998, Georgia State Representative
Catherine Fleming Bruce, 1984, author, activist, and Director of Operations at Richland County Democratic Party
Constance Curry, 1955, civil rights activist
Goudyloch E. Dyer, 1938, Illinois state representative
Caroline Frederick, 1928, South Carolina House of Representatives
Katherine Harris, 1979, U.S. House of Representatives, Secretary of State of Florida, and Florida Senate
Bertha "B" Holt, 1938, former North Carolina State Representative and children's rights advocate
Brownie Ledbetter, political activist, social justice crusader, and lobbyist who was involved in the civil rights, feminist, labor, and environmental movements in Arkansas
Rosalind McGee, non-degreed, Utah House of Representatives
Frances Freeborn Pauley, 1927, civil rights activist
Martha Priscilla Shaw, non-degreed, mayor of Sumter, South Carolina (1952–1956), first female mayor in South Carolina
Marjorie R. Turnbull, non-degreed, Florida House of Representatives
Religion
Ivylyn Girardeau, 1922, medical missionary in India and Pakistan
Rachel Henderlite, 1928, the first woman to be ordained a pastor of the Presbyterian Church in the United States
Science and medicine
Frances Anderson, pioneer of art therapy
Ivylyn Girardeau, 1922, medical missionary in India and Pakistan
Lucia Murchison, 1922, social worker, club woman, and president of the South Carolina Public Health Association
Willie W. Smith, 1927, physiologist who specialized in radiobiology and researcher with the National Institutes of Health
Patricia Ann Webb, 1945, microbiologist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and National Institutes of Health
Sports
Wasfia Nazreen, 2006, mountaineer
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of Agnes Scott College alumnae
- Agnes Scott College
- List of alumnae of women's colleges in the United States
- Women's colleges in the United States
- List of Bryn Mawr College people
- List of women's universities and colleges in the United States
- Women's colleges in the Southern United States
- List of Mount Holyoke College people
- List of Connecticut College alumni
- St. Olaf College