Grace Raymond Hebard

Hebard served as the first female on the University of Wyoming Board of Trustees, where she exercised authority over the university finances, its president, and faculty. Her University of Wyoming role extended to establishing the university's first library. Hebard served as a professor for 28 years. She was also the first woman admitted to the Wyoming State Bar Association (1898); admitted to practice before the Wyoming Supreme Court (1914); and appointed by her peers as vice president of the National Society of Women Lawyers.
She was active in Wyoming political life, giving speeches, organizing historical associations, conducting citizenship classes for immigrants, participating in the local and national suffragist movement, lobbying for child-welfare laws, serving as a Red Cross volunteer, and selling war bonds during World War I. Provided by Wikipedia
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Sacajaweaa guide and interpreter of the Lewis and Clark expedition with an account of travels of Toussaint Charbonneau and of Jean Baptiste the expedition papooseBookby Hebard, Grace Raymond, 1861-1936
Published 1933Book
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The pathbreakers from river to ocean;the story of the great West from the time of Coronado to the presentBookby Hebard, Grace Raymond, 1861-1936
Published 1932Book
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The pathbreakers from river to ocean ;the story of the great West from the time of Coronado to the presentBookby Hebard, Grace Raymond, 1861-1936
Published 1911Book
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The Bozeman trailhistorical accounts of the blazing of the overland routes into the Northwest and the fights with Red Cloud's warriorsBookby Hebard, Grace Raymond, 1861-1936
Published 1922Book
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