Judith Ellen Heumann (December 18, 1947 – March 4, 2023) was an American
disability rights activist. She was recognized internationally as a leader in the disability community. Heumann was a lifelong civil rights advocate for people with disabilities. Her work with governments and
non-governmental organizations (NGOs), non-profits, and various other disability interest groups, produced significant contributions since the 1970s to the development of human rights legislation and policies benefiting children and adults with disabilities. Through her work in the
World Bank and the
State Department, Heumann led the mainstreaming of disability rights into international development. Her contributions extended the international reach of the
independent livingmovement.
Heumann contracted
polio at the age of 18 months, and used a
wheelchair most of her life. She rejected cliches about disability as a tragic experience, saying, "Disability only becomes a tragedy for me when society fails to provide the things we need to lead our lives––job opportunities or barrier-free buildings, for example. It is not a tragedy to me that I'm living in a wheelchair."
Bessie Coleman (January 26, 1892 – April 30, 1926)
[2] was an early American
civil aviator. She was the first African-American woman and first
Native American to hold a
pilot license.
[3][4][5][6]She earned her license from the
Fédération Aéronautique Internationale on June 15, 1921,
[4][5][7] and was the first
Black person to earn an
international pilot's license.
[8]
Born to a family of
sharecroppers in
Texas, Coleman worked in the cotton fields at a young age while also studying in a small
segregated school. She attended one term of college at
Langston University. Coleman developed an early interest in flying, but African Americans, Native Americans, and women had no
flight training opportunities in the United States, so she saved and obtained sponsorships in
Chicago to go to
Francefor flight school.
She then became a high-profile pilot in notoriously dangerous
air shows in the United States. She was popularly known as
Queen Bess and
Brave Bessie,
[9] and hoped to start a school for African-American fliers. Coleman died in a plane crash in 1926. Her pioneering role was an inspiration to early pilots and to the African-American and Native American communities.