Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Florida News

Ron DeSantis Names Three New Members of Florida Women’s Hall of Fame

Each year, the governor selects three nominees from recommendations presented by the Florida Commission on the Status of Women.

florida women's hall of fame

On Monday, Gov. Ron DeSantis named three new members of the Florida Women’s Hall of Fame. Each year, the governor selects three nominees from recommendations presented by the Florida Commission on the Status of Women.

“The Florida Women’s Hall of Fame was created by Florida Statute in 1982 to honor women who, through their lives and efforts, made significant contributions to the improvement of life for women and all Florida citizens. They are pioneers who have broken down barriers, created new opportunities, and championed issues to better Florida and its people. These women are immortalized on an honorary wall in the halls of the Florida Capitol,” the Florida Women’s Hall of Fame notes on its website. “At the Florida Commission on the Status of Women, we are proud to ensure that the stories of Florida women will be shared for future generations.”

Below is information on the three new members of the Florida Women’s Hall of Fame:

 

Doris Mae Barnes

Barnes, of Miami, made a significant contribution to Floridians and the world by helping shape Florida’s tourism industry by recording sport fishing for 50 consecutive years from the 1930s into the 1990s. Through her energetic efforts, she photographed thousands of anglers and celebrities with their outstanding, and in many cases, award-winning catches. Often at her own expense, Ms. Barnes sent prints to hometown newspapers in Florida and abroad and to the Metropolitan Miami Fishing Tournament, thereby presenting an enticing image of Florida sport fishing and helping make Florida, including Baker’s Haulover and North Miami Beach, a vacation destination. She was the first pioneer career woman marine photographer and the first “Official Dock Photographer” at the Baker’s Haulover Dock in North Miami Beach for 50 consecutive years. She served in this role until she 85 years old and has the distinction of being the only individual given the title of the “Fisherman’s Photographer.”

 

Dr. Judith Ann Bense

Dr. Bense, of Pensacola, established the University of West Florida’s Historical Archeology program. She also founded and chaired the University’s Anthropology Department and their Archaeology Institute. She helped pass legislation and obtain funding for the Florida Public Archeology Network (FPAN), a $1.5 million program operating at six regional public archeology centers throughout Florida. In 2008 she was appointed president of the University of West Florida and extended her term through 2015. As the University of West Florida’s first female president, she continues to inspire women to achieve both professionally and academically. As both professor and president, she has served as a mentor to many students who will one day be front-runners in the archeological world.

 

Millie Wilborn Gildersleeve

Gildersleeve, of Palm Beach County, was born a slave in Cuthbert, Georgia in 1858 shortly before the U.S. Civil War. She served as a trusted nurse and midwife in Florida during the Reconstruction Era. Despite the strict racial segregation of that time, Mrs. Gildersleeve maintained strong relationships with families throughout Palm Beach County. For many pioneering families tasked with building the area, she was the only source of maternal care. In 1950, Mrs. Gildersleeve was posthumously inducted into the Lake Worth Pioneer’s Association. The Historical Society of Palm Beach County has recognized Mrs. Gildersleeve as one of the first healers and medical practitioners to settle in the Palm Beach County area.

 

 

Related Articles

Top Story

Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that Florida saw a major decline in fentanyl- and opioid-related deaths during the first half of 2025, citing new data...

The Florida Daily Show

On this episode of the Florida Daily Show, Florida lawmakers are back in Tallahassee as a controversial mid-decade redistricting push could reshape the political...

Florida Government & Politics

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed two education measures—Senate Bill 1296 and House Bill 1279—aimed at changing how teacher unions operate, speeding up pay increases,...

Popular Stories

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis marked the groundbreaking of a major reconstruction project at the Interstate 95 and U.S. 1 interchange in Ormond Beach, a...

Advertisement
Florida Daily
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

HOW WE COLLECT E-MAIL INFORMATION:

If you sign up to subscribe to Florida Daily’s e-mail newsletter, you will provide us your e-mail address and name, voluntarily, and we will never obtain any of your contact information that you don’t voluntarily provide.

HOW WE USE AN E-MAIL ADDRESS IF YOU VOLUNTARILY PROVIDE IT TO US:

If you voluntarily provide us with your name and email address, we will use it to send you one email update per weekday. Your email address will not be given to any third parties.

YOUR CONTROLS:

You will have the option to unsubscribe to our E-mail update at anytime by clicking an unsubscribe link that will be provided in each E-Mail we send.