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HomeHistoryMaya Angelou Becomes First Black Woman To Appear On US Quarter

Maya Angelou Becomes First Black Woman To Appear On US Quarter

Legendary black activist and poet Maya Angelou is on a new United States quarter which went into circulation on Monday, the US Mint announced.

This made the former University of Ghana lecturer and Pan Africanist the first Black woman ever to appear on the coin.
The Maya Angelou quarter is the first in the American Women Quarters Programme, which will include coins featuring prominent women in American history.
Maya Angelou

Other quarters in the series will begin rolling out later this year and through 2025, the Mint said in a release.
“Each time we redesign our currency, we have the chance to say something about our country — what we value, and how we have progressed as a society,” Madam Janet Yellen, the Treasury Secretary said in a separate statement.
“I’m very proud that these coins celebrate the contributions of some of America’s most remarkable women, including Maya Angelou.”

The new coin still features George Washington’s visage on the “heads” side, while the “tails” side honors Angelou by evoking one of her most famous works, the autobiography “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. The release said, “Lawmakers cheered the release of the new coin on Monday and credited Representative, Madam Barbara Lee, a California Democrat, with the achievement.”
It said Madam Lee introduced the Circulating Collectible Coin Redesign Act of 2020, which was passed in January 2021 and ultimately paved the way for the creation of these new coins.

“The phenomenal women who shaped American history have gone unrecognized for too long — especially women of color,” Lee said in a tweet, adding that “Proud to have led this bill to honor their legacies.” The US Mint invited the public to submit names of women they view as American icons. The bureau welcomed entries of women known for their work in civil rights, science, and the arts, among other areas, with an emphasis on women from “ethnically, racially and geographically diverse backgrounds.

The only requirement was that the women who appeared on the coins must be deceased. The agency will issue four other quarters this year, with the others honoring Sally Ride, an astronaut who was the first American woman in space; Asian American actress Anna May Wong; Cherokee Nation leader Wilma Mankiller and suffragette and politician Nina Otero-Warren.

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