Highlighting women from across Queens - from Long Island City to Jamaica - whose contributions reshaped their neighborhoods. These educators, activists, and public servants broke barriers to create systems of change. Their names mark more than physical places; they represent legacies of collective action. We invite you to explore these stories and consider how we choose which contributions to celebrate in our public spaces.
Aurora Gareiss at Udalls Cove, December 18, 1969. Aurora Gareiss Papers, QPL Archives.
Ceremony at City Hall designating Udalls Cove as a city park, 1973. (L-R) Ralph Kamhi, Aurora Gareiss, Parks Commissioner Richard M. Clurman, and Mayor John Lindsay. Aurora Gareiss Papers, QPL Archives.
Aurora Gareiss (1909-2000) was a community activist and conservationist who was a member and substantial contributor to many community and conservation organizations. She was born in 1909 to Peter and Anna M. Varvaro, both of whom came from Palermo, Italy, and settled in Bay Ridge. Aurora studied art in the United States and Italy and become an accomplished artist. She married Herbert Gareiss in 1932 and as newlyweds, they lived in Jackson Heights. In 1943, they moved with their son to Douglaston. For the next 20 years or so, Aurora worked as a housewife and an artist.
By the 1960s, the environment and its degradation became a major concern for her, but when real estate developers began filling in the marsh in the wetlands of Little Neck and Great Neck, this concern grew into action. In 1969, with the help of neighbor Ralph Kamhi, Gareiss co-founded the Udalls Cove Preservation Committee. This not only saved this land from development but spurred a host of Douglaston, Little Neck and Great Neck residents into becoming activists themselves.
Gareiss was involved with many other environmentally focused groups, including the State Northeastern Queens Nature and Historical Preserve Commission (Commissioner, 1974-1993; Vice-Chair, 1974-1977; Chair, 1978-1986); the Alley Restoration Committee; the Water Quality Management Plan Program; the Citizens Advisory Committee, Coastal Zone Management; the Research Committee, Council on the Environment of New York City; the Sierra Club; the Alert Committee, League of Conservation Voters; and Friends of the Earth. She was also a member of the Douglaston Civic Association and served as an environmental aide to State Senator Frank Padavan and U.S. Rep. Lester Wolff.
In the mid-1990s, Gareiss moved upstate to Warwick, NY, to be close to her son Herbert and his family; she passed away in 2000.
"Guide to the Aurora Gareiss Papers," Archives at Queens Public Library
Claire Shulman at the Langston Hughes Community Library Grand Re-Opening, November 1999, Queens Public Library Digital Archive
Claire Shulman, née Kantoff (1926-2020) was born February 23rd, 1926 in Brooklyn, NY, to a Jewish family. She attended Adelphi University and was one the first women in their nursing program, graduating in 1946. Shulman worked as a registered nurse at Queens Hospital, where she met and married Dr. Melvin Shulman. The couple had three children: Dr. Lawrence Shulman, Dr. Ellen Baker (née Shulman), and Kim Shulman.
Claire Shulman started her political career as president of the Mothers Association of her local public school, P.S.41. She served on multiple non-partisan community boards before being appointed the director of Queen Community Boards in 1972 and was later appointed Deputy Borough President in 1980. She was initiated as the Seventeenth President of the Borough of Queens and the first woman to lead the Borough in 1986. As Borough President, Shulman went on to win four terms and participate in the revitalization of downtown Jamaica and Western Queens, as well as championing the development of cultural institutions, The Queens Museum of Art, The Hall of Science, Museum of the Moving Image, and Flushing Town Hall.
Shulman also helped to secure funding for 30,000 new school seats in Queens and for the completion of the Queens Hospital Center. She also raised funding for infrastructure in senior living, public libraries, and cultural programming. Shulman left the Queens Borough Presidency in 2001 due to term limits but remained active in the Queens community until her death from cancer on August 16th, 2020.
“A CELEBRATION OF THE LIFE AND LEGACY OF THE HONORABLE CLAIRE SHULMAN – Office of the Queens Borough President.” Accessed September 22, 2023. https://queensbp.org/claire/
Fried, Joseph P. “Claire Shulman, First Woman to Lead Queens, Dies at 94.” The New York Times, August 17, 2020, sec. New York. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/17/nyregion/claire-shulman-dead.html
“In Memory of Claire Shulman ’46, Nurse and Four-Term Queens Borough President.” Accessed September 25, 2023. https://www.adelphi.edu/news/in-memory-of-claire-shulman-46-nurse-and-four-term-queens-borough-president/
Behar, By Manny. “Farewell To The Queen Of Queens: Remembering Claire Shulman.” Queens Jewish Link | Connecting the Queens Jewish Community, August 19, 2020. https://www.queensjewishlink.com/index.php/local/9-news/3033-farewell-to-the-queen-of-queens-remembering-claire-shulman
Photo of Dr. Margaret V. Kiely, from a yearbook at the Queens College Special Collections and Archives
Kiely Hall (undated). Detail cropped from a photograph of Jefferson and Kiely Halls. Queens College Special Collections and Archives.
Dr. Margaret V. Kiely (1894-1978 ) was the first Dean of Faculty at Queens College, serving from the school’s inception in 1937 until 1959. She also held the position of Acting President for two years, stepping in when President Paul Klapper was on leave during the 1947-48 school year and staying on after his retirement until the search for the school’s second president was concluded in 1949.
Before joining the administration of the new college, Kiely was principal and director of the City Normal School of Bridgeport, Conn., and president of the Connecticut State Teachers Association. In 1929, she was a delegate to the White House Conference on Child Health and Protection. Over the course of her career, she was a member of the State Commission on Higher Education in Connecticut and president of the National Association of Municipal Normal Schools and Teachers Colleges. Kiely was also on the board of trustees of Columbia University Teachers College and the advisory board of Albertus Magnus College. She received her Ph.D. from Teachers College.
In 1983, Queens College renamed the Academic II building in Kiely’s honor. The 13-story Kiely Hall, built in 1968, houses classrooms, large lecture halls and many administrative departments.
“Queens College Presidents: Dr. Margaret V. Kiely,” Queens College Library research guide.
Christina Tsatsakos and Joseph R. Brostek, “Places and Faces Special Feature," (undated), Department of Special Collections and Archives, Queens College, City University of New York.
“Miss Kiely Named To Queens College,” The New York Times, Aug. 13, 1937.
“Dr. Margaret Kiely, 84, Ex‐Queens College Dean,” The New York Times, May 21, 1978
Ethel L. Cuff Black, 1915. Howard University Yearbook. Wikimedia Commons. Public Domain.
Ethel Cuff Black (1890 – 1977) was an American educator and one of the founders of Delta Sigma Theta sorority at Howard University. On the eve of Woodrow Wilson's first inauguration in March 1913, she and the Delta Sigma Theta sisters marched, with thousands of others, in the National Woman Suffrage Procession in Washington, D.C.
In 1930, she became the first Black teacher at P.S. #108 in Richmond Hill, Queens, and taught in Queens until her retirement in 1957.
"Committee Report of the Infrastructure Division," The Council of the City of New York, December 20, 2023
"Ethel Cuff Black," Delta Sigma Theta: March for Women's Suffrage, accessed August 19, 2025
"Ethel L. Cuff (Black)" Alexander Street. Accessed August 19, 2025
Courtesy of PBS NewsHour, CC BY-SA 2.0
Gwen Ifill (1955-2016) was a trailblazing journalist who covered the White House, Congress and national election campaigns. She was the first Black woman to anchor a national TV public affairs show, Washington Week. Though she held positions with The Washington Post, The New York Times and NBC, she spent most of her career at PBS. She worked at PBS NewsHour for 17 years, and along with Judy Woodruff, was on the first all-woman anchor team on network nightly news.
Ifill was born in Jamaica, Queens, and lived in several different cities throughout New England, Pennsylvania and New York, due to her father’s work as a minister. She attended Simmons College in Boston and majored in communications. Her first journalism experience was as an intern at the Boston Herald newspaper in her senior year of college, and she subsequently began working at the newspaper full-time in 1977. Until her untimely death from cancer at the age of 61, Ifill had a prolific career as a journalist for more than 30 years.
The former Railroad Park was renamed Gwen Ifill Park on June 16, 2021.
Joshua Barajas, "New York City renames parks for Gwen Ifill and other prominent Black Americans," PBS NewsHour, June 17, 2021
Ryan Songalia, "Parks in Queens Renamed in Honor of Famous African Americans – Including Gwen Ifill and Malcolm X," Sunnyside Post, June 17, 2021
The HistoryMakers "Gwen Ifill’s Biography," Accessed January 6, 2026
Sam Roberts, "Gwen Ifill, Political Reporter and Co-Anchor of ‘PBS NewsHour,’ Dies at 61," The New York Times, November 14, 2016
Photos and biographical text courtesy of the DeBenedittis family and P.S. Q016 The Nancy DeBenedittis School
Photos and biographical text courtesy of the DeBenedittis family and P.S. Q016 The Nancy DeBenedittis School
On May 29, 1919, Nancy Leo, the oldest of five children, was born in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Her parents, Francesco Leo and Irene Fiore, emigrated from Bari, Italy, in 1917. After working on the railroad and then in the ice and coal business for some time, Francesco went into the food business, opening his first store in Brooklyn, on Lorimer and Skillman Avenues.
Nancy and her sisters, Mary, Lily and Grace, and their brother, Al, attended P.S. 132 in Brooklyn. They often came to Corona, Queens, for "vacation" since Corona at that time was still mainly farms and countryside.
In the early 1930s, the family moved to Corona where Nancy's parents set down roots and opened Leo's Latticini, later to become known as "Mama's," an affectionate nickname given to Nancy when she was raising her daughters.
Nancy Leo worked at Leo's Latticini alongside her parents for some time. Then, during World War II, she became one of the first pioneer women to help in the war effort. In November 1942, Nancy completed the airplane assembly course at Delehanty Institute. She then joined the ranks of women riveters working for American Export Airlines on some of the first non-stop transatlantic flight planes carrying passengers, cargo and mail overseas.
A few years later, Nancy took a vacation to visit her aunts in Italy and met her future husband, Frank DeBenedittis, who was born in Corato, Bari, Italy. They were married on August 29, 1948, in Rome's St. Peter's Basillica.
Years later, when Nancy's parents retired, she and Frank took over the family store and continued in the food business. They worked very hard serving the community while raising their loving family. They had three daughters, Carmela, Irene and Marie, all of whom attended St. Leo's Elementary School in Corona.
Carmela, the oldest, married Oronzo Lamorgese and owns Leo's Ravioli and Pasta Shop in Corona. Their daughter, Marie Geiorgina, who is married to Fiore DiFelo, is a teacher at P.S. 16 in Corona. They have one child, Mama's first great-grandchild.
Irene, a former New York City public school teacher, joined the family business in order to keep the family traditions alive.
Marie, though the youngest, has been in the store the longest. She, like her mother and grandmother, is very business-minded and also an excellent cook who strives for quality in all she does.
In 1985, Frank, who was a major part of the family business, passed away at the age of 73. He was sorely missed by everyone. After Frank's passing, Nancy, with her daughters, decided to continue on with the family business and for years Nancy became known as "Mama" to everyone.
After so many years of dedication to family and community, Mama passed away in 2009 at the age of 90. Upon her passing, there was a true expression of love and appreciation by all her patrons, neighbors and friends for all she had done for the community.
When many of the original Corona residents moved away to "better neighborhoods," Mama stayed and lived and worked with the community's people. She instilled in all her family a sense of discipline, respect for each other and good character. She was truly a wonderful role model for all.
Throughout her lifetime, Nancy saw immense change. From ice and coal to refrigeration and gas heat, from radio and television all the way to today's world of computers.
She made everyone around her appreciate all the little things in life that are special and "Mama," Nancy DeBenedittis, was truly a special person.
Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022
Tammy Scileppi, " 'Mama’ DeBenedittis, of Corona deli, dies," Queens Chronicle, December 10, 2009
Howard Koplowitz, "Corona honors ‘Mama’ with celebratory street rename," QNS.com, August 10, 2011
Portraits of Mary Moody provided by Andreii Moody Lynch and Reverend Patrick Young
Portraits of Mary Moody provided by Andreii Moody Lynch and Reverend Patrick Young
Clip from an oral history with Andreii Moody Lynch (daughter of Mary Moody) and Patrick Young (adopted son of Mary Moody).
Photo of street sign by David Engelman, 2025
Mary Lena Waller Moody (1924–2021) was a committed community leader in Corona and East Elmhurst.
Waller Moody began as a volunteer with the Board of Education and later served as the president of the Parent Teacher Association at P.S. 92 in Corona. This led to a career in education when she was hired as a school aide at P.S. 92 in 1962, eventually becoming the school’s supervisory paraprofessional. She retired from the New York City Board of Education in 1995.
Waller Moody was active in many community efforts. She was a Girl Scout Leader at the First Baptist Church in Corona, an election inspector, and a supervisor for a Saturday educational program for children at Grace Episcopal Church. She also owned and operated Big City Realty, which helped find housing for low-income families in Corona, and provided daycare services for working mothers in the area. Her other community involvement included supporting the Flushing Meadow Soap Box Derby and collecting toys for disabled children at Goldwater Hospital.
She received numerous citations, awards, and proclamations during her life. Two of the most memorable experiences for her were being crowned Miss Fine Brown Frame of Harlem and receiving a City Proclamation for "Mrs. Mary Moody Day" at City Hall in October 2019.
Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022
"Mary Moody Obituary," www.echovita.com, accessed October 7, 2022
Bill Parry, "‘Warrior queen’ of Corona memorialized with street co-naming in her longtime neighborhood," QNS.com, September 20, 2022
Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm, Center Director Tyrone Bryant and Library Director Helen Marshall at the Langston Hughes Community Library & Cultural Center in 1974. Photo courtesy of Queens Public Library
Photo courtesy of Queens Public Library
Helen Marshall (1929-2017) was the first African American Queens Borough President from 2002 – 2013.
Marshall was born in Manhattan to immigrant parents of African descent from Guyana. The family moved to Queens in 1949, settling first in Corona and then in East Elmhurst. Marshall graduated with a B.A. in education from Queens College. After teaching for eight years, she left to help found the Langston Hughes Library in 1969, where she was the first Director. She served in the State Assembly for 8 years and then served on the City Council for 10 years, before becoming the first African American and the second woman to serve as the Queens Borough President. She supported job training programs and economic development and was a devoted supporter of the Queens Public Library.
The Helen M. Marshall School was founded in 2010 and moved to it's current building on Northern Boulevard between 110th and 111th streets in 2013. It serves students in Kindergarten through Grade 5.
“The Honorable Helen Marshall,” The History Makers, accessed November 10, 2022
Bill Parry, “Former Borough President Helen Marshall honored with street co-naming in Corona,” QNS.com, December 14, 2017
“The Honorable Helen M. Marshall,” Cobbs Funeral Chapels, accessed September 30, 2022
Photo by David Engelman, 2025
Portrait of Sister Mary Patrick McCarthy provided by her brother Patrick McCarthy
Photo of a young Sister Mary Patrick McCarthy provided by her brother Patrick McCarthy
Sister Mary Patrick McCarthy (1935–2002) was a nun, educator, and beloved member of the Jackson Heights community in Queens, New York. As a child, she attended Blessed Sacrament Church and School - the same institution where she would return decades later to serve as principal from 1967 to 2002. During her 35-year tenure, Sister Mary guided the school through significant transitions, advocating for the neighborhood’s growing Hispanic community throughout the 1970s and 1980s. She supported many recent immigrants from South America, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Cuba by ensuring access to quality, affordable education.
Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed January 12, 2024, http://www.nycstreets.info/
Photo courtesy of Colectivo Intercultural TRANSgrediendo and Translatin@ Coalition
Photo by David Engelman, 2025
Born in Veracruz, Mexico, Lorena Borjas (1960-2020) was a fierce advocate for the transgender and Latinx communities in Queens. Borjas moved to the U.S. in 1980 and earned a green card through a Reagan-era amnesty program. She was convicted of charges related to prostitution in 1994, but the charges were later vacated, since she was forced into prostitution by human traffickers. However, other convictions remained on her record until 2017, when then-Governor Andrew M. Cuomo pardoned her. She became a U.S. citizen in 2019.
Borjas inspired many people through her advocacy for the LGBT community. She co-founded the Lorena Borjas Community Fund in 2012 and was actively involved in many organizations, including the AIDS Center of Queens County, the Hispanic AIDS Forum and the Latino Commission on AIDS. In 2015, she founded El Colectivo Intercultural TRANSgrediendo, a non-profit organization that works to defend the rights of transgender and gender non-binary people. The organization provides legal and medical services to trans and non-binary sex workers and undocumented members of the community. Although Borjas had already been taking sex workers to clinics to get tested for HIV and helping to get lawyers for possible deportation cases, El Colectivo was a way for her to officially continue that work. She also became a counselor for the Community Healthcare Network's Transgender Family Program, where she worked to obtain legal aid for victims of human trafficking. Borjas died on March 30, 2020, of complications from COVID-19.
On June 26, 2022, a bill was signed by Governor Kathy Hochul establishing the Lorena Borjas transgender and gender non-binary (TGNB) wellness and equity fund, which will be used to invest in increasing employment opportunities, providing access to gender-affirming healthcare, and raising awareness about transgender and gender non-binary people in New York.
Daniel E. Slotnik, "Lorena Borjas, Transgender Immigrant Activist, Dies at 59," The New York Times, April 1, 2020
Bill Parry, "Transgender activist Lorena Borjas honored with Elmhurst street co-naming," QNS, April 1, 2021
Chantal Vaca, "Through Community, Lorena Borjas’ Legacy Lives On," The Know (blog), December 27, 2021
Queens Stories: The Story of Lorena Borjas: The Transgender Latina Activist, Queens Public Television
New York State Senate, Assembly Bill A9418A
Photo of Alice Cardona courtesy of the Alice Cardona Collection. Archives of the Puerto Rican Diaspora, Center for Puerto Rican Studies, Hunter College, CUNY.
Photo of Alice Cardona courtesy of the Alice Cardona Collection. Archives of the Puerto Rican Diaspora, Center for Puerto Rican Studies, Hunter College, CUNY.
Photo of Alice Cardona courtesy of the Alice Cardona Collection. Archives of the Puerto Rican Diaspora, Center for Puerto Rican Studies, Hunter College, CUNY.
Street sign photo by Mary Bakija, May 10, 2025
Alice Cardona (1930-2011) was an eminent Puerto Rican activist and community organizer. She is widely recognized for her advocacy in bilingual education, women’s rights, and political representation. Born the first of nine children to Puerto Rican parents who relocated to New York in 1923, Cardona was raised in Spanish Harlem.
After graduating high school in 1950, Cardona volunteered at the Legion de Maria, offering psychological support to Black and Hispanic communities. In 1961, she joined the Sisters of St. John, a religious order in Texas, but ultimately left the order, realizing that religious life was not her calling. Returning to New York, she worked at a financial institution and later joined the United Bronx Parents (UBP), eventually getting involved with the Head Start program in 1964.
Between 1970 and 1978, Cardona’s career flourished, especially during her time at ASPIRA, a nonprofit organization that seeks to empower and educate the Latino youth community, where she worked as a youth counselor and later as the director of counseling for parents and students. Her work at ASPIRA motivated her to complete her degree, which she did through an independent study program at Goddard College in 1973. Cardona was also an active member of the National Conference of Puerto Rican Women (NACOPRW) and served on its national board starting in 1975. She founded HACER (Hispanic Advocacy and Community Empowerment through Research) / Hispanic Women’s Center to support Latinas in reaching their professional aspirations through education.
From 1983 to 1986, Cardona served on the executive board of the New York State Association for Bilingual Education (NYSABE) and represented New York City at the organization. She then worked as assistant director of the New York State Division for Women from 1983 to 1995, under Gov. Mario Cuomo’s administration. There, she oversaw daily operations and continued her advocacy for bilingual education, women’s rights, and prisoners’ rights. She played a key role in addressing health issues like AIDS/HIV, breast cancer, and domestic violence, founding the Hispanic AIDS Forum in 1986 and the Women and AIDS Research Network. Additionally, she co-founded Atrévete, a political participation and voter registration program.
After retiring in 1995, she remained active and served as director for the Puerto Rican Association for Community Affairs and on the boards of the National Women's Political Caucus, the National Association for Bilingual Education and the Puerto Rican Educators Association. In 1997, Cordona was one of 70 U.S. women invited to “Vital Voices of Women in Democracy” in Beijing. She also is the author of the book, “Puerto Rican Women Achievers in New York City,” and she was the first Hispanic woman to receive the Susan B. Anthony prize from the National Organization for Women (NOW).
Cardona passed away from cancer at the age of 81.
"Woodside Street Co-Named ‘Alice Cardona Way," Queens Gazette, March 16, 2016.
QNS News Team, "Alice Cardona, women’s rights activist, passes away", QNS, November 2, 2011.
"PRdream mourns the passing of Alice Cardona, Community Activist and Latina Rights Advocate", Puerto Rico and the American Dream, accessed October 25, 2024.
"Woodside Street Renamed to Honor Latina Activist Alice Cardona", NY1 Spectrum News, March 13, 2016.
"Alice Cardona Papers", CENTRO Hunter College CUNY, accessed October 25, 2024.
"Alice Cardona, Latina rights activist, dies at 81", Open CUNY, accessed October 25, 2024.
Street Naming Ceremony on May 13, 2025 - Speakers (Tiffany Caban, Brad Landers, Letitia James, local doctor, Jimmy VB) remembering the legacy of Elizabeth. Photo: Derek Evers/Office of NYC Comptroller
Elizabeth White Marcum (1940-2024) was a volunteer, activist, and natural-born leader who was deeply engaged with her community of Astoria for more than 50 years. Marcum modeled the importance of volunteerism, civic engagement, and community activism to the youth of her neighborhood. She served in a variety of leadership roles in the Boy Scouts as a den mother in Troop 470 and went on to serve as one of the first female Cub Scout troop leaders, where she mentored numerous youths and led them on trips to Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia. She also volunteered with the Girl Scout Troop 500, where she assisted with community-based fundraising activities, and at St. Joseph’s fundraisers and activities, including Little League and the St. Joseph’s Brigade Drum and Bugle Corps. As a committed activist for LGBTQ civil rights, she marched in pride parades and rallies and also served as a parent activist in the group Western Queens for Marriage Equality.
A lifelong resident of Queens, Marcum was born in Maspeth on January 19, 1940, the youngest of four children to parents Homer Ensign White and Amelie “Emily” Tebbs. Lovingly called “Betty” by her mother and siblings, she grew up in Corona, attending P.S. 19, Junior High School 16, and Flushing High School. After a brief marriage to Burel Carter, she met and married her second husband, William Van Bramer, in 1966, and the couple made their home in Woodside/Sunnyside before settling in Astoria.
She had her first child at the age of 17, and she would go on to register each of her seven children in the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, where she served as a volunteer and then troop leader. Marcum babysat during the day for a large roster of local children who knew her as “Aunt Liz,” and she is fondly remembered for the love, care, presence, and attention she gave to each of them. After a day of childcare, Marcum would regularly work the night shift at the local supermarket, arriving back home after midnight. She instilled a spirit of tireless service in the many children whose lives she touched, including her son, Jimmy Van Bramer, whose three decades of public service include 12 years as a member of the New York City Council representing District 26.
Marcum took great pleasure in community activities, especially enjoying local block parties, barbecues, and the charity car washes that were a regular part of life in Astoria in the 1970s and 1980s. After battling vascular dementia for several years, she died on July 23, 2024. Preceded in death in 2012 by her husband, James “Eddie” Marcum, a longtime janitor at JHS/IS 10 in Astoria, she was survived by her seven children, 35 grandchildren, and 10 great-grandchildren. On May 11, 2025, a sunny Mother’s Day in Astoria, a co-naming ceremony was held dedicating the corner of 28th Avenue and 44th Street in her honor as Elizabeth White Marcum Way.
"Committee Report of the Infrastructure Division," The Council of the City of New York, December 19, 2024
Shane O’Brien, “Astoria street co-named for Elizabeth White Marcum, mother of former Council Member Van Bramer,” Astoria Post, May 12, 2025
“Elizabeth E. Marcum dies at 84,” Queens Chronicle, July 25, 2024
P.S. 122 The Mamie Fay School Class of 1942, submitted by Judy Milo, Parent Coordinator, PS 122 Mamie Fay School
Mamie Fay (cropped from class photo), submitted by Judy Milo, Parent Coordinator, PS 122 Mamie Fay School
Mamie Fay (1872-1949) was the first principal of P.S. 122 in Astoria, now named in her honor as P.S. 122 The Mamie Fay School, where she served from 1925 until her retirement in 1942. Following the consolidation of Queens into New York City in 1898, she became the first teacher in the borough to be designated as a principal. As a member of the Queensborough Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, she also worked to protect children’s rights.
Born in Brooklyn to John and Mary Archer Fay, Mamie graduated from Flushing High School and Columbia University before beginning her career in education as a teacher in 1898. In 1905, she earned her principal’s license. Five years later, she became principal of what was then P.S. 7 in Astoria, moving on to serve at P.S. 122 when it first opened in 1925.
She was active in her community, serving as a member of the Teachers’ Council of the City of New York, the New York Principals Association, the Teachers’ Organization for Women’s Suffrage, and the League of Women Voters. In addition, she was the first woman to become a member of the Queensborough Chamber of Commerce.
Fay died at her home in Flushing on March 19, 1949. On September 20, 2024, the section of Ditmars Boulevard between 21st and 23rd Streets in Astoria was co-named Mamie Fay Way in her honor. The street is located directly in front of P.S. 122 Mamie Fay School where she served for 17 years.
"About Ms. Mamie Fay," P.S./ M.S. 122Q The Mamie Fay School, accessed September 25, 2025
"Miss Mamie Fay," The New York Times, March 22, 1949,
"Mamie Fay memorial," FindAGrave.com
“Rights for Amy Fay, 76, Tonight; Served in City Schools 44 Yrs.” Brooklyn Eagle, March 22, 1949, via Newspapers.com, accessed September 25, 2025
NYPD Police Portrait, Public Domain
Mary "Mae" Foley (1886-1967) shattered gender barriers within the NYPD, becoming one of its first female plainclothes detectives. Her pioneering work inspired over 2,000 women to join the force. She served from 1923 to 1945.
Born in Manhattan's Lower East Side Gas House District to Irish and French immigrant parents, Mary Foley always aspired to a police career, even after marrying young and having children. As an adult, she resided at 30-16 82nd Street in Jackson Heights, Queens.
Foley began her NYPD training in 1923 and joined the "Masher Squad," a unit dedicated to protecting women from predatory men. She was later assigned to detective work under Chief Inspector William Leahy, actively participating in raids with the Volstead Act enforcement squad (also known as the Bureau of Prohibition or Prohibition Unit). From 1925 to 1930, she was assigned to the 19th Precinct in Manhattan. In 1930, she transferred to the 108th Precinct in Queens, where she became a detective in the homicide division.
During her career, Foley worked with Manhattan District Attorney Thomas Dewey, playing a crucial role in the successful conviction of Italian-born gangster Charles "Lucky" Luciano and exposing the pro-Nazi organization, the German American Bund.
Foley also contributed to the war effort by helping to organize the Women's Volunteer Police Reserves during World War I, serving as its captain.
Her legacy is documented in the book The Girls Who Fought Crime: The Untold True Story of the Country's First Female Investigator and Her Crime Fighting Squad by Mari Eder.
In 2024, a street was named "Detective Mary "Mae" Foley Way" in her honor, due to its proximity to the former site of the NYPD's 108th Precinct.
"Committee Report of the Infrastructure Division," The Council of the City of New York, December 19, 2024
"POLICE WOMAN TO RETIRE; Mrs. Mae Foley Began Service in 1923 With 'Masher Squad,'" The New York Times, December 26, 1945
Gavin Newsham, "Mary Foley was a trailblazing 1920s NYC female police officer," New York Post, August 12, 2023
Eder, Mari K., "The Girls Who Fought Crime: The Untold True Story of the Country’s First Female Investigator and Her Crime Fighting Squad," Sourcebooks, August 8, 2023
Photo courtesy of the Greater Ridgewood Historical Society showing Officers and Board of Directors. Bottom row, left to right: Jane Panken, Carl Clemens, Maureen Walthers,Liza Lieser.
Photo by Aimai Reporter, 2022
Maureen Walthers (1934 – 2020) was the owner and publisher of the Ridgewood Times and Times Newsweekly.
Walthers was a homemaker in the 1970s when she wrote a letter to the editor of the Ridgewood Times about drug use at a playground a block away. The letter impressed the paper’s then-publisher, and she was offered a job as a writer - it began a five-decade association with the weekly newspaper covering the Greater Ridgewood area (Ridgewood, Glendale, Maspeth, and Middle Village). She was on the front lines covering the civic scene in Ridgewood and neighboring Bushwick, Brooklyn, during the 1970s. She would ride along with police officers and firefighters as they responded to emergencies in both communities and chronicled the rampant urban decay in Bushwick an award-winning seven-part series, “The Agony of Bushwick,” published in the Ridgewood Times in the summer and fall of 1977. The series brought further public awareness of the community’s woes, and action from the city to reverse the decline.
Walthers was one of the founding members of the Greater Ridgewood Historical Society and took an active role in helping to preserve and landmark the Onderdonk House, a colonial farmhouse on Flushing Avenue. She was also an active member of Queens Community Board 5 for many years and served for a time as the chair of its Public Safety Committee. She was also involved with the Greater Ridgewood Restoration Corporation, which promotes the preservation of the neighborhood’s housing stock. In 1981, she became the Ridgewood Times’ first female editor, as well as executive vice president and co-owner. She became owner of the paper and expanded it over the next three decades beyond the Greater Ridgewood area. She launched the Times Newsweekly in 1989, a version of the Ridgewood Times distributed in northwestern and southwestern Queens communities, extending out as far north as Astoria and as far south Howard Beach. The Times Newsweekly sponsored Cop of the Month awards at eight precincts covering western Queens and Bushwick.
Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022, http://www.nycstreets.info/
Rebecca Roche, "Maureen Walthers, former owner and publisher of Ridgewood Times, to be honored with street renaming ceremony," QNS.com, August 18, 2022, https://qns.com/2022/08/maureen-walthers-street-renaming/
Photo or Geraldine Ferraro courtesy of U.S. House of Representatives, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
Photo by Dacia Metes, 2022.
Geraldine Ferraro speaking at a podium at an event for women political congressional candidates in 1991. Cathey Steinberg, Sara Nichols, Hilda Pemberton, Representative Connie Morella and others are at left. Image from Library of Congress, Public Domain.
Geraldine Anne Ferraro (1935–2011) was the first woman nominated for vice president by a major U.S. political party and the first Italian American to run on a national ticket. She served as Walter Mondale’s Democratic running mate in the 1984 presidential election, though they ultimately lost the race.
Earlier in her career, she taught in Astoria, Queens, while attending Fordham University Law School at night. She passed the bar in 1960, the same year she married John Zaccaro. In 1978, the mother of three was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives, where she represented New York’s 9th District in Queens from 1979 to 1985.
Gil Tauber, "NYC Honorary Street Names," accessed June 15, 2022
"Geraldine Ferraro," Encyclopedia Britannica, accessed January 8, 2026