Grace Raymond Hebard

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Tree dedicated to Grace Hebard’s memory. 

Grace Raymond Hebard may not have been the first woman in Wyoming to break the “glass ceiling,” but her achievements were nevertheless remarkable! Not only was Hebard the first woman admitted to the Wyoming State Bar in 1898, plus the first woman to practice law before the Wyoming Supreme Court, she was also an engineer, suffragist, librarian and historian.

Reared in Iowa, Hebard received a B.S. in engineering from the State University of Iowa in 1882, followed by an M.A. through a correspondence course in 1885. A job opportunity as a draftsman in the land office of the United States Surveyor General brought her and her family to Wyoming. Once here, her love of the state never waned.

Hebard became a member of the University of Wyoming Board of Trustees in 1891, serving as its secretary. Later, she taught political economy. By the end of her long career, she was heading the Department of Political Economy and Sociology. Hebard was a popular speaker and writer whose books were considered highly romanticized. These included the History and Government of Wyoming and Pathbreakers from River to Ocean.

As if that weren’t enough, Heard was also Wyoming’s reigning tennis champion for a time!

Learn more about Grace Raymond Hebard.

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