Jeanne d’Arc (1412-1431): This French heroine, a war leader beatified and later canonized, is a symbol of resistance and courage.
La Bolduc (1894-1941): A self-taught musician considered the first singer-songwriter in Quebec.
Irma LeVasseur (1877-1964): The first French Canadian woman doctor, she dedicated her life to healing the sick and founding children’s hospitals in Quebec.
Ada Blackjack (1898-1983): The sole survivor of an expedition on Wrangel Island, she was nicknamed the Robinson Crusoe of the Arctic.
Maggie Sirois (1865-1920): The strongest woman in the world, whose feats equaled those of Louis Cyr.
Anna Canfield (1772-1825): A forgotten pioneer, whose skills and vision allowed her to buy land and safeguard the future of Sherbrooke.
Claudette Colvin (1939–present): The overlooked heroine who refused to give up her bus seat, nine months before Rosa Parks.
Thérèse Casgrain (1896-1981): Politician, activist, and pioneer of women’s suffrage in Quebec.
Eva Tanguay (1878-1947): Queen of vaudeville in the early 20th century, and a forerunner of major American show-business stars.
Maude Abbott (1868-1940): Cardiac pathologist, physician, and curator. Author of the Atlas of Congenital Cardiac Disease (1936), a groundbreaking text in cardiac research.
Hedy Lamarr (1914-2000): Actress and inventor, whose innovation laid the foundation for modern technologies such as Wi-Fi, GPS, and Bluetooth.