Nellie Tayloe Ross
Nellie Tayloe Ross (
November 29,
1876 -
December 19,
1977) was the first female governor of a U.S. state.
Ross was nominated for
governor of
Wyoming on the Democratic ticket after the death of her husband, William Bradford Ross on
October 2,
1924, from complications with appendectomy surgery. She was elected that
November 4 and on
January 5,
1925, Ross became the first female governor in the
United States. Roosevelt appointed her as the first woman director of the U.S. Mint in
1933, where she capably served until her retirement in
1953. She served the longest tenure of any woman, exactly 20 years. After her retirement, Ross contributed articles to various women's magazines and also traveled extensively. She made her last trip to Wyoming in
1972 at age 96.