All Trailblazers
Dorothy Height
Civil Rights & Activism

Dorothy Height

Born March 24, 1912 · Richmond, Virginia · Joined the Ancestors April 20, 2010
The godmother of the civil rights movement — Dorothy Height led the National Council of Negro Women for 40 years and was the only woman at the table with King, Wilkins, Young, and Randolph during the movement's defining moments.
Known For
President of NCNW for 40 years
Honor
Presidential Medal of Freedom, Congressional Gold Medal
Legacy
Champion of Black women's rights

Dorothy Irene Height was born in Richmond, Virginia and raised in Rankin, Pennsylvania. A brilliant student, she was accepted to Barnard College but turned away on registration day because the school had already filled its quota for Black students. She enrolled at New York University instead and earned both a bachelor's and master's degree.

Height became president of the National Council of Negro Women in 1957 and led it for the next 40 years. She was present at virtually every major moment of the civil rights era — she stood on the platform during the March on Washington, worked with Eleanor Roosevelt, and was the only woman in the "Big Six" civil rights leadership alongside King, Lewis, Wilkins, Young, and Farmer.

Despite her central role, Height was often overlooked and undercredited — a reflection of the sexism within the movement itself. She spent her life fighting for both racial justice and women's equality, understanding that the two could never be separated. She received the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Congressional Gold Medal before her death at 98.

"If the time is not ripe, we have to ripen the time."
— Dorothy Height
Share
Community Contribution

Suggest an Edit

Help us keep Dorothy Height's profile accurate and complete.

Helps our team verify the information.

Key Milestones

A Life in Firsts

1912
Born in Richmond, Virginia
1935
Meets Mary McLeod Bethune — a turning point in her life
1957
Becomes president of the National Council of Negro Women
1963
Stands on the platform at the March on Washington
1971
Founds the Women's Center for Education and Career Advancement
2004
Awarded Congressional Gold Medal
2010
Dies in Washington, D.C. at age 98

Join the Village

Get the Best of BOTWC Weekly

Our curated digest of the most powerful stories, newest firsts, and community highlights — delivered every Thursday.

Join 50,000+ subscribers. Unsubscribe anytime.