User:Chris.sherlock/Australian Women In Red/Australian women
47.7% completed (estimate)
A
edit100% completed (estimate)
- Gertrude Abbott (1846-1934) founder of a hospital for women
- Hilda Gertrude Abbott (1890-1984) broadcaster, interior designer and community worker
- Joan Stevenson Abbott (Judy) (1899-1975) nursing sister and army matron
- Ada Mary à Beckett (1872-1948) educationalist
- Essie Adele Ackland (1896-1975) singer
- Amy Vera Ackman (1886-1966) Sister of Charity and hospital administrator
- Jane Swain Adams (1851-1934) farmer
- Sophia Charlotte Louisa Adams (1832-1891) Dominican prioress
- Amy Hannah Adamson (1893–1963) headmistress
- May Mabel Adamson (1891–1966) headmistress
- Mary Ann Eliza Agnew (1857-1940) kindergarten teacher
- Linda Agostini (1905-1934) hairdresser
- Elizabeth Ahern (1877-1969) socialist propagandist
- Daphne Jessie Akhurst (1903-1933) tennis-player
- Lilian Helen Alexander (1861-1934) medical practitioner
- Catherine Mabel Joyce Allan (1896-1966) conchologist and museum curator
- Frances Elizabeth (Betty) Allan (1905–1952) statistician
- Margaret Theadora Allan (1889–1968) community worker
- Stella May Allan (1871-1962) journalist
- Mary Cecil Allen (1893-1962) artist, writer and lecturer on art
- Marion Ellen Lea Allnutt (1896–1980) welfare worker
- Mary Sophia Alston (1856–1932) charity worker
- Alice Elizabeth Foley Anderson (1897–1926) garage proprietor
- Ethel Campbell Louise Anderson (1883-1958) writer
- Florence Anderson (1871-1949), trade unionist
- Maybanke Susannah Anderson (1845-1927) feminist and educationist
- Phyllis Margery Anderson (1901-1957) pathologist
- Selina Sarah Elizabeth Anderson (1878-1964) parliamentary candidate, trade unionist and photographic retoucher
- Caroline Lillian Archer (1922–1978) telephonist and Aboriginal publicist
- Gail Archer, judge
- Ellen Arnold (1858–1931) missionary
- Zara Aronson (1864–1944) journalist and charity worker
- Ida Nancy Ashburn (1909–1980) headmistress
- Sylvia Rose Ashby (1908–1978) market researcher
- Olive Eva Anstey (1920-1983) hospital matron
- Mary Ellinor Lucy Archer (1893-1979) librarian and scientist
- Katie Louisa Ardill (1886-1955) medical practitioner
- Jessie Argyle (Gypsy Argyle) (1900-1955) domestic
- Lillian May Armfield (1884-1971) policewoman
- Millicent Sylvia Armstrong (1888-1973) playwright and farmer
- Alison Marjorie Ashby (1901-1987) botanical artist and plant collector
- Ellen Atkinson (1894–1965) Aboriginal community leader
- Matilda Ann Aston (1873-1947) blind writer and teacher
- Louisa Atkinson (1834-1872) early Australian writer, botanist and illustrator
- Charlotte Elizabeth (Lottie) Austin (1878–1933) community leader
- Elizabeth Phillips Austin (1821-1910) benefactor
- Florence Mary Austral (1892-1968) singer
B
edit81.1% completed (estimate)
- Edith Annesley Badham (1853–1920) headmistress
- Editha Olga Bailey (1903–1980) community worker
- Sarah Jane Baines (1866–1951) feminist
- Ada Winifred Weekes Baker (1866–1949) teacher of singing
- Catherine (Kate) Baker (1861–1953) teacher
- Elizabeth Anstice (Bessie) Baker (1849–1914) intellectual and social activist
- Effie Baker (1880–1968) photographer and Bahá'í
- Mabel Jewell Baker (1885–1967) headmistress
- Alice Marian Ellen Bale (1875–1955) artist
- Elizabeth Lindsay Banks (1849–1933) kindergarten mistress
- Yvonne (Fifi) Banvard (1901–1962) actress
- Nola Isabel Barber (1901–1985) mayor and community worker
- Lyndall Barbour (1916–1986) radio actress
- Doris Bardsley (1895–1968) nurse
- Jane Foss Barff (1863-1937) educationist
- Caroline Barker (1894–1988) artist
- Frances Barkman (1885–1946) teacher and Jewish welfare worker
- Mary Kate Barlow (1865–1934) charity worker and women's leader
- Marjorie Faith (Marjory) Barnard (1897-1987) writer and historian
- Kathleen Hope Barnes (1909–1981) nurse
- Emily Caroline Barnett (1860–1944) explorer
- Elise Barney (1810–1883) postmistress
- Margaret Barr (1904–1991) choreographer and teacher of dance-drama
- Edith Helen Barrett (1872–1939) medical practitioner
- Ellen Barron (1875–1951) nurse
- Johanna Barron (1865–1948) Brigidine nun
- Diane Barwick (1938–1986) anthropologist and Aboriginal rights activist
- Margaret Francis Ellen Baskerville (1861–1930) sculptor
- Nancy Bates, newspaper editor
- Genni Batterham (1955-1995) disability rights activist
- Dora Isabel Baudinet (1883–1945) nurse
- Barbara Baynton (1857–1929) writer
- Isabelle Bean (1862–1939) nurse, theosophist and feminist
- Annette Bear-Crawford (1853–1899) feminist
- Clarice Marjoribanks Beckett (1887–1935) painter
- Ruth Marjory Bedford (1882–1963) writer
- Doris Anne Beeston (1897–1940) kindergarten teacher
- Lucy Beeton (1829–1886) Aboriginal teacher and businesswoman
- Barbara Bell (1870–1957) Catholic educationist
- Jane Bell (1873–1959) hospital matron
- Mary Teston Luis Bell, (1903–1979) air force officer
- Agnes Mary Matilda Benham (1850–1932) socialist and advocate of sex reform
- Ellen Ida Benham (1871–1917) educationist
- Rosamund Agnes Benham (1874–1932)
- Agnes Jessie (Addie) Bennett (1880–1969) community worker
- Emily Bennett (1871–1941) feminist and political organiser
- Mary Montgomerie Bennett (1881–1961) teacher and advocate of Aboriginal rights
- Portia Mary Bennett (1898–1989) artist
- Louisa Benson (1845–1920) religious Sister and educationist
- Lucy Charlotte Benson (1860–1943) musician and theatrical entrepreneur
- Dame Alice Berry (1900–1978) Country Women's Association leader
- Margaret Berry (1832–1918) educationist
- Zoe Emma Bertles (1880–1975) librarian
- Amy Jane Best (1844–1932) schoolmistress
- Kathleen Annie Louise Best (1910–1957) nurse and army officer
- Marion Hall Best (1905–1988) interior designer
- Edith Bethel (1871–1929) political organizer
- Louisa Jane Bevan (1844–1933) community worker
- Dorothy Christina Beveridge (1894–1978) public servant
- Janet Biddlecombe (1866–1954) pastoralist and philanthropist
- Martha Sarah Bidmead (1862–1940) nurse
- Joan Bielski (1923-2012) feminist
- Daisy Bindi (1904–1962) Aboriginal activist
- Margaret Henrietta Bird (1888–1963) bookseller
- Sylvia Jessie Catherine Birdseye (1902–1962) bus driver
- Dora Eileen Birtles (1903–1992) author and journalist
- Marie Caroline Bjelke-Petersen (1874–1969) novelist
- Ruby Constance Ethel Blackall (1880–1951) charity organizer
- Dame Margaret Blackwood (1909–1986) botanist and geneticist
- Dame Helen Frances Blaxland (1907–1989) conservationist
- Rosemary Beatrice (Bea) Bligh (1916–1973) gardener
- Isla Stuart Blomfield (1865–1959) nurse, sanitary inspector and health visitor
- Mary Bluett, trade unionist
- Elise Margot Blumann (1897–1990) artist
- Ruby Willmet Board (1880–1963) voluntary welfare worker
- Irene Bolger, trade unionist
- Ann Fraser Bon (1838–1936) philanthropist
- Kathleen Patricia (Kath) Bonnin (1911–1985) army nurse
- Angela Elizabeth Josephine Booth (1869–1954) eugenicist
- Anna Booth, trade unionist
- Doris Regina Booth (1895–1970) nursing volunteer and goldminer
- Mary Booth (1869–1956) physician and welfare worker
- Lady Constance Jean Bonython (redirect to dude) (1891–1977) charity worker
- Annabella Alexandrina Campbell Boswell (1826–1914) diarist and gentlewoman
- Eleanor Elizabeth Bourne, (1878–1957) medical practitioner
- Una Mabel Bourne (1882–1974) pianist and composer
- Ethel Jessie Bowe (1906–1961) army matron-in-chief
- Helen Rosalie (Ros) Bower (1923–1980) community arts director
- Edith Susan Boyd (1880–1961) artist and dramatist
- Eileen Alberta Boyd (1890–1975) singer
- Eileen Burton Bradley (1911–1976) bush regenerator
- Jean Isobel (Jeana) Bradley (1906–1991) university lecturer and theatre producer
- Joan Burton Bradley (1916–1982) bush regenerator
- Mary Hannah (May) Brahe (1884-1956)
- Jennie Frances Brenan (1877–1964) dancing teacher
- Molly Brennan, teacher
- Sarah Octavia Brennan (1867–1928) teacher and nun
- Sarah Agnes Angus Brewster (1874–1957) headmistress and naturalist
- Hilda Maggie Bridges, (1881–1971) novelist
- Shirley Margaret Brifman, (1935–1972) prostitute
- Louisa Briggs (1836–1925) Aboriginal leader, dormitory matron and nurse
- Annie Bright (1840–1913) journalist and spiritualist
- Maria May Brodney (1894–1973) labour activist
- Ivy Brookes (1883–1970) community worker
- Dame Mabel Balcombe Brookes (1890–1975) society and charity leader
- Doris Jocelyn Brown (1898–1971) landscape gardener
- Coral Browne (1913–1991) stage and screen actor
- Emma Ann Browne (1857–1941) philanthropist
- Ida Browne (1900–1976) geologist
- Louisa Alice Brown (1875–1959) factory inspector
- Margaret Hamilton Brown (1858–1952) headmistress
- Mary Home (Mamie) Brown (1878–1968) schoolteacher
- Christine Dorothy (Dot) Brunton, (1890–1977) actress
- Dorothy Josephine Bruton (1866–1938) Sister of Charity
- Mary Catherine Bruton (1862–1937) Sister of Charity
- Edith Bryan (1872–1963) teacher of the deaf
- Jane Bryan (1805–1893) pioneer
- Beryl Annear Bryant, (1893–1973) actress and producer
- Marianne Helena Brydon (1864–1941) educationist
- Florence Griffiths Buchanan (1861–1913) missionary and teacher
- Gwynneth Vaughan Buchanan (1886–1945) zoologist
- Vera Winifred Buck (1903–1986) composer and pianist
- Emily Hemans Bulcock (1877–1969) poet and journalist
- Lilian Ethel Bullen (1894–1965) circus proprietor
- Agnes Buntine (1822–1896) pastoralist and bullocky
- Gladys Selby Buntine (1901–1992) Girl Guide commissioner
- Beryl Emma Burbridge, (1902–1988) hospital matron
- Phyllis Le Cappelaine Burke, (1900–1969) social reformer and housing commissioner
- Kathleen Mary (Kate) Burrow (1899–1987) educator and community leader
- Winifred Charlotte Hillier Crosse Burston (1889–1976) pianist
- Dame Rita Mary Buxton (1896–1982) community worker
- Ethel Byrne (1895–1957) physician and pathologist
- Lorna Byrne (1897–1989) agriculture extension officer and broadcaster
- Wendy Bacon, journalist
- Anna Frederika (Freda) Bage (1883–1970) university teacher
- Elizabeth Margaret Bannan (1909–1977) educationist
- Mary Gonzaga Barry, (1834–1915) mother superior
- Charlotte Barton, (1796–1867) governess, feminist and author
- Lady Flora Marjorie (Marnie) Bassett (1889–1980) historian
- Daisy May Bates (1863–1951) anthropologist
- Thelma Florence Bate (1904–1984) community leader
- Margaret Battye (1909–1949) lawyer
- Jane (Jean) Beadle (1868–1942) Labor leader, feminist and social worker
- Sophia (Zoe) Benjamin (1882–1962) pioneer of kindergarten work and of parent and sex education
- Susan Grace Benny (1872–1944) local government councillor and housewife
- Ada Beveridge (1875–1964) Country Women's Association leader
- Doris Amelia Blackburn (1889–1970) politician, peace campaigner and civil rights activist
- Gertrud Bodenwieser (1890–1959) dancer, choreographer and teacher
- Grace Fairley Boelke (1870–1948) medical practitioner
- Diamantina Bowen (1833–1893) governor’s wife
- Euphemia Bridges Bowes (1816–1900) wife, mother and social reformer
- Anna Teresa Brennan (1879–1962) lawyer
- Florence Maud Broadhurst (1899–1977) designer, businesswoman, singer and banjolele player
- Ada Bromham (1880–1965) feminist and temperance worker
- Fanny Eileen Brownbill (1890-1948) politician
- Diana Bryant, judge
- Mary Bryant (1765-1794) convict
- Lucy Meredith Bryce (1897-1968) haematologist
- Victoria Leonie (Pat) Byrnes, (1888–1964) school inspector
- Marie Beuzeville Byles (1900-1979) solicitor and conservationist
C
edit55.3% completed (estimate)
- Ada Cambridge (1844-1926) writer
- Wendy Caird trade unionist
- Emma Jane Callaghan (1884–1979) Aboriginal nurse and midwife
- Ellen (Eileen) Callanan (1880–1947) religious Sister and educator
- Elizabeth (Bessy) Cameron (1851–1895) Aboriginal teacher
- Kathleen Gordon (Kay) Cameron (1899–1987) rural community leader and environmentalist
- Maud Martha Cameron (1886–1973) headmistress
- Jean May Campbell (1901–1984) author
- Dame Kate Isabel Campbell (1899-1986) paediatrician
- Persia Campbell (1898–1974) economist
- Mary Card (1861–1940) crochet pattern designer
- Minnie Lindsay Carpenter (1873–1960) Salvationist author
- Stella Grace Maisie Carr (1912-1988) botanist and conservationist
- Neva Josephine Mary Carr-Glyn (1908–1975) actress
- Dorothy Carroll (1907-1970) geologist
- Dorothy Carroll (hospital matron) (1897–1966) hospital matron
- Winifred Anderson Carruthers (1890–1966) Young Women's Christian Association administrator
- Annie Carvosso, feminist
- Clare Josephine Cascarret (1902–1977) city councillor
- Deirdre Cash (1924-1963) novelist
- Alice Alanna Cashin (1870–1939) army nurse
- Ellen Imelda (Mel) Cashman (1891–1983) union organiser and arbitration inspector
- Margaret Catchpole (1762-1819) convict and pioneer
- Mary Fanny Cathcart (1833–1880) actress
- Dorothy Marguerite Catts (1896–1961) businesswoman and novelist
- Dorothy Gwendolen Cawood (1884–1962) nurse
- Minnie Elizabeth Cawthorn (1898–1966) headmistress and aviatrix
- Céleste de Chabrillan (1824–1909) courtesan and author
- Azaria Chantel Loren Chamberlain (1980-1980) missing infant
- Margaret Olive Chandler (1934–1963) housewife
- Phoebe Chapple (1879–1967) medical practitioner
- Ethel Jean Sophia Charlton (1898–1930) novelist
- Muriel Jean Eliot Chase (1880–1936) journalist and philanthropist
- Florence Chatfield (1867–1949) nurse
- Dame Alice Isabel Chisholm (1856-1954) organizer and superintendent of soldiers' canteens
- Margaret Sheila Chisholm (1895–1969) high society beauty
- Constance Mary Charlotte (Connie) Christie (1908–1989) writer and illustrator of children's books, designer and photographer
- Ann Rachel Church (1925–1975) set and costume designer
- Caroline Emily Clark (1825-1911) philanthropist and reformer
- Mona Matilda (Monica) Clare (1924–1973) Aboriginal political activist and author
- Janet Clarke (1851–1909) philanthropist
- Ellen Clark (1915–1988) naturalist
- Margaret Turner Clarke (1836–1887) harpist and nurse
- Marian Clarke (1853–1933) headmistress
- Helen Agnes Cleary (1914–1987) air force matron-in-chief
- Ella Cleggett (1884–1960) schoolteacher and welfare worker
- Margaret Clement (1881–1952) missing person
- Harriet Jemima Winifred Clisby (1830–1931) physician and feminist
- Evelyn May Clowes
- Katherine Mary Clutterbuck (1861-1946) Anglican Sister
- Fanny Kate Boadicea Cocks (1875-1954) policewoman and welfare worker
- Fanny Cohen (1887–1975) headmistress
- Carola (Ola) Cohn (1892-1964) sculptor
- Ida Cohen (1867–1970) charity worker
- Rieke Cohen (1887–1964) Zionist leader
- Geraldine Christein Wilhelmina Collee (1906–1982) medical practitioner
- Marie Elizabeth Collier (1927–1971) dramatic soprano
- Marjorie Chave Collison (1887–1982) lecturer and feminist
- Doris Catherine Condon (1908–1979) mayor
- Marjorie Margaret Conley, (1931–1959) soprano
- Madge Irene Connor (1874-1952) policewoman
- Marjorie Connor (1906–1991) nursing administrator and educator
- Evelyn Augusta Conyers (1870–1944) matron-in-chief
- Janet Pierson Cooper (1891–1984) medical practitioner, mayor and community worker
- Marjorie Jean Coppel (1900–1970) community worker
- Laura Mary Louisa Corbin (1841–1906) crèche founder
- Ada Elizabeth Corder (1895–1987) pianist and music teacher
- Elizabeth Pearl Corkhill (1887–1985) nurse
- Elsie Marion Cornish (1870–1946) landscape gardener
- Sophia Corrie (1832–1913) farmer, orchardist and writer
- Dame Gertrude Ann Cosgrove (1882–1962) community worker
- Ida Dorothy Ottley Cottrell (1902–1957) writer
- Dame Elizabeth May Ramsay Couchman (1876–1982) political organiser and activist
- Emily Coungeau (1860–1936) poet
- Robina Fordyce Cowper (1866–1948) church worker and women’s rights advocate
- Diana Craig (1912–1992) orthoptist
- Elinor Frances Craig (1888–1969) headmistress
- Frances Eileen Craig (1896–1974) community worker
- Sybil Mary Frances Craig (1901–1989) artist
- Alison Hilma Cranley (1910–1987) schoolteacher and unionist
- Dorothy Crawford (1911–1988) radio and television producer
- Alice Hay Creswick (1889–1973) Red Cross commandant and kindergarten administrator
- Helen Creed trade unionist
- Alice Guerin Crist (1876–1941) author and journalist
- Ida Lucy Croft (1878–1957) pharmacist
- Hope Croll (1901–1982) army and hospital matron
- Minard Fannie Crommelin (1881-1972) postmistress and conservationist
- Grace Adela Williams Crowley (1890–1979) painter
- Janet Agnes Cumbrae Stewart (1883–1960) artist
- Alice Mary Cummins (1898–1943) businesswoman
- Gladys Maeva Cumpston (1887–1975) community worker, gardener and Braille transcriber
- Mary Ellen Cuper (1847–1877) Aboriginal postmistress and telegraphist
- Grace Johnston Cuthbert-Browne (1900–1988) medical practitioner
- Edith Mary Cuthbert (1891–1988) community worker
- Margaret Gardiner Cuthbertson (1864–1944) factory inspector
- Ada Cambridge (1844–1926) writer
- Elizabeth (Bessie) Campbell (1870–1964) banjoist
- Grace Elizabeth Jennings Carmichael (1867–1904) poet and nurse
- Ethel Marian (Maie) Casey (1891–1983) writer, artist and flyer
- Amy Eliza Castles (1880–1951) dramatic soprano
- Dame Alice Isabel Chisholm (1856–1954) organizer and superintendent of soldiers' canteens
- Caroline Chisholm (1808–1877) philanthropist
- Annie Evelyn (Anne) Clark (1903–1983) netball administrator
- Charmian Clift (1923–1969) writer
- Edith Coleman (1874–1951) naturalist
- Patricia Anne Conlon (1939–1979) feminist, labour movement activist and public servant
- Caroline Ethel Cooper (1871–1961) letter-writer, traveller and musician
- Lilian Violet Cooper (1861–1947) medical practitioner
- Emma Crawford (1864–1939) teacher and mother superior
- Rose Ann Creal (1865–1921) nurse
- Irene Crespin (1896–1980) geologist and micropalaeontologist
- Zora Bernice May Cross (1890–1964) writer
- Ellen Dymphna (Nell) Cusack (1902–1981) author
D
edit56.3% completed (estimate)
- Beatrice Eliza Dacomb (1863–1947) co-inventor of Dacomb shorthand
- Clara Thurston Dacomb (1867–1946) co-inventor of Dacomb shorthand
- Marguerite Ludovia Dale (1883–1963) feminist and playwright
- Henrietta Jessie Shaw Daley (1890–1943) community worker
- Isabella Dalgarno, (1805–1878) temperance advocate
- Marie (Ma) Dalley (1880–1965) scrap-metal merchant and mayor
- Dolly Dalrymple (1808–1864) Aboriginal matriarch
- Mother Mary Berchmans (Anne) Daly (1860–1924) founder of hospitals
- Jean Mary Daly (1897–1986) women’s rights activist
- Dame Mary Dora (May) Daly (1896–1983) charity worker
- Phyllis May Danaher (1908–1991) ballet teacher and examiner
- Anne Dangar (1885–1951) painter and potter
- Beatrice Dean Darbyshire (1901–1988) artist
- Constance Muriel Davey (1882–1963) psychologist
- Caroline Martha (Cara) David (1856–1951) community worker
- Ethel Sarah Davidson (1872–1939) nurse
- Natalia (Nat) Davies (1907–1951) schoolteacher and defence worker
- Stella Marguerite Davies (1885–1965) hospital almoner
- Ruby Claudia Davy (1883–1949) musician
- Annie Maria Dawbin (1816–1905) pioneer and diarist
- Clare Deacon (1891–1952) nurse
- Maude Kathleen Deasey (1909–1968) teacher, army officer and administrator
- Hazel Estelle De Berg (1913–1984) oral history pioneer
- Mary Clementina De Garis (1881–1963) obstetrician
- Lavinia Florence de Loitte (1881–1962) actress and singer
- Lucy de Neeve (1906–1976) nurse and administrator
- Frances Alexandra Mabel Letitia (Frankie) Derham (1894–1987) artist and art educator
- Anna Maria Desmond (1839–1921) nun and teacher
- Nancy Nugent Dexter (1923–1983) journalist
- Robin Elizabeth Dicks (1940–1975) nurse and aviatrix
- Lorna Dixon (1917–1976) Aboriginal linguist and cultural preserver
- Emma Elizabeth Dixson (1844–1922) charity worker
- Agnes Dobson (1904–1987) actor, theatre director and writer
- Emily Dobson (1842–1934) philanthropist
- Beatrice Olive Victoria Dodd (1897–1968) social worker
- Minnie Dodds (1860–1938) writer and community worker
- Ettie Dodge (1885–1973) vigoro administrator
- Muriel Knox Doherty (1896–1988) nurse and air force principal matron
- Edna Nell Doig (1915–1988) army matron-in-chief
- Dorothy Eleanor Dolling (1897–1967) community worker and journalist
- Agnes Marie Johanna Dorsch (1871–1958) teacher
- Helen Elizabeth (Nellie) Dougharty (1886–1968) community worker
- Cecilia Downing (1858–1952) temperance worker, community activist and political organizer
- Desmonde Florence Downing (1920–1975) stage designer
- Henrietta Drake-Brockman (1901–1968) author
- Ann (Anne) Drew (1822–1907) welfare worker
- Marien Oulton Dreyer (1911–1980) writer and journalist
- Irene Melville Drummond (1905–1942) army matron
- Ruth Janet (Lute) Drummond (1879–1949) operatic coach
- Anne Drysdale (1792–1853) woman squatter
- Lady Rachel Dudley (1867–1920)
- Elsie Dumolo (1879–1963) elocutionist
- Nona Dumolo (1877–1966) headmistress
- Annie Jane Duncan (1858–1943) factory inspector
- Alice Monkton Duncan-Kemp, (1901–1988) author
- Dorothy Harriette Dunckley (1890–1972) actress and make-up artist
- Mary Elizabeth Duncombe (1899–1980) Sister of Mercy
- Eliza Hamilton Dunlop (1796–1880) lyric writer and student of the Aboriginals
- Emily Dutton (1884–1962) musician, artist and Red Cross worker
- Diana Joan (Ding) Dyason (1919–1989) university lecturer and historian of medicine
- Louise Berta Dyer, (1884–1962) patron of the arts and music publisher
- Moira Lenore Dynon (1920–1976) welfare worker and scientist
- Moya Dyring, (1909–1967) artist
- Jane (Jean) Daley (1881–1948) political organizer
- Anne Patricia Dalgarno, (1909–1980) politician, community leader and nurse
- Elsie Jean Dalyell (1881–1948) pathologist
- Zelda D'Aprano, trade unionist
- Dame Constance Elizabeth D'Arcy (1879–1950) obstetrician and gynaecologist
- Eleanor Dark (1901–1985) author
- Bessie Ellen Davidson (1879–1965) artist
- Beatrice Deloitte Davis (1909–1992) editor
- Norma Lochlenah Davis (1905–1945) poet
- Mary Campbell (Mollie) Dawbarn, (1902–1982) biochemist and nutritional physiologist
- Gloria Dawn (1929–1978) entertainer
- Mary Elizabeth Kathleen Dulcie Deamer (1890–1972) writer and Bohemian
- Lillian Daphne de Lissa (1885–1967) educator
- Clara (Clare) Dennis (1916–1971) swimmer
- Enid Derham (1882–1941) university lecturer and poet
- Jane (Jean) Devanny (1894–1962) writer
- Patricia Devanny (1913–1980) political activist
- Matilda Mary (Tilly) Devine, (1900–1970) madam
- Caroline Dexter (1819–1884) feminist
- Ellen Dickson (1895–1984) community worker
- Amalie Dietrich (1821–1891) naturalist
- Ruth Violet Dobson (1918–1989) diplomat
- Eliza Emily Donnithorne (1826–1886) recluse and eccentric
- Annie Dorrington (1866–1926) artist
- Emmeline Freda Du Faur (1882–1935) mountaineer
- Henrietta Augusta Dugdale (1827–1918) feminist
- Harriet Alice Dumolo (1875–1944) kindergarten teacher
- Ada Constance Duncan (1896–1970) welfare activist and international affairs specialist
- Laura Duncan (1875–1955) pastoralist and charity worker
- Louisa Margaret Dunkley (1866–1927) union leader and feminist
- Sarah (Fanny) Durack (1889–1956) swimmer
- Catherine Winifred (Kate) Dwyer (1861–1949) schoolteacher and Labor leader
- Moira Lenore Dynon, (1920–1976) welfare worker and scientist
E
edit41.7% completed (estimate)
- Millicent Eastwood (1872–1947) landlady
- Lucy Harriet Eatock (1874–1950) political activist
- Margaret Dorothy (Dot) Edis (1890–1981) nurse
- Catherine Beatrice (Caddie) Edmonds (1900–1960) barmaid
- Rosina Mary Edmunds (1900–1956) architect and town planner
- Rose Edouin (1844–1925) – redirect to husband
- Agnes Edwards (1873–1928) Aboriginal craftworker
- Marion (Bill) Edwards (1874–1956) transsexual barman, pony trainer and bookmaker
- Katherine Rose Egan (1861–1951) charity worker
- Kathleen Mary Egan (1890–1977) Dominican Sister and educationist
- Elizabeth Moulton Eggleston (1934–1976) academic lawyer and activist
- Anne Josephine Chloe Elder (1918–1976) ballet dancer and poet
- Alice Gordon Elliott (1886–1977) nurse and community worker
- Della Elliott, trade unionist
- Leah Madeleine (Madge) Elliott (1896–1955) dancer and actor
- Melicent Jane (Jean) Ellis (1887–1974) founder of the Penguin Club
- Evelyn Paget Evans (1881–1960) administrator
- Mary Alice Evatt (1898–1973) art patron
- Gladys Gordon Everett (1888–1971) headmistress
- Minnie Rebecca Everett (1874–1956) dancer and producer
- Florence Maude Ewart (1864–1949) musician
- Joyce Vera Mary Ewart (1916–1964) artist and teacher
- Joyce Eileen Eyre (1909–1950) teacher and academic
- Gladys Elphick (1904–1988) Aboriginal community leader
F
edit46.2% completed (estimate)
- Irene Florence Fairbairn, (1899–1974) Girl Guide commissioner
- Mary Elizabeth Fairfax (1858–1945) philanthropist and women's leader (redirect to diff person)
- Ruth Beatrice Fairfax (1878–1948) a founder of the Country Women's Association
- Eugenia Falleni (1875–1938) convicted murderer
- Marie Langley Farquharson (1883–1954) schoolteacher, journalist and community worker
- Phoebe Elizabeth Farrar (1868–1960) bushwoman
- Mary Martha Farrelly (1866–1943) social worker and diet reformer
- Julia Warren Farr (1824–1914) charity worker
- Rhoda Mary Felgate (1901–1990) speech and drama teacher and theatre director
- Helen Wilson Fell (1849–1935) diarist and philanthropist
- Minnie Felstead trade unionist
- Mary Jane Fennescey (1878–1946) church benefactor
- Esmé (Ezzie) Fenston (1908–1972) journalist
- Jean Elsie Ferguson (1909–1979) hospital matron
- Maria Teresa Ferrari (artist) (1884–1969) artist
- Eliza Ann Fewings (1857–1940) schoolteacher
- Isabel Margaret Fidler (1869–1952) tutor to women students
- Mabel Maude Fidler (1871–1960) headmistress
- Dorothy Vivienne Fielder (1890–1972) teacher of bridge
- Una Lucy Fielding (1888–1969) neuroanatomist
- Reta Mildred Findlay (1893–1954) businesswoman
- Esme Mary Sorrett (Molly) Fink (1894–1967) rani of Pudukota (Pudukkottai)
- Miriam (Mina) Fink (1913–1990) Jewish community leader
- Mary McKenzie Finlay (1870–1923) matron
- Dorothy Mary Kell (Mollie) Finnis (1903–1970) physiotherapist
- Bettie Fisher (1939–1976) singer and Aboriginal theatre administrator
- Mary Lucy Fisher (Lala) (1872–1929) poet and editor
- Dame Doris Fitton (1897–1985) theatrical producer, director and actor
- Lily Kathleen Pattie Fitzgibbons (1892–1978) schoolteacher, bus proprietor and hotelier
- Hope Verity Fitzhardinge (1908–1986) teacher and bookseller
- Aileen Fitzpatrick (1897–1974) community worker, teacher and social work educator
- Kathleen Fitzpatrick (Australian academic) (1905–1990) historian
- Rosa Catherine Fiveash (1854–1938) botanical artist
- Jane Ada Fletcher (1870–1956) teacher, ornithologist and author
- Mary (Isabel) Flinn (1894–1959) teacher and housewife
- Sheila Mary Florance (1916–1991) actor
- Mary Ethel Hayter Florey (1900–1966) medical historian
- Patricia Mary Bryson Flower (1914–1977) crime novelist and television playwright
- Sara Flower (1823–1865) opera singer and teacher of singing
- Julia Teresa Flynn (1878–1947) educationist
- Mary Hannay Foott (1846–1918) teacher and poet
- Ada Lorna Forbes (1890–1976) actress
- Catherine Ellen Forbes (1874–1946) religious sister and educationist
- Florrie Forde (1875–1940) music hall artist
- Eliza Forlonge (1784–1859) pastoralist
- Mabel Forrest (1872–1935) writer
- Ida Muriel Forsyth (1884–1953) nurse and community worker
- Mary Fortune (1833–1910) author
- Baroness Rachel Forster charity worker
- Dorothy Isabel May Foster (1908–1981) radio producer, scriptwriter and actress
- Elizabeth Lilian Fowler (1886–1954) alderman and politician
- Ethel Carrick Fox (1872–1952) artist
- Andree Marcelle Frame (1910–1967) masseuse and childbirth educator
- May Francis (later Brodney), trade unionist
- Susan Francis (1877–1946) midwife and political activist
- Lady Jane Franklin (1791–1875) protagonist, governor's lady and patron of science
- Stella Maria Sarah Miles Franklin (1879–1954) writer
- Eliza Fraser (1798–1858) shipwreck victim and source of myth and legend
- Ursula Frayne (1816–1885) mother superior
- Valerie French (lawyer) lawyer and judge
- Helen Fryer journalist
- Lillian Mary Frost (1870–1953) organist
- Jane Fryer (1832–1917) political and religious radical
- Mary Eliza Fullerton (1868–1946) writer
- Eileen Furley (1900–1985) Liberal politician
G
edit93.4% completed (estimate)
- Rubina Hope Gainfort (Ruby) (1890–1985) headmistress
- Marie Carola Franciska Roselyne Galway (1876–1963) charity and civic worker, and governor's wife
- Lucy Arabella Stocks Garvin (1851–1938) headmistress
- Minnie May Gates (1878–1966) community worker and women's leader
- Mary Eliza Bakewell Gaunt (1861–1942) novelist and traveller
- Portia Geach (1873–1959) artist and feminist
- Margaret Gee, journalist
- Heather Doris Gell (1896–1988) kindergarten teacher, eurhythmics pioneer and broadcaster
- Dorothy Edna Genders (1892–1978) Anglican deaconess
- Doris May Gentile (1894–1972) writer
- Madeline Rees George (1851–1931) headmistress
- Clara Lazar Geroe (1900–1980) psychiatrist
- Susanne Vilhelmine Gether (1857–1911) woodcarver
- Geraldine Scholastica Gibbons (1817–1901) mother superior
- Cecilia May Gibbs (1877–1969) author
- Pearl Mary Gibbs (Gambanyi) (1901–1983) Aboriginal leader
- Dorothy Gibson (teacher) (1899–1978) teacher, communist and peace activist
- Elizabeth Dickson Gibson (Bessie) (1868–1961) artist
- Freda Evelyn Gibson (1908–1977) flying doctor
- Gladys Ruth Gibson (1901–1972) educationist and women's leader
- Grace Isabel Gibson (1905–1989) radio executive producer
- Julia Gibson (1872–1953) fortune-teller
- Jeanette Anne Gilbert (1883–1960) educationist
- Boronia Lucy Giles (Bonnie) (1909–1978) journalist
- Pat Giles, trade unionist
- Helen Elizabeth Gillan (1873–1955) voluntary worker and social reformer
- Eunice Elizabeth Perrott Gill (1918–1987) sportswoman, administrator, coach and academic
- Margaret Sylvia Gilliland (1917–1990) biochemist
- Dame Mary Jean Gilmore (1865–1962) writer
- Marie-Louise Victoire Girardin (1754–1794) ship’s steward and cross-dresser
- Peggy Winsome Glanville-Hicks (1912–1990) composer and music critic
- Eleanor Glencross (1876–1950) feminist and housewives' advocate
- Dorothy Ada Goble (1910–1990) politician
- Annie Mackenzie Golding (1855–1934) feminist teacher
- Isabella Theresa Golding (Belle) (1864–1940) public servant
- Sarah Goldsmith (1846–1940) charity worker
- Vida Jane Goldstein (1869–1949) feminist and suffragist
- Agnes Knight Goode (1872–1947) social and political activist
- Lillie Elizabeth Goodisson (1860–1947) racial hygienist
- Ann Alison Goodlet (1824–1903) church worker and philanthropist
- Elizabeth Mary Goodlet (1854–1926) church worker and philanthropist
- Cora Gooseberry (1777–1852) Aboriginal woman
- Ann Gordon (superintendent) (1795–1868) female factory superintendent
- Margaret Jane Gordon (1880–1962) singer
- Kathleen Ann Gorham (Kathy) (1928–1983) dancer
- Eleanor Lilian Gladys Gough (1887–1967) teacher of dressmaking
- Elizabeth Gould (illustrator) (1804–1841) natural history artist
- Ellen Julia Gould (Nellie) (1860–1941) nurse
- Zara Eileen Gowrie (1879–1965) charity worker
- Margaret Graham (1889–1966) kindergarten teacher and broadcaster
- Margaret Graham (1860–1942) nursing sister and army matron
- Margherita Grandi (Maggie) (1892–1972) opera singer
- Gwendolyn Muriel Grant (1877–1968) artist
- Octavia Grave (1890–1974)
- Ethel Gray (1876–1962) nursing sister and army matron
- Isabel Gray (1851–1929) hotelier and storekeeper
- Alice Jane Green (1863–1966) headmistress
- Anne Eliza Green (1869–1954) artist
- Anne Syrett Green (1858–1936) welfare worker and evangelist
- Dorothy Green (writer) (1915–1991) poet, literary critic, academic and peace activist
- Anne Green (1884–1965) missionary and nurse
- Florence Emily Green (1862–1926) headmistress
- Eleanor Constance Greenham (Ella) (1874–1957) medical practitioner
- Isabel Alice Green (Belle) (1893–1984) manager
- Ettie Gwendoline Greenwood (1906–1977) benefactress
- Clara Puella Greig (1877–1957) tutor
- Grata Flos Matilda Greig (1880–1958) barrister and solicitor
- Jane Stocks Greig (Jean) (1872–1939) medical practitioner
- Janet Lindsay Greig (Jenny) (1874–1950) medical practitioner
- Maysie Coucher Greig (1901–1971) romantic novelist
- Stella Fida Greig (1889–1913) law graduate
- Henrietta Greville (1861–1964) labour organizer
- Edith Grieve (1892–1972) illustrator
- Rachel Grieve (1885–1977) weaver
- Marion Lucy Mahony Griffin (1871–1961) architect
- Mary Harriett Griffith (1849–1930) philanthropist
- Glynde Nesta Griffiths (1889–1968) author and philanthropist
- Gwendolin Winifred Griffiths (1886–1968) investor and socialite
- Caroline Grills (1888–1960) poisoner
- Louise Catherine Grimes (1907–1990) musician and schoolteacher
- Beatrice Grimshaw (1870–1953) writer
- Mary Leman Grimstone (1796–1869) author and feminist
- Jessie Grover (1843–1906) journalist and sericulturist
- Julia Margaret Guerin (Bella) (1858–1923) feminist, political activist and teacher
- Beryl Annie Blanche Guertner (1917–1981) magazine editor and author
- Lucy Edith Gullett (1876–1949) medical practitioner and philanthropist
- Jeannie Gunn (1870–1961) author
- Mary Gunn (1884–1967) eisteddford secretary
- Bessie Jean Thompson Guthrie (1905–1977) designer, publisher, feminist and campaigner for children's rights
- Mary Valentine Gutteridge (1887–1962) kindergarten principal
H
edit38.3% completed (estimate)
- Deborah Vernon Hackett (1887–1965) mining company director and welfare worker
- Patricia Hackett (1908–1963) theatrical producer, actress and lawyer
- Helen Joyce Haenke (1916–1978) poet and playwright
- Dorothy Jean Hailes (1926–1988) medical practitioner
- Gladys Adeline Hain (1887–1962) lawyer, journalist and housewives' association president
- Eliza Rowdon Hall (1847–1916) philanthropist
- Elsie Maude Stanley Hall (1877–1976) pianist
- Lesley Hall, disability rights activist
- Ida Gertrude Margaret Halley (1867–1939) medical officer and feminist
- Irene Slater Hall (1888–1961) hospital matron
- Marie Montgomerie Hamilton (1891–1955) pathologist and hockey administrator
- Eunice Hanger (1911–1972) playwright and schoolteacher
- Rose Hanigan (1864–1952) Sister of Mercy
- Barbara Hanrahan (1939–1991) writer and artist
- Ethel Frances Hanrahan (1909–1981) army and repatriation hospital matron
- Gwendoline Dorothea Julie Hansen (1896–1971) film censor
- Hilda Mary Hanton (1884–1954) hospital matron
- Catherine Hardess (1889–1970) artist and designer
- Mary Veronica Hardy (1931–1985) entertainer
- Lesbia Venner Harford (1891–1927) poet
- Constance Elizabeth Harker (1875–1964) headmistress
- Margaret Hilda Harper (1879–1964) paediatrician
- Edith Mary Harrhy (1893–1969) composer and entertainer
- Mary Packer Harris (1891–1978) teacher of art
- Hazel Joyce Harrison (1905–1970) kindergarten principal
- Rita May Wilson Harris (1888–1975) community worker
- Helen Hart (feminist preacher) (1842–1908) feminist preacher and lecturer
- Iris Correll Hart (1910–1983) singer, actor and director
- Edythe Ellison Harvie (1902–1984) architect
- Marian Fleming Harwood (1846–1934) scholar, pacifist and philanthropist
- Eliza Marsden Hassall (1834–1917) clergyman’s daughter and philanthropist
- Elizabeth Hastings (disability discrimination commissioner), disability discrimination commissioner [1]
- Martha Madge Hateley (1906–1950) air force matron
- Fifi Olive Annette Hawthorne (1899–1986) headmistress
- Catherine Hayes (soprano) (?–1861) soprano
- Vina Evelyn Hayes (Evie) (1912–1988) entertainer
- Margaret Fordyce Dalrymple Hay (1889–1975) clerk and librarian
- Olga Janet Hay (1891–1974) headmistress
- Muriel Agnes Heagney (1885–1974) trade unionist and feminist
- Eileen Mary Healy (1888–1966) Sister of Mercy
- Gertrude Healy (1894–1984) musician and Sister of Mercy
- Mary Healy (1865–1952) Sister of Charity and hospital administrator
- Mary Estelle Healy (Molly) (1915–1971) charity worker and socialite
- Mary Gabrielle Healy (1908–1980) Catholic nun, musician and liturgist
- Amy Elizabeth Heap (1874–1956) artist and illustrator
- Mabel Emily Hedditch (1897–1966) mayor
- Freida Ruth Heighway (1907–1963) gynaecologist
- Mary Christine Heinig (1892–1979) educationist
- Dorothy Jane Adele Helmrich (1889–1984) singer and arts administrator
- Isabella Thomson Henderson (Isabel) (1862–1940) educationist
- Jessie Isabel Henderson (1866–1951) social welfare worker
- Jocelyn Henderson (1905–1972) conservationist
- Rachel Henning (1826–1914) letter-writer
- Alice Henry (1857–1943) journalist and woman's rights advocate
- Margaret Edith Hentze (1909–1947) historian
- Dame Mary Ranken Herring (1895–1981) medical practitioner
- Joy Hester (1920–1960) artist
- Nellie Hetherington (1903–1940)
- Ella Violet Bell Hickson (1879–1955) community worker
- Kate Hill (nurse) (1859–1933) nurse
- Ernestine Hill (1899–1972) journalist and author
- Mirrie Irma Jaffa Hill (1889–1986) composer
- Eleanor Mary Hinder (1893–1963) welfare officer and international public servant
- Margel Ina Hinder (1906–1995) sculptor
- Clytie May Hine (1887–1983) soprano and vocal teacher
- Mary Elizabeth Hoban (Maie) (1887–1984) speech and drama teacher
- Grace McKenzie Hodge (1888–1980) schoolteacher
- Margaret Emily Hodge (1858–1938) feminist and educator
- Mary Constance Hodgkin (1909–1985) anthropologist, lecturer and student adviser
- Lorna Myrtle Hodgkinson (1887–1951) psychologist and educationist
- Caroline Hodgson (1851–1908) brothel proprietor
- Frances Gillam Holden (1843–1924) nurse
- Ruth Miriam Hollick (1883–1977) photographer
- May Hollinworth (1895–1968) theatrical producer and director
- Ada Augusta Holman (1869–1949) journalist
- Mary Alice Holman (May) (1893–1939) politician
- Edith Lilla Holmes (1893–1973) artist
- Margaret Holmes (1886–1981) lay religious leader and welfare worker
- Marion Louisa Holmes (1856–1921) worker for charity
- Marion Phoebe Holmes (1880–1966) worker for charity
- Beatrice Holt (Bea) (1900–1988) medical practitioner and mother- and baby-care advocate
- Dame Zara Kate Holt (1909–1989) fashion designer and businesswoman
- Hazel Holyman (1899–1992) air hostess services superintendent
- Neredah Daisy St Leon Honey (1879–1960) circus artiste
- Nora Hood (1836–1871)
- Harriet Hooton (Ettie) (1875–1960) women's activist and editor
- Laura Margaret Hope (1868–1952) medical practitioner
- Susan Hopgood, trade unionist
- Felicia Hopkins (1841–1933) social worker
- Eleanor Mary Hopman (Nell) (1909–1968) tennis player and administrator
- Ursula Mary Hordern (1911–1961) fashion editor
- Marie Compston Horseman (Mollie) (1911–1974) cartoonist and illustrator
- Greta Hort (1903–1967) academic and college principal
- Catherine Clarissa Howarde (Kate) (1864–1939) actor, theatrical entrepreneur, playwright and cinema pioneer
- Ann Howe (1802–1842) newspaper proprietor
- Lucy Howell (Lucie) (1888–1985) soprano and singing teacher
- Clara Winifred Howie (1881–1960) nurse and administrator
- Alice Hoy (1893–1976) educationist
- Agnes Eva Hughes (1856–1940) political organizer
- Edith Hughes-Jones (1905–1976) nurse and hospital proprietor
- Stella Leonora Harriette Hume (1882–1954) radio announcer, director and producer
- Florence Ellen Hummerston (Flo) (1889–1983) community leader and city councillor
- Rosa Zelma Huppatz (1906–1982) nurse
- Ruby Florence Hutchison (1892–1974) politician
- Beatrice May Hutton (Bea) (1893–1990) architect and craftswoman
- Mary Hutton (headmistress) (1883–1964) headmistress
- Sarah Hynes (Sally) (1859–1938) botanist and teacher
I
edit20% completed (estimate)
- Nellie Grace Ibbott (1889–1970) mayor
- Ellen Jeanie Imlay (1881–1978) nursing sister
- Alice Christina Irvine (1879–1940) domestic science teacher and cookery book author
- Freda Mary Howy Irving (1903–1984) journalist
- Caroline (Lynka) Isaacson (1900–1962) journalist
J
edit93.8% completed (estimate)
- Beryl Elaine Jacka (1913–1989) administrator
- Alice Mabel Jackson (1887–1974) journalist and editor
- Caroline Jacob (1861–1940) headmistress
- Marjorie Jacobs, historian
- Elizabeth Britomarte James (1867–1943) political reformer
- Winifred Llewellyn James (1876–1941) writer
- Patricia Irene (Pat) Jarrett (1911–1990) journalist
- Thelma Eileen Jarrett (1905–1987) Soroptimist
- Margaret Lilian Jeffrey (1896–1977) policewoman
- Maud Evelyn Jeffries (1869–1946) actress
- Dorothy Hetty Fosbury (Andrea) Jenner (1891–1985) actress, journalist and radio broadcaster
- Elizabeth Esther Helen Jennings (1864–1920) actress
- Sarah Ann Jenyns (1865–1952) surgical instrument maker and corset manufacturer
- Carol Joyce Jerrems (1949–1980) photographer
- Nancy Jobson (1880–1964) headmistress
- Sandra Jobson, journalist ??? who?
- Cecilia Annie John (1877–1955) singer, feminist and pacifist
- Florence Ethel Johnson (1884–1934) feminist and educationist
- Gertrude Emily Johnson (1894–1973) coloratura soprano and theatre administrator
- Narelle Johnson, judge
- Esther Johnston (1767–1846) landowner
- Christian Jollie Smith (1885–1963) solicitor
- Doris Egerton Jones (1889–1973) writer
- Edith Emily Jones (1875–1952) community worker and Aboriginal rights advocate
- Kathleen Annie Gilman Jones (1880–1942) educationist
- Margaret Jones, journalist
- Nina Eva Vida Jones (1882–1966) racing motorist
- Phyllis Mander-Jones (1896–1984) librarian and archivist
- Ellen Violet (Vi) Jordan (1913–1982) politician
- Enid Joske (1890–1973) college principal
- Eileen Alannah Joyce (1908–1991) pianist
- Roberta Henrietta Margaritta Jull (1872–1961) medical practitioner
K
edit42.6% completed (estimate)
- Phyllis Mary Kaberry (1910–1977) anthropologist
- Winifred Kastner (1903–1987) community leader and welfare worker
- Susie Olive Kaylock (1892–1959) local government official and community worker
- Margaret Kay (1904–1967) keeper of Aboriginal relics
- Adeline May Keating (1885–1957) businesswoman
- Erna Laura Keighley (1891–1955) women's leader
- Aileen Margaret Keldie (1936–1961) air hostess
- Annette Marie Sarah Kellermann (1886–1975) swimmer, aquatic performer and film actress
- Adelaide Maud Kellett (1873–1945) hospital matron
- Alicia Mary Kelly (1885–1942) nurse
- Claire Kelly, trade unionist
- Ellen Kelly (1832–1923) matriarch and mother of Ned Kelly
- Emily Caroline Kelly (Carrie) (1899–1989) theatre producer and anthropologist
- Ethel Knight Kelly (1875–1949) actress and author
- Margaret Elizabeth Kelly (Margot) (1894–1983) restaurateur
- Myra Kemble (1857–1906) actress
- Daisy Fowler Kennedy (1893–1981) violinist
- Margaret Kennedy (Marnie) (1919–1985) domestic servant and writer
- Elizabeth Kenny (1880–1952) nurse
- Constance Kent (1844–1944)
- Ellen Mary Kent Hughes (1893–1979) medical practitioner and alderman
- Edith Betty Kernot (Betty) (1910–1984) golfer
- Edith Latham Kernot (1877–1967) community worker
- Beatrice Maude Kerr (1887–1971) swimmer and entertainer
- Doris Boake Kerr (1889–1944) writer
- Edith Amelia Kerr (1893–1975) missionary and headmistress
- Constance Mabel Keys (1886–1964) nurse
- Eileen Constance Keys (1903–1992) potter
- Nita Bernice Kibble (1879–1962) librarian
- Margaret Loch Kiddle (1914–1958) historian
- Winifred Kiek (1884–1975) Congregational minister
- Hilda Estelle Kincaid (1886–1967) medical practitioner
- Anna Josepha King (1765–1844)
- Georgina King (1845–1932) amateur geologist and anthropologist
- Olive May King (1885–1958) ambulance driver
- Rosa Angela Kirkcaldie (1887–1972) hospital matron and army nurse
- Elizabeth Kilgour Kirkhope (1896–1978) headmistress
- Katherine Kirkland (1808–1892) memoirist
- Maria Elizabeth Kirk (1855–1928) temperance advocate and social reformer
- Mary Kirkpatrick (1863–1943) midwife
- Hélène Kirsova (1910–1962) prima ballerina and choreographer
- Frances Lydia Knorr (Minnie) (1867–1894) baby-farmer
- Marion Knowles (1865–1949) writer
- Dorothy Isabel Knox (1902–1983) headmistress
- Johanna Korner (1891–1969) beauty salon proprietor
- Xenia Nicolaeva Krüger (1903–1985) ballet teacher
- Frances Gertrude Kumm (1886–1966) churchwoman and philanthropist
L
edit41.6% completed (estimate)
- Frances Vida Lahey (1882–1968) painter
- Annie Ina Laidlaw (1889–1978) navy matron
- Serena Lake (1842–1902) evangelist and suffragist
- Violet Barry Lambert (1898–1975) grazier and shire councillor
- Amelia Lambrick (1864–1956) public servant and social reformer
- Flora Annie Landells (1888–1981) painter and potter
- Gertrude Langer (1908–1984) art critic and arts advocate
- Jessie Margaret Langham (1902–1988) army nurse and hospital matron
- Eve Langley (1904–1974) novelist
- Minnie Ruth Langley (1878–1933) school proprietor
- Margaret Irene Lang (1893–1983) sister and air force matron-in-chief
- Coral Lansbury (1929–1991) radio scriptwriter, academic, and novelist
- Lady Eleanor Mary (Ella) Latham (1878–1964) charity worker
- Freer Helen Latham, (1907–1987) Methodist lay leader
- Loma Kyle Latour (1902–1964) sculptor
- Marjorie Florence Lawrence (1907–1979) dramatic soprano
- Betty Lawson, teacher and trade unionist
- Jean Lawson (1908–1986) actor, educator, broadcaster and writer
- Louisa Lawson (1848–1920) newspaper proprietor
- Robin Ann Layton, judge
- Caroline Woolmer Leakey (1827–1881) author
- Charlotte Mary Clarina (Lottie) Leal (1881–1961) community worker
- Hattie Martha Leckie (1886–1965) journalist
- Betsy (Bessie) Lee (1860–1950) temperance evangelist
- Nancy Lorna Leebold (1915–1982) pilot and flying instructor
- Mary Agnes Leehy (1873–1960) Sister of St Joseph
- Ida Lee (1865–1943) historical geographer
- Jean Lee (1919–1951) murderer
- Margaret Stella (Meg) Lee (1923–1987) actress
- Mary Lee (1821–1909) suffragist
- Ida Emily Leeson (1885–1964) librarian
- Emily Leggett (1875–1949) ballroom-dancing promoter
- Kate Leigh (1881–1964) crime entrepreneur
- Emily Bertha Leitch (1873–1957) medical practitioner
- Mary Grace Lester (1911–1980) political activist
- Frances Deborah Levvy (1831–1924) animal protection advocate
- Hettie Margaret (Margo) Lewers (1908–1978) artist
- Grace Margaret (Gretta) Lewis (1892–1968) community worker
- Sarah Lewis, trade unionist
- Betty Caroline Leworthy (1877–1962) church and community worker
- Mary Wherry Liddell (1877–1967) journalist
- Louisa Mary Lightfoot (1902–1979) dancer, choreographer and impresario
- Kathleen Mitford Lilley (1888–1975) headmistress
- Joan à Beckett Lindsay (1896–1984) author and artist
- Mary Ann Josephine Lindsay (1892–1975) circus artiste
- Rose Lindsay (1885–1978) artist’s model, printmaker and author
- Ruby Lindsay (1885–1919) artist and writer
- Mary Ling (1865–1953) writer and parliamentary candidate
- Agnes Mary (Molly) Lions (1908–1992) industrial nurse and union official
- Jessie Sinclair Litchfield (1883–1956) Northern Territory pioneer and author
- Elaine Marjory Little (1884–1974) pathologist
- Emma Linda Palmer Littlejohn (1883–1949) feminist, journalist and radio commentator
- Jean Littlejohn (1899–1990) medical practitioner
- Gwendolen Kent Lloyd (Gwenda) (1899–1965) educationist
- Jessie Georgina Lloyd (1843–1885) author
- Jessie Mary Lloyd (1883–1960) temperance campaigner
- Joice Mary Nankivell Loch (1887–1982) humanitarian and writer
- Ann Lock (1876–1943) missionary
- Helena Sumner Locke (1881–1917) author
- Lilian Sophia Locke (1869–1950) feminist and socialist
- Mary Fauriel Lockett (Mary) (1911–1982) pharmacologist
- Maria Lock (1805–1878) Aboriginal landowner
- Irene Maud Longman (1877–1964) politician and community worker
- Margaret Jane Long (Retta) (1878–1956) missionary
- Lydia Longmore (1874–1967) infant-teacher
- Olive Murray Long (1889–1981) medical practitioner and missionary
- Isabel Frances Longworth (1881–1961) dentist and peace-activist
- Margaret Frances Looker (1910–1988) hospital matron
- Maria Lord (1780–1859) convict and entrepreneur
- Clarice Maude Lorenz (1906–1981) opera company founder
- Enid Bosworth Lorimer (1887–1982) actress
- Louisa Eleanor Lort Smith (1875–1956) animal-welfare advocate and administrator
- Elizabeth Inglis Lothian (1881–1973) teacher of classics
- Ida Dorothy Love (1908–1990) nurse and midwifery educator
- Louise Nellie Lovely (1895–1980) actress
- Mildred Esther Lovett (1880–1955) artist
- Mary Ann Lucas (1826–1900) community worker and temperance advocate
- Ruth Lucas (1859–1953) - joint article with husband
- Lauretta Caroline Maria Luffman (1846–1929) writer and women's activist
- Dora Mary Lush (1910–1943) bacteriologist
- Mabel Mary Lush (1881–1958) kindergarten teacher
- Lottie Edith Lyell (1890–1925) actress and film producer
- Aileen Elizabeth Lynch (1898–1983) State superintendent, Australian Women’s Land Army
- Annie Lynch (1870–1938) religious and hospital administrator
- Nancye Doris Lynton (1893–1973) actor
- Marjorie Jean Lyon (1905–1975) surgeon and prisoner of war
- Betty Dorothy Lyons (1921–1986) nurse educator
- Dame Enid Muriel Lyons (1897–1981) politician
- Margaret Jane Ruth Lyttle (Greta) (1875–1944) educationist
M
edit41.9% completed (estimate)
- Elizabeth Macarthur (1766–1850) grazier
- Rosa Sibella Macarthur Onslow (1871–1943) charity and church worker
- Dorette Margarethe MacCallum (Dorothea) (1863–1952) community worker
- Amelia Morrison Macdonald (1865–1946) social reformer and women's activist
- Louisa Macdonald (1858–1949) educationist
- Augusta Macdougall (Pakie) (1875–1945) café owner
- Mary Veta Macghey (1897–1970) headmistress
- Amy Eleanor Mack (1876–1939) writer
- Kate Mackay (1897–1983) medical practitioner
- Katherine Ada Mackay (1901–1975) policewoman
- Isobel Marion Dorothea Mackellar (1885–1968) writer
- Mabel Josephine Mackerras (Jo) (1896–1971) medical scientist
- Mary Helen MacKillop (1842–1909) Catholic religious sister
- Mary Barr Mackinlay (1910–1974) Dominican Sister
- Claire Adams Mackinnon (1896–1978) film actress and benefactor
- Eleanor Vokes MacKinnon (1871–1936) Red Cross leader
- Grace Mackintosh (1890–1954) headmistress and college lecturer
- Marie Louise Mack (1870–1935) writer
- Constance Mackness (1882–1973) teacher and author
- Dora Maclean (1892–1978) horse-breeder
- Hannah Maclurcan (1860–1936) hotelier
- Dame Annie Jean Macnamara (1899–1968) medical scientist
- Margaret MacPherson (1875–1956) pharmacist and benefactress
- Elizabeth Henrietta Macquarie (1778–1835) governor's wife
- Margaret MacRory (1862–1931) religious Sister
- Sarah Maddock (1860–1955) cyclist
- Ann Margaret Magoffin (Peg) (1918–1971) chartered accountant
- Marguerite Henriette Mahood (1901–1989) artist
- Sarah Jane Makin (1845–1918) midwife
- Dame Ida Caroline Mann (1893–1983) ophthalmologist
- Eleanor Manning (1906–1986) Girl Guide commissioner and army officer
- Emily Matilda Manning (1845–1890) writer and journalist
- Dorothy Mary Mansom (1905–1978) equestrienne
- Helena Catherine Marfell (1896–1981) community worker
- Hyllus Noel Maris (1933–1986) Aboriginal rights campaigner, community worker, educator, poet and scriptwriter
- Gladys Hope Marks (1883–1970) university lecturer
- Harriet Elizabeth Marks (1900–1989) schoolteacher and educationist
- Elaine Marlay (1915–1977) dentist and university lecturer
- Margaret Mary Marlowe (1884–1962) actress, author and journalist
- May Marsden (1876–1968) artist and educationist
- Alma Elizabeth Marshall (1879–1964) political activist
- Dorothy May Marshall (1902–1961) schoolteacher, war- and welfare-worker, and public servant
- Selina Courtenay Marshall (1899–1990) medical practitioner
- Ellen Alma Martel (Nellie) (1855–1940) suffragist, elocutionist and parliamentary candidate
- Anna Montgomerie Martin (Annie) (1841–1918) teacher
- Catherine Edith Macauley Martin (1848–1937) writer
- Catherine Martin, journalist
- Florence Martin (1867–1957) physicist
- Jean Isobel Martin (1923–1979) sociologist
- Mary Maydwell Martin (1915–1973) bookseller
- Norah Margaret Martin (1888–1977) mother superior and hospital nurse
- Nellie Constance Martyn (1887–1926) businesswoman
- Mary Masson (1862–1945) charity worker
- Olga Masters (1919–1986) author and journalist
- Janet Elizabeth Mathews (1914–1992) music teacher and recorder of Indigenous culture
- Julia Matthews (1842–1876) actress
- Marianne Helene Sara Mathy (1890–1978) teacher of singing
- Muriel Lilah Matters (1877–1969) suffragist
- Susan May Matthews (1877–1935) child welfare inspector
- Elizabeth Matthias (Betsy) (1882–1963) socialist and charity-worker
- Francisca Adriana Mawson (Paquita) (1891–1974) community worker and writer
- May Maxell (Maisie) (1876–1977) actress and journalist
- Mary Mayne (1826–1889) businesswoman
- Mary Emelia Mayne (1858–1940) philanthropist
- Helen Mary Mayo (1878–1967) medical practitioner
- Lilian Daphne Mayo (1895–1982) sculptor and art advocate
- Ida Mary McAulay (1858–1949) feminist
- Mona Margaret McBurney (1862–1932) composer, pianist and teacher
- Dame Emma Maud McCarthy (1859–1949) nursing sister and army matron-in-chief
- Mary Agnes McCarthy (1903–1978) nurse, policewoman and welfare officer
- Harriette Adelaide McCathie (1840–1912) retailer
- Sheila Mary McClemans (1909–1988) barrister and naval officer
- Jane Isabella McComas (Isabel) (1864–1960) headmistress
- Ursula Hope McConnel (1888–1957) anthropologist
- Isabella McCorkindale (Isabel) (1885–1971) temperance worker
- Georgiana Huntly McCrae (1804–1890) artist and diarist
- Georgina McCready (1888–1980) nurse, trade unionist and administrator
- Mabel Mary McCutcheon (1886–1942) nurse
- Isabella Mercia McDonagh (1899–1982) film-maker
- Paulette de Vere McDonagh (1901–1978) film-maker
- Phyllis Glory McDonagh (1900–1978) film-maker
- Louise Warden McDonald (1903–1988) headmistress
- Nancy May McDonald (Nan) (1921–1974) poet and editor
- Phyllis Mary McDonald (1905–1977) violinist and teacher of music
- Ethel McDonnell (1876–1961) community leader
- Kathleen Agnes Rose McEwan (Kitty) (1894–1969) sports journalist, golfer and war-worker
- Susan Bell McGahey (1862–1919) hospital matron and reformer
- Katharine Elizabeth McGregor (1903–1979) lawyer
- Brigid McGuigan (1842–1923) Sister of Charity
- Hilda Hayward McIntosh (1886–1958) schoolteacher and postmistress
- Margaret Edgeworth McIntyre (1886–1948) community worker and politician
- Lorna Crawford McKean (1914–1963) soprano
- Florence Violet McKenzie (1890–1982) signals trainer
- Margaret Dawn McKenzie (1930–1984) hockey and softball player, sports administrator, coach and schoolteacher
- Gwladys Yvonne McKeon (1897–1979) biologist
- Clara Jane McLaughlin (Mother Berchams) (1856–1931) Sister of the Good Samaritan
- Caroline Mary McLean (1883–1965) pony-breeder
- Margaret McLean (1845–1923) temperance advocate and feminist
- Beryl Elizabeth McLeish (1902–1974) public servant and State superintendent of the Australian Women's Land Army
- Ethel Irene McLennan (1891–1983) botanist and educator
- Gertrude Evelyn McLeod (1891–1971) golf administrator
- Hannah McLeod (1857–1912) hospital matron
- Florence Elizabeth McMillan (1882–1943) nursing sister
- Lady Helen Maria McMillan (1863–1937) community worker
- Dorothy Victoria McMorran (1897–1974) Canadian community leader
- Matilda Emilie Bertha McNamara (1853–1931) socialist agitator, feminist and bookshop-owner
- Verania McPhillamy (1889–1961) superintendent of soldiers' canteens
- Doris Mary McRae (1893–1988) schoolteacher and headmistress
- Gertrude Ella Mead (1867–1919) medical practitioner
- Mary Emma Goldsmith Meares (1889–1964) welfare worker
- Emmeline Mary Medley (Molly) (1891–1977) charity worker
- Dora Meeson (1869–1955) artist
- Dame Nellie Melba (1861–1931) prima donna
- Gertrude Mary Melville (1884–1959) housewife and politician
- Doris Rosetta Elizabeth Mendoza (Dot) (1899–1986) pianist
- Hephzibah Menuhin (1920–1981) pianist and social activist
- Louisa Ann Meredith (1812–1895) author
- Winifred Barbara Meredith (1895–1979) medical practitioner
- Thelma Constance Metcalfe (1898–1984) schoolteacher and community worker
- Margarethe Michaelis (1902–1985) photographer
- Adelaide Laetitia Miethke (1881–1962) educationist
- Beatrice Miles (Bea) (1902–1973) Bohemian rebel
- Emma Miller (1839–1917) seamstress and women's rights and labour activist
- Dame Mabel Flora Miller (1906–1978) politician
- Beryl Lucy Mills (1907–1977) Miss Australia
- May Mills (1890–1984) schoolteacher and sports administrator
- Agnes Anderson Milne (1851–1919) factory inspector
- Agnes Eliza Fraser Mitchell (1890–1968) novelist and memoirist
- Lady Eliza Fraser Mitchell (1864–1948) charity worker
- Isabel Mary Mitchell (1893–1973) author
- Janet Charlotte Mitchell (1896–1957) journalist and author
- Margaret Mobourne (1872–1917)
- Annie Mildred Mocatta (1887–1984) kindergarten teacher, medical practitioner and art patron
- Alice Maude Mofflin (1878–1961) community worker
- Maud Margaret Molesworth (Mall) (1894–1985) tennis player
- Georgiana Molloy (1805–1843) amateur botanist
- Gladys Lillian Moncrieff (1892–1976) soprano
- Mondalmi (1910–1969) Aboriginal matriarch
- Dorothy Frances Montefiore (Dora) (1851–1933) women's suffragist and socialist
- Lola Montez (1818–1861) dancer and courtesan
- Christina Smith Montgomery (1870–1965) headmistress
- Annie May Moore (1881–1931) photographer
- Caroline Ellen Moore (Carrie) (1882–1956) actress
- Eleanor May Moore (1875–1949) pacifist
- Maggie Moore (1851–1926) actress
- Minnie Louise Moore (Mina) (1882–1957) photographer
- Evelyn May Mordaunt (1872–1942) author
- Elwyn Aisne Morey (1914–1968) psychologist
- Agnes Helen Morgan (1883–1969) hospital matron
- Anna Euphemia Morgan (1874–1935) Aboriginal leader
- Molly Morgan (1762–1835) convict and landowner
- Barbara Ierne Moriarty (Biddy) (1902–1979) Red Cross field representative
- Louise Morice (Lucy) (1859–1951) kindergarten worker and social reformer
- Belinda Morieson, trade unionist
- Audrey Cummins Morphett (1902–1983) community worker
- Elsie Frances Morres (1874–1958) teacher
- Nellie Constance Morrice (1881–1963) nurse and administrator
- Myra Evelyn Morris (1893–1966) author
- Hedwig Marie Morrison (Hedda) (1908–1991) photographer
- Sibyl Enid Morrison (1895–1961) barrister
- Eirene Mort (1879–1977) artist
- Dorothy Elizabeth Mortlock (1906–1979) philanthropist
- Margaret Veronica Moses (1940–1975) Sister of Mercy, teacher and orphanage administrator
- Alice Frances Moss (1869–1948) campaigner for women's rights
- Constance Moulds (1897–1972) trotting trainer
- Mary Braidwood Mowle (1827–1857) diarist
- Annie Moysey (1875–1976) Aboriginal matriarch
- Ellen Mulcahy, trade unionist
- Phyllis Katherine Fraser Mullens (1908–1962) nurse
- Katherine Mulquin (1842–1930) educationist
- Grace Emily Munro (1879–1964) a founder of the Country Women's Association
- Jean Eileen Muntz (Jane) (1903–1969) nurse
- Lesley Elizabeth Murdoch (1881–1961) feminist and welfare worker
- Madoline Murdoch (Nina) (1890–1976) writer
- Isla Victoria Murphy (1913–1967) lawyer and army officer
- Edith Constance Murray (1897–1988) puppeteer and schoolteacher
- Florence Mildred Muscio (1882–1964) feminist
- Alice Jane Muskett (1869–1936) artist and author
- Dame Marjorie Merlyn Myer (1900–1982) philanthropist and fundraiser
N
edit36% completed (estimate)
- Janet Nanson (1868–1943) journalist
- Marie (Molly) Narelle (1870–1941) singer
- Edna Lillian Nelson (1896–1948) medical practitioner
- Caroline Elizabeth Newcomb (1812–1874) woman squatter
- Harriet Christina Newcomb (1854–1942) feminist and educator
- Vivienne Elizabeth (Viv) Newson (1891–1973) editor
- Gladys Agness Newton (1901–1988) community worker
- Emily Hilda Nicholas (1884–1961) artist
- Mabel Nicholas (1866–1958) Anglican Sister and college principal
- Mary Ann Nicolay (1850–1939) Nightingale nurse and hospital matron
- Phyllis Mary Nicol (1903–1964) lecturer and demonstrator in physics
- Angelina Noble (1879–1964) Aboriginal missionary
- Beryl Margaret Elizabeth Noble (1907–1984) Australian Women’s Army Service officer
- Marie Thérèse Augustine Noblet (1889–1930) Catholic mystic
- Sara Susan Nolan (1843–1927) temperance reformer
- Violet Cynthia Nolan (1908–1976) writer
- Bess Norriss Tait (also known as Elizabeth May (Bess) Norriss) (1878–1939) miniature portraitist
- Ellice Maud Nosworthy (1897–1972) architect
- Evelyn Grace Ione Nowland (1887–1974) nurse and trade unionist
- Marjorie Estella Nunan (1910–1963) pensioners' advocate
- Carmel Nyhan (1893–1962) trade union organizer
- Juanita Nielsen (1937–1975) publisher and urban conservationist
- Clara (Decima) Norman (1909–1983) athlete
- Dame Ada May Norris (1901–1989) schoolteacher and campaigner for women’s rights
- Margaret Nyland judge
O
edit41.7% completed (estimate)
- Catherine Cecily O'Brien (1893–1945) Dominican Sister and educationist
- Louisa O'Brien (1880–1957) hotelier
- Cecily Maude O'Connell (1884–1965) trade unionist and religious Sister
- Kathleen Laetitia O'Connor (1876–1968) artist
- Ellen O'Doherty (Sister Mary Alphonsus) (1894–1983) Sister of Charity and hospital administrator
- Janette Hannum Octoman (1879–1971) community worker
- Doris Lyne Officer (1898–1967) medical practitioner
- Margaret Ann Ogg (1863–1953) electoral reformer
- Florinda Katharine Ogilvie (1902–1983) social worker and educator
- Kathleen Clare O'Keeffe (1883–1949) public servant and campaigner for equal pay for women
- Maggie Oliver (1844–1892) actress
- Josephine O'Neill (1905–1968) journalist and film critic
- Martha Mary O'Neill (1878–1972) Sister of Mercy and schoolteacher
- Edith Charlotte Onians (1866–1955) voluntary welfare worker
- Margaret Oppen (1890–1975) artist and embroiderer
- Elizabeth (Lizzie) Orr (1860–1945) hospital and army matron
- Doris Margaret Osborne (1906–1977) schoolteacher and campaigner for equal rights for women
- Ethel Elizabeth Osborne (1882–1968) medical practitioner and industrial hygienist
- Gladys Dorothy O'Shane (1919–1965) Aboriginal political activist
- Gladys Mary Owen (1889–1960) artist and charity worker
- Eileen Rosaline (Eily) O'Connor (1892–1921) religious
- Eliza O'Flaherty (1818–1882) actress and novelist
- Pat O'Shane, magistrate
- Lucy Osburn (1836–1891) hospital nurse
P
edit37.6% completed (estimate)
- Aileen Yvonne Palmer (1915–1988) poet, translator and political activist
- Helen Gwynneth Palmer (1917–1979) educationist
- Janet Gertrude Palmer (Nettie) (1885–1964) writer and critic
- Rosina Martha Palmer (1844–1932) singer
- Adela Constantia Pankhurst (1885–1961) feminist
- Wendy Paramor (1938–1975) artist
- Edith Emma Pardey (1896–1963) pianola-roll pianist
- Minnie Laurel Pardey (1897–1974) pianola-roll pianist
- Florence Mary Parker (1872–1966) community worker
- Grace Dorothy Parker (1895–1987) farmer and community leader
- Katharine Parker (Kitty) (1886–1971) pianist and composer
- Kathleen Isabel Alice Parker (Kay) (1906–1979) army nurse
- Dame Marjorie Alice Parker (Margot) (1900–1991) philanthropist and community leader
- Norma Parker, social worker
- Hilma Olivia Edla Johanna Parkes (1859–1909) political organizer
- Melina Florence Parnell (1870–1944) teacher and school proprietor
- Annie Bertha Parry (1886–1959) nurse and health training administrator
- Bridget Partridge (1890–1966) lapsed nun
- Olive Dorothy Paschke (1905–1942) army matron
- Eunice Muriel Harriett Hunt Paten (1883–1973) nurse
- Esther Paterson (1892–1971) artist
- Eveline Pauline Paul (Queenie) (1893–1982) vaudeville artist, producer and entrepreneur
- Emily Dorothea Pavy (1885–1967) teacher, sociologist and lawyer
- Ellen Nora Payne (1865–1962) woodcarver
- Frances Mallalieu Payne (Frank) (1885–1976) artist and illustrator
- Ruby Violet Payne-Scott (1912–1981) physicist, radio astronomer and schoolteacher
- Margaret Elizabeth Maynard Peden (1905–1981) cricketer
- Ethel Charlotte Pedley (1859–1898) musician and writer
- Emily Harriet Pelloe (1877–1941) journalist, equestrienne, botanist and artist
- Edith Gladys Pendred (1897–1964) kindergarten teacher
- Gladys Penfold Hyland (1886–1974) businesswoman and collector of antiques
- Frances Eileen Penington (1897–1972) social scientist
- Anna Perivolaris (1888–1963) schoolteacher
- Hetty Perkins (1895–1979) Arrernte matriarch
- Grace Perrier (1875–1979) librarian
- Adelaide Elizabeth Perry (1891–1973) painter, printmaker and teacher
- Frances Perry (Fanny) (1814–1892) community worker
- Grace Amelia Perry (1927–1987) poet and medical practitioner
- Alicia Teresa Jane O’Shea Petersen (1862–1923) social activist and political candidate
- Georgette Augusta Christina Peterson (1863–1947) singer, pianist and composer
- Isabel Varney Desmond Peterson (1892–1967) pianist and composer
- Winifred Marion Petrie (1890–1966) nurse and hospital proprietress
- Evdokia Alekseevna Petrova (1914–2002) Soviet intelligence officer
- Dora Peyser (1904–1970) social worker and nurse
- Dorothy Jane Phillips (Thea) (1892–1960) soprano and teacher of singing
- Marion Phillips (1881–1932) politician
- Rebecca Phillips (Ray) (1872–1942) philanthropist and novelist
- Angela Josephine Piazza (1911–1988) hairdresser and beautician
- Marion Louisa Piddington (1869–1950) eugenist and sex educator
- Elsie Clare Pidgeon (1879–1956) hospital matron
- Veronica Pike (1900–1986) solicitor
- Olive Muriel Pink (1884–1975) artist, Aboriginal-rights activist, anthropologist and gardener
- Gerda Pinter (1915–2003) patron of the arts
- Marie Elizabeth Josephine Pitt (1869–1948) journalist and poet
- Ada May Plante (1875–1950) artist
- Elsie May Plowman (1905–1978) hotelier
- Mary Anne Pocock (Bessie) (1863–1946) nursing sister and army matron
- Muriel Jean Polglaze (1911–1978) economist
- Emélie Adeline Polini (1881–1927) actress
- Norah Mary Potter (1849–1927) Sister of Mercy
- Eliza Pottie (1837–1907) evangelist, pacifist and reformer
- Betty Mildred Pounder (1921–1990) choreographer and dancer
- Eileen Powell, trade unionist
- Marguerite Helen Power (1870–1957) poet
- Stella Power (1896–1977) soprano
- Marjorie Evelyn Pownall (Eve) (1902–1982) historian and author of children’s books
- Annie Praed (1873–1948) dentist
- Rosa Caroline Praed (1851–1935) novelist
- Rachel Pratt (1874–1954) army nurse
- Una Prentice, lawyer
- Anne Elizabeth Press (1903–1992) politician
- Margaret Rose Preston (1875–1963) artist
- Millicent Fanny Preston Stanley (1883–1955) politician
- Maria Caroline Prevost (Ronnie) (1895–1976) 'flapper'
- Katharine Susannah Prichard (1883–1969) writer and political activist
- Maud Violet Florinda Primrose (1872–1954) nurse
- Alethea Mary Proctor (Thea) (1879–1966) artist
- Marjorie Gertrude Eleanor Propsting (1905–1972) librarian and mayor
- Frances Betty Provan (1911–1963) naval officer and businesswoman
- Mary Grace Courtenay Puckey (1898–1990) medical practitioner and hospital administrator
- Maude Mary Puddy (1883–1974) musician
- Caroline Frances Pugliese (1865–1940) theatre proprietor
- Ethel May Punshon (Monte) (1882–1989) teacher
- Annie Helen Pura (1894–1982) restaurateur
- Emmeline Pye (1861–1949) teacher and lecturer
Q
edit75% completed (estimate)
- Winnifred Evelyn (Narrandjeri) Quagliotti (1931–1988) Aboriginal community leader and Wurundjeri elder
- Lois Gertrude Quarrell (1914–1991) journalist and sports administrator
- Rose Maud Quong (1879–1972) performer and writer
- Mary Quirk (1880–1952) politician
R
edit34.6% completed (estimate)
- Mary Bertha Raine (1877–1960) businesswoman and philanthropist
- Edith Marion Ralston (1894–1967) headmistress
- Barbara Mary Ramsden (1903–1971) editor
- Edith Dora Ranclaud (1885–1960) violinist
- Dame Annabelle Jane Rankin (1908–1986) politician
- Annie Isabel Rankine (1917–1972) Aboriginal leader
- Julia Rachel Rapke (1886–1959) feminist and civil rights activist
- Wilhelmina Frances Rawson (Mina) (1851–1933) writer
- Joan Ellen Rayner (1900–1999) theatre educator
- Rhoda Elspeth Rayner (Betty) (1907–1981) theatre educator
- Dame Audrey Tattie Reader (1903–1989) Liberal Party organiser and community worker
- Fanny Reading (1884–1974) medical practitioner and Jewish communal leader
- Irene Victoria Read (1880–1972) charity and community worker
- Lelda Sunday Reed (1905–1981) art patron
- Coralie Clarke Rees (1908–1972) journalist, broadcaster and author
- Elizabeth Laurie Rees (Bessie) (1865–1939) temperance activist and social reformer
- Lucy Frances Harvey Rees (1901–1983) bookseller, book collector and authority on children’s literature
- Joan Janet Brown Refshauge (1906–1979) medical practitioner and medical administrator
- Alison Baily Rehfisch (1900–1975) artist
- Mary Reibey (1777–1855) née Haydock, businesswoman and trader
- Elizabeth Julia Reid (1915–1974) Grail worker and journalist
- Isabelle Bruce Reid (Belle) (1883–1945) veterinary surgeon
- Jane Sinclair Reid (1883–1968) educator of the blind
- Mary Walker Reid (1911–1963) grazier and benefactor
- Beatrice Lilias Rennie (1893–1971) headmistress
- Annie Rattray Rentoul (1882–1978) schoolteacher and children's author
- Gladys Reynell (1881–1956) potter
- Ethel Florence Richardson (Henry Handel) (1870–1946) novelist and short story writer
- Ethel Tracy Richardson (1877–1942) nursing sister and army matron-in-chief
- Ruby Sophia Rich (1888–1988) Jewish community leader, feminist and pianist
- Dorothy Riddle (1894–1979) librarian
- Corra Ridgeway (1892–1975)
- Hannah Rigby (1794–1853) embroiderer, servant and convict
- Bessie Mabel Rischbieth (1874–1967) feminist
- Amy Christine Rivett (1891–1962) medical practitioner
- Doris Mary Rivett (1896–1969) psychologist
- Eleanor Harriett Rivett (Nell) (1883–1972) missionary
- Elsie Grace Rivett (1887–1964) welfare worker
- Mary Ellen Roberts (1866–1924) teacher of dressmaking
- Mary Grant Roberts (1841–1921) zoo-owner
- Agnes Robertson Robertson (1882–1968) schoolteacher and politician
- Constance Robertson (Connie) (1895–1964) journalist
- Helen Lothan Robertson (1848–1937) tailoress and trade unionist
- Jessie Marian Robertson (1909–1976) radio broadcaster and community leader
- Margery Fraser Robertson (1858–1933) teacher and educationist
- Philadelphia Nina Robertson (1866–1951) Red Cross administrator
- Kathleen Mary Robinson (1901–1983) actress and director
- Marjorie Clare Roche (1896–1982) army officer and Red Cross administrator
- Florence Aline Rodway (1881–1971) artist
- Mary Catherine Rogers (1872–1932) community and political worker
- Ada Jane Rohu (1848–1928) taxidermist and shopkeeper
- Mary Ronan (1904–1989) Sister of Mercy
- Jessie Spink Rooke (1845–1906) suffragist and temperance reformer
- Edna Sirius Roper (1913–1986) politician
- Joan Mavis Rosanove (1896–1974) lawyer
- Gertrude Amy Roseby (1872–1971) headmistress
- Sarah Mabel Roseby (1878–1957) schoolteacher
- Alice Trevenen Rosman (1882–1961) writer
- Dorothy Jean Ross (1891–1982) headmistress and educationist
- Euphemia Welch Ross (1889–1971) community worker
- Hedwig Ross (Hettie) (1900–1971) teacher and socialist
- Daisy Mary Rossi (1879–1974) artist and writer
- Isabella Henrietta Younger Ross (Isie) (1887–1956) medical practitioner
- Alice Ross-King (1887–1968) civilian and army nurse
- Blanche Muriel Eugénie Ross-Watt (1861–1956) shire president and charity worker
- Marian Ellis Rowan (1848–1922) artist, naturalist and explorer
- Olive Dorothy Rowe (1888–1979) ballroom dancer
- Caroline Ann Rowland (1852–1921) Ursuline nun
- Amy Rowntree (1885–1962) educationist
- Rachel Mary Roxburgh (1915–1991) artist, educator and activist
- Lillian Roxon (1932–1973) journalist and author
- Elena Domenica Rubeo (1896–1979) community worker
- Helena Rubinstein (1870–1965) cosmetics manufacturer
- Ann Rumpf (1849–1925) manufacturer and entrepreneur
- Delia Constance Russell (1870–1938) community worker
- Emmie Russell (1892–1987) orthoptist
- Gertrude Winifred Ruston (1897–1985) community worker
- Clara Padbury Rutherford (1878–1975) women's activist
- Mother Leone Ryan (1900–1989) Sister of St Joseph and educator
- Mary Margaret Ryan (1886–1968) community worker
- Shylie Katherine Rymill (1882–1959) Girl Guide commissioner
S
edit45.5% completed (estimate)
- Annie Moriah Sage (1895–1969) army matron-in-chief
- Nancy Evelyn Salas (1910–1990) pianist, harpsichordist and music teacher
- Dorothy Lucy Sanders (1907–1987) novelist
- Annie Mabel Sandes (1881–1966) technical-college superintendent
- Gladys Sandford (1891–1971) motorist
- Louisa Angelina Santospirito (Lena) (1895–1983) welfare worker
- Katie Sarah (19??-), mountaineer[1]
- Charlotte Sargent (1856–1924) pastry-cook
- Ellen Savage (1912–1985) army nurse and hospital matron
- Emily Winifred Savage (1888–1977) home economics teacher
- Jessie Frederica Pauline Sawyer (1870–1947) community leader
- Vera Scantlebury Brown (1889–1946) medical practitioner
- Lilian Avis Scantlebury (1894–1964) Red Cross worker
- Susan Katherina Schardt (1872–1934) hospital founder
- Amy Schauer (1871–1956) cookery instructor
- Florence Eleanor Schonell (1902–1962) educationist
- Helen Macpherson Schutt (1874–1951) philanthropist
- Grace Locke Scobie (1876–1957) inspector of factories and shops
- Mary May Scollen (1887–1967) Sister of Mercy, nurse and hospital administrator
- Jennie Scott Griffiths (1875–1951) journalist and political activist
- Harriet Scott (1830–1907) artist and naturalist
- Helena Scott (1832–1910) artist and naturalist
- Rose Scott (1847–1925) feminist
- Kathleen Stirling Scrymgour (1895–1982) hospital matron
- Alexandrine Seager (1870–1950) businesswoman and war-worker
- Joyce Debenham Seager (Joy) (1899–1991) medical practitioner
- Clara Maria Seekamp (1819–1908) actress and newspaper editor
- Eva Mary Seery (1874–1937) political organizer
- Sophia Bridget Seery (1872–1946)
- Clara Serena (1890–1972) contralto
- Dora Beatrice Serle (1875–1968) artist
- Alice Maud Sewell (1881–1971) community worker
- Hannah Mary Helen Sexton (1862–1950) surgeon
- Edna Mary Anna Jane Shaw (1891–1974) hospital matron
- Mary Turner Shaw (Mollie) (1906–1990) architect and historian
- Kathleen Eileen Sheehy (1892–1981) head teacher
- Eliza Jeanettie Sheldon (1885–1974) art-dealer
- Cecelia Moore Shelley (1893–1986) trade unionist
- Catherine Shepherd (1901–1976) playwright
- Kathleen Margaret Maria Sherrard (1898–1975) geologist
- Frances Amy Lillian Sherwin (1855–1935) singer
- Phyllis Sykes Shillito (1895–1980) designer
- Elizabeth Frances Shippen (1894–1982) matron and army nurse
- Lucie Emilie Shorter (Lulu) (1887–1989) china-painter
- Clara Jane Shumack (1899–1974) army matron
- Emma Caroline Silcock (1858–1931) Anglican religious
- Rose Simmonds (1877–1960) photographer
- Cinderella Jane Simon (1902–1981) Aboriginal leader, evangelist and storyteller
- Helen de Guerry Simpson (1897–1940) writer
- Martha Margaret Mildred Simpson (1865–1948) kindergarten teacher and school inspector
- Gwendoline Elizabeth Sims (1902–1986) occupational therapist
- Jean Dorothy Sinclair (1940–1991) political staff worker
- Marion Sinclair (1896–1988) teacher, welfare worker, poet and composer
- Barbara Sisley (1878–1945) teacher of speech and drama
- Lillias Margaret Skene (1867–1957) women's activist and welfare worker
- Elizabeth Skillen (1879–1970) educationist
- Mary Louisa Skinner (Mollie) (1876–1955) nurse and writer
- Rose Skinner (1900–1979) art-dealer
- Marie Elizabeth Skitch (1900–1989) labour activist and housewives’ advocate
- Patricia Violet Slater (1918–1990) nurse educator
- Judy Small, singer
- Marjorie Gordon Smart (1911–1982) diplomat and college principal
- Addie Viola Smith (1893–1975) solicitor and trade commissioner
- Bertha Chatto Smith (1892–1984) Country Women’s Association leader and author
- Cecilia Smith (1911–1980) matriarch and Aboriginal activist
- Christina Smith (1809–1893) teacher and missionary
- Christine Idris Smith (1946–1979) skier and interior decorator
- Fanny Cochrane Smith (1834–1905) Tasmanian Aboriginal
- Grace Cossington Smith (1892–1984) artist
- Ivy Blanche Irene Smith (1884–1975) teacher and community worker
- Maria Ann Smith (1799–1870) orchardist
- Mary Smith (1909–1989) psychologist
- Treania Helen Lindsay Smith (1901–1990) gallery owner and artist
- Bridgetena Smyth (Brettena) (1840–1898) campaigner for women's health reform and women's political rights
- Joyce Mary Snelling (1904–1988) army officer
- Dorothy Somerville, lawyer
- Christense Sorensen (1885–1958) hospital matron and army nurse
- Augustine Soubeiran (1858–1933) headmistress and French patriot
- Clara Southern (1860–1940) artist
- Catherine Helen Spence (1825–1910) writer, preacher, reformer and feminist
- Gwendoline Gladys Spencer (Gwen) (1888–1974) journalist and managing editor
- Margaret Joan Spencer (1912–1990) army officer
- Ethel Louise Spowers (1890–1947) painter and printmaker
- Mabel Angelina Springfield (1892–1966) swimmer and coach
- Ida Standley (1869–1948) schoolteacher
- Eleanor Margrethe Stang (1894–1978) medical practitioner
- Annie Creo Stanley (1865–1940) trade union leader
- Muriel Conomie Stanley (1918–1979) home missionary and nurse
- Florence Melian Stawell (1869–1936) classical scholar and author
- Christina Ellen Stead (1902–1983) author
- Thistle Yolette Stead (1902–1990) biologist, educator and wildlife preservationist
- Joyce Steele (1909–1991) politician
- Sophia Elizabeth Steffanoni (1873–1906) artist
- Jane Winifred Steger (1882–1981) writer
- Muriel Myee Steinbeck (1913–1982) actress
- Eunice Minnie Stelzer (1880–1962) founder of the Happiness Club
- Elizabeth Anne Valentine Sterne (1880–1973) community leader
- Gwendolyne Daphne Stevens (1908–1974) hospital proprietress, sheep breeder and mining entrepreneur
- Jemima Elizabeth Mary Stevens (1855–1940) educationist and Anglican nun
- Clare Grant Stevenson (1903–1988) air force officer, company executive and welfare worker
- Margaret Stevenson (1807–1874) poet and satirist
- Beatrice Anne Stewart (1897–1990) florist
- Eleanor Charlotte Stewart (Nora) (1879–1966) dancing teacher
- Eleanor Towzey Stewart (Nellie) (1858–1931) actress
- Flora Shaw Stewart (1886–1979) pioneer and hotelkeeper
- Helen Dorothy Stirling (Nell) (1909–1951) radio actress
- Lorna Mary Belton Stirling (1893–1956) musicologist
- Mary Stoddard (1852–1901) artist
- Emily Mary Stone (1865–1910) medical practitioner
- Emma Constance Stone (1856–1902) medical practitioner
- Grace Clara Stone (1860–1957) medical practitioner
- Ethel Nhill Victoria Stonehouse (1883–1964) writer
- Ethel Turner Stoneman (1890–1973) psychologist
- Ann Fawcett Story (1846–1911) cookery instructor
- Shirley Stott Despoja, journalist
- Catherine Eliza Stow (Katie) (1856–1940) collector of Aboriginal legends
- Elsa Stralia (1881–1945) soprano
- Jessie Mary Street (1889–1970) feminist
- Florence Sulman (1876–1965) author and benefactor
- Rose Anna Summerfield (1864–1922) feminist and labour leader
- Annie Gladys Sutcliffe ('Suttie') (1900–1990) lawn bowler
- Jane Sutherland (1853–1928) painter and teacher
- Margaret Ada Sutherland (1896–1984) composer, pianist and teacher
- Selina Murray Sutherland (1839–1909) nurse and child welfare worker
- Edith Muriel Maitland Swain (1880–1964) public servant and physical-fitness advocate
- Mary Hynes Swanton (1861–1940) trade unionist
- Theodora Maude Sweetapple (Dora) (1872–1972) nurse
- Georgina Sweet (1875–1946) zoologist, academic and philanthropist
- Eveline Winifred Syme (1888–1961) painter and printmaker
- Kathleen Alice Syme (1896–1977) journalist, company director and welfare worker
- Olga Lesle Symes (1925–1982) librarian
- Mary Synan (1837–1915) Brigidine nun
T
edit57.1% completed (estimate)
- Dame Dorothy Margaret Tangney (1907–1985) politician
- Tarenorerer (1800–1831) Aboriginal leader
- Beatrice Mary Taylor (1893–1982) schoolteacher
- Doris Irene Taylor (1901–1968) founder of Meals on Wheels
- Florence Mary Taylor (1879–1969) architect and publisher
- Irene Frances Taylor (1890–1933) journalist and feminist
- Lyra Veronica Esmeralda Taylor (1894–1979) social worker and public servant
- Evelyn Ruth Tazewell (1893–1983) sportswoman
- Violet Helen Teague (1872–1951) artist
- Margaret Alison Telfer (1904–1974) university registrar
- Mary Cecil Tenison Woods (nee Kitson) (1893–1971) lawyer
- Kathleen Tennant (Kylie) (1912–1988) author
- Audrey Georgiana Florence Tennyson (1854–1916) letter-writer, hospital founder and vice-regal wife
- Angela Margaret Thirkell (1890–1961) author
- Bessie Margaret Thomas (1892–1968) librarian
- Kathleen Kyffin Thomas (1891–1973) community worker
- Margaret Thomas (1842–1929) artist, sculptor and author
- Mary Thomas (1787–1875) diarist and poet
- Freda Mary Thompson (1906–1980) aviatrix
- Lilian Wattnall Thompson (Lil) (1867–1956) novelist
- Matilda Louise Thompson (1871–1959) businesswoman and philanthropist
- Catherine Maria Thornber (1837–1924) schoolmistress
- Catherine Maria Thornber (1812–1894) schoolmistress
- Ellen Thornber (1851–1947) schoolmistress
- Rachel Anne Thornber (1839–1930) schoolmistress
- Margaret Thornton, legal academic
- Beatrice Maude Tildesley (1886–1977) teacher and woman of letters
- Evelyn Mary Tildesley (1882–1976) teacher and woman of letters
- Pattie Tillyard (1880–1971) community leader
- Emma Timbery (1842–1916) Aboriginal shellworker
- Alice Constance Tisdall (1877–1968) educationist
- Ellen Joy Todd (1860–1948) journalist
- Pauline Therese Toner (1935–1989) educator and politician
- Jane Catharine Tost (1817–1889) taxidermist and shopkeeper
- Eliza Tracey (1842–1917) litigant
- Jessie Constance Alicia Traill (1881–1967) artist
- Isobel Dieudonnée Travers (1898–1982) educationist
- Beryl Randall Trigellis-Smith (1892–1985) probation officer
- Margaret Bethesda Trist (1914–1986) author
- Lydia Ellen Tritton (1899–1946) journalist and public speaker
- Trugernanner (Truganini) (1812–1876) Tasmanian Aboriginal
- Jean Amalie Trundle (1905–1965) teacher, actress and theatre director
- Marie Anne Tuck (1866–1947) artist
- Joan Tully (1907–1973) agricultural scientist
- Dora Jeannette Turner (1888–1953) educationist
- Ethel Mary Turner (1870–1958) author
- Martha Turner (1839–1915) Unitarian preacher
- Haldane Colquhoun Turriff (1834–1922) hospital nurse
- Isabel May Tweddle (Diana) (1875–1945) artist
U
edit50% completed (estimate)
- Erica Reid Underwood (1907–1992) psychologist, broadcaster, education administrator and community worker
- Elkin Umbagai (1921–1980) Aboriginal leader
V
edit64.3% completed (estimate)
- Margaret Mildred Vale (1893–1972) public servant
- Mary Vale (1887–1968) Sister of Mercy
- May Vale (1862–1945) artist
- Dame Margaret (Peggy) van Praagh (1910–1990) ballet dancer, producer, director, teacher and administrator
- Ann Vanstone judge
- Gwendoline Varley (1896–1975) sports organizer and broadcaster
- Jessie Vasey (1897–1966) founder of the War Widows' Guild of Australia
- Dorothy Vaughan (1881–1974) social reformer (redirect)
- Grace Sydney Vaughan (1922–1984) social worker and politician
- Barbara Mary Vernon (1916–1978) playwright
- Joyce Winifred Vickery (1908–1979) botanist and conservationist
- Mary Theresa Vidal (1815–1873) author
- Harriette Martha Voss (1887–1951) medical practitioner and community worker
- Anna Fellowes Vroland (1902–1978) schoolteacher and human-rights advocate
W
edit36.9% completed (estimate)
- Rhoda Wager (1875–1953) jewellery designer
- Margaret Loder Wakehurst (1899–1994) charity worker
- Bertha May Walker (1912–1975) labour activist
- Dame Eadith Campbell Walker (1861–1937) philanthropist
- Ellinor Gertrude Walker (1893–1990) kindergarten teacher and women’s rights activist
- Janet Walker (1850–1940) costumier and teacher
- Jean Nellie Miles Walker (1878–1918) nursing sister and army matron
- Theodosia Ada Wallace (1872–1953) journalist
- Dorothy Wall (1894–1942) author and illustrator
- Christian Marjory Emily Carlyle Waller (1894–1954) artist
- Edna Margaret Walling (1895–1973) garden designer
- Agnes Marion McLean Walsh (1884–1967) hospital matron
- Gertrude Mary Walton (1881–1951) headmistress
- Marion Boyd Wanliss (1896–1984) physician
- Elizabeth Jane Ward (1842–1908) milliner and philanthropist
- Patience Australie Wardle (Pat) (1910–1992) local historian and diarist
- Mary Alice Ward (1896–1972) teacher and pastoralist
- Catherine Anne Warnes (1949–1969) entertainer
- Marilyn Warren, judge
- Mary Jane Warnes (1877–1959) Country Women's Association founder
- Edith Alice Waterworth (1873–1957) welfare worker
- Mary Watson (1860–1881) heroine
- Phebe Naomi Watson (1876–1964) educationist and women's leader
- Margaret Sturge Watts (1892–1978) welfare worker
- Julian Barbara Waugh (1857–1938) political and community worker
- Amelia Lucy Wayn (1862–1951) historical researcher
- Margaret Wearne (1893–1967) trade unionist
- May Isabella Weatherly (1868–1950) headmistress
- Margareta Louise Pitcairn Webber (1891–1983) bookseller
- Jessie Stobo Watson Webb (1880–1944) historian
- Ivy Lavinia Weber (1892–1976) physical culturist and politician
- Ellen Webster (1877–1965) grazier and politician
- Dame Ahioma Alice Wedega (1905–1987) missionary, teacher, women’s advocate and social worker
- Camilla Hildegarde Wedgwood (1901–1955) anthropologist and educationist
- Dame Ivy Evelyn Annie Wedgwood (1896–1975) politician
- Hazel Claire Weekes (1903–1990) zoologist and physician
- Johanna Wilhelmine Weigel (1847–1940) paper-pattern manufacturer
- Tina Wentcher (1887–1974) sculptor
- Phoebe Ellen Wesché (1871–1950) charity worker
- Evelyn Maude West (1888–1969) accountant, shire secretary and community worker
- Nora Kate Weston (1880–1965) woodcarver
- Winifred Mary West (1881–1971) educationist
- Amy Grace Wheaton (1898–1988) feminist and social-work educator
- Annie Margaret Wheeler (1867–1950) soldiers' welfare worker
- Elsie Jane Whicker (1899–1987) bush-nursing superintendent
- Jenifer Hedley Edols Whitecross (1926–1988) veterinary surgeon and administrator
- Edith Alexandra White (1901–1988) army matron
- Lady Elizabeth White (1907–1988) community worker
- Ellen Gould White (1827–1915) Seventh-day Adventist prophet and author
- Rose Ethel Janet White-Haney (Jean) (1877–1953) botanist
- Dorothy Eleanor Whitehead (1908–1976) headmistress
- Jessie McHardy White (1870–1957) army principal matron
- Mary Hyacinthe Petronel White (1900–1984) local government councillor and campaigner for women’s rights
- Myrtle Rose White (1888–1961) author
- Vera Deakin White (1891–1978) Red Cross worker
- Ellen Whitty (1819–1892) Mercy Sister
- Harriett Frances Wicken (1847–1937) cookery writer
- Elise Wiedermann (1851–1922) soprano
- Alice Ivy Wigmore (1895–1982) violinist and philanthropist
- Mary Theodora Joyce Wilcox (1873–1953) poet and playwright
- Winifred Doris Wilding (Joyce) (1909–1978) community worker
- Alexina Maude Wildman (1867–1896) journalist
- Dorothy Irene Wilkinson (1883–1947) headmistress
- Katherine Williams (Kath) Mary Isabel (1895–1975) unionist
- Mary Boyd Burfitt Williams (1882–1956) physician and pathologist
- Mary Jamieston Williams, feminist
- Ada Jean Hounsell Williamson (1891–1977) journalist
- Susannah Jane Williams (1875–1942) classical scholar and educationist
- Florence Amy Willie (1922–1981) community leader
- Austral Groves Wilson (Strella) (1894–1989) soprano
- Ella Wilson (1870–1959) Sister of Charity
- Enid Phyllis Wilson (1908–1988) psychologist
- Norah Magdalene Wilson (1901–1971) Aboriginal community leader
- Norma Linley Wilson (1898–1990) dancing entrepreneur
- Marie Naomi Wing (1903–1985) medical practitioner
- Mary Elizabeth Victoria Wirth (Marizles) (1868–1948) equestrienne
- Gweneth Wisewould (1884–1972) medical practitioner
- Mary Helen Withers (1907–1986) community leader
- Isobel Wolmby (1917–1989) Indigenous culture informant
- Joan Mary Woodhill (1912–1990) dietitian
- Margaret Joan Woodhouse (1927–1990) bookseller
- Olwen Abigail Wooster (1917–1981) air force officer and telecommunications engineer
- Elinor Caroline Wray (1899–1992) speech pathologist
- Wilhemina Wylie (Mina) (1891–1984) swimmer
Y
edit0% completed (estimate)
- Constance Louise Young (Connie) (1900–1987) local history enthusiast