Some of our greatest heroes were
the first woman to accomplish something;
fly a plane, go to space,
or be elected head of government.
But the great women of history
weren't just playing catch-up with men.
They were pioneers in their own right.
The following five women blazed trails
throughout history, not only for other women,
but for all of humanity.
They weren't the first woman
to achieve a milestone.
They were just the first.
First up is Ada Lovelace, 
a member of the British aristocracy
who was the very first computer programmer.
Lovelace was born in 1815,
the daughter of the famed poet Lord Byron
and his then wife, Annabella.
Lovelace was a mathematician who was
an associate of Charles Babbage,
the man who first designed the digital computer.
Lovelace famously wrote the first description
of how the machine could be used
to perform calculations.
Her achievement was remembered many years later
when the early computer language
"Ada" was named for her.
Next on our list is the illustrious
Zora Neale Hurston.
Hurston was a novelist and folklorist
who was part of the Harlem Renaissance.
In addition to her influential novel,
"Their Eyes Were Watching God,"
she was an early filmmaker,
taking ethnographic footage
of black people's lives in the 1920s South.
She studied under Franz Boas,
the father of American anthropology,
and used his rigorous techniques
to document African American folklore.
Her book "Mules and Men" is thought
to be the first collection
of African American folktales by an African American.
She was also the first African American to
graduate from Barnard College in New York,
and her attendance is a point
of pride for the institution to this day.
Third on our list is an Olympic legend,
Romanian gymnast Nadia Comaneci.
Comaneci holds the distinction
of being the first athlete
to ever be awarded a perfect 10 in an Olympic event.
She achieved that perfect score
seven times during the Montreal Olympics in 1976
and took home three gold medals as a result.
Though Amelia Earhart is well known
as a pioneering aviator and the first woman
to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean,
number four on our list
is Beryl Markham, the first person to fly solo
across the Atlantic from the east to the west.
Markham led a fascinating life.
She was born in England,
but raised in British East Africa.
When her father's fortune was lost,
she remained on her own in Kenya
and at 18, became the first woman in Africa
to receive a racehorse-trainer's license.
By her late 20s, she had learned
to fly and became a commercial pilot,
with her historic flight occurring in 1936.
She is also remembered for her
memoir, "West with the Night."
Our final trailblazing woman is U.S. Supreme Court
Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor.
Not only was Sotomayor just
the third woman to serve on the Court,
but she was the first Hispanic
to be appointed to that prestigious role.
Born in the Bronx, New York,
Sotomayor was first appointed
to the federal judiciary by the elder
President Bush and in that role,
famously helped to end the 1995
Major League Baseball strike
by ruling in favor of the players
in the lawsuit against team owners.
She was nominated to the highest court
by President Barack Obama in 2009
and released a memoir,
"My Beloved World," in 2013.
And that's five, just a small sample of the
achievements and contributions achieved first—
and at least for a time, only—
by women.
So...what are you going to be
the first person to accomplish?
