Champaign County? How interesting! A while back my interest was piqued when I read in the UDC about a presentation made to the Soroptimist Club concerning interesting women in Champaign County. When I recently read that “Interesting Women of Champaign County, Ohio Prior to 1960” would be presented on the Champaign County Library Facebook page, I made sure to watch. Library employee Gloria Malone compiled the informative 30-minute program of facts gleaned from county histories, city directories, and archived newspapers. From these sources she added photographs and clippings in describing each of forty notable ladies. For me, the most fascinating women were those with accomplishments involving cultural change and historical advancements, the kind we might take for granted these days. Sophia Holt, Alice Tracy, and Sarah Dupler served as physicians in the county in the 1800s. In 1870 Mary Lyons became the first woman clerk in Urbana, subsequently working forty years in the dress department of the Hitt & Fuller Dry Goods store, the current location of Legacy Park. Mrs. Golden Millice of North Lewisburg in 1937 became the first Champaign County woman to run for mayor. Luetta Curtis Eggleston, assistant manager at the Gloria Theater in 1943, was the first woman movie projectionist in the United States. During the 1930s Adelaide Lutz became the first married woman to work at the Citizens Bank. And Anna Bosler became the first woman sheriff in Champaign County when she succeeded her husband after his death in the line of duty in 1926.