A look back at some of the most storied accomplishments by women athletes and adventurers over the past 100 years.
The XX Factor Issue
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1926: Gertrude Ederle
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Gertrude Ederle swims the English Channel in 14 hours 34 minutes—eight hours faster than the first man did in 1857.
1966: Bobbi Gibb
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Despite receiving a letter from organizers explaining that women aren’t capable of running 26.2 miles, Bobbi Gibb hides in the bushes near the start line and runs it anyway, finishing in 3:21:40, ahead of two-thirds of the field. (In 2016, a total of 12,166 women finished the race.)
1978: Naomi Christine James
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After 272 days at sea, Naomi Christine James becomes the first woman to sail solo around the world via Cape Horn, besting Sir Francis Chichester’s record by two days.
1985: Libby Riddles
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Dog musher Libby Riddles becomes the first woman to win the 1,100-mile , after 18 days in 50-below weather. She gains time by pushing on during a blizzard while other competitors stop.
1993: Lynn Hill
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Lynn Hill is the first person, man or woman, to free-climb the on El Capitan in Yosemite Valley. It will take 12 years for anyone to repeat the feat.
2015: Ashima Shiraishi
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Eleven-year-old Ashima Shiraishi is the youngest person, male or female, to climb a 5.14c route.
2016: Lael Wilcox
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After 18 grueling days biking unsupported across the country, endurance cyclist is the first woman to win the 4,400-mile , beating 41 other finishers, 35 of them men.