All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Hattie Caraway

    • August 27, 2019
    • PBS

    Her nickname may have been "Silent Hattie," but when Sen. Caraway spoke, her voice was loud and clear. Hattie Caraway became the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate — as well as the first to preside over the Senate, chair a Senate committee and preside over a Senate hearing.

  • S01E02 Daisy Bates

    • August 29, 2019
    • PBS

    Hate can overcome us, or it can motivate us. When Daisy Gatson Bates' mother was raped and murdered and the attackers weren't prosecuted, it lit a fire under Daisy. Learn how tragedy inspired Daisy Gatson Bates to battle inequality and become a pivotal figure in the civil rights movement.

  • S01E03 Alice Walton

    • September 5, 2019
    • PBS

    Learn more about Alice Walton’s work as the founder and chair of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and her hope to uplift the image that Arkansans have of themselves.

  • S01E04 Dr. Edith Irby Jones

    • September 12, 2019
    • PBS

    When we give of ourselves, we pave the way for others. Dr. Edith Irby Jones was a trailblazer on so many fronts: the first African-American to attend UAMS - University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, the first black female resident at Baylor University and the first female president of The National Medical Association.

  • S01E05 Dr. Joycelyn Elders

    • September 19, 2019
    • PBS

    Dr. Joycelyn Elders, the first African-American U.S. Surgeon General and UAMS - University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences professor emerita, shares how others supported her education at Philander Smith College and how Dr. Edith Irby Jones inspired her medical career.

  • S01E06 Dr. Sue Griffin

    • September 26, 2019
    • PBS

    Love, science and even dancing — whatever aspect of life she encounters, UAMS - University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences' Dr. Sue Griffin believes in pursuing it to the fullest. Learn more about Dr. Griffin’s extraordinary work in neurobiology and how her neurodegenerative disease research has led to significant breakthroughs in the early detection and treatment of Alzheimer's disease.

  • S01E07 Joanna Seibert

    • October 2, 2019
    • PBS

    For Dr. Joanna Seibert - longtime Arkansas Children's Hospital and UAMS - University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences physician and Episcopal deacon - the scientific and the sacred are closely linked. Learn more about how Dr. Seibert became Arkansas’s first trained pediatric radiologist, her extensive research contributions, and how - in her retirement - she continues to use her expertise to serve.

  • S01E08 Raye Montague

    • October 9, 2019
    • PBS

    “Aim for the stars. At the very worst, you’ll land on the moon.” As an engineer and graphics designer for the U.S. Navy, Raye Montague lived by those words from her eighth-grade history teacher. Find out more about the woman who created the first computer generated draft of a U.S. Navy ship.

  • S01E09 Maya Angelou

    • October 17, 2019
    • PBS

    As a singer, dancer, activist, poet, writer and educator, Maya Angelou used her art to give voice to an amazing perspective, inspiring generations to think about their own histories in ways they had never considered before.

  • S01E10 Mary Steenburgen

    • October 24, 2019
    • PBS

    Although her career took her elsewhere, Academy Award-winning actress and songwriter Mary Steenburgen has always been proud of her Arkansas roots. Learn about Steenburgen's acting career — spanning film, television and the stage — and what it's taken to balance her loves, life and business.