Wisconsin civil rights activist and politician Vel Phillips had a reputation for making historic breakthroughs during her lengthy career in public service. After becoming both the first Black person and the first woman on the Milwaukee Common Council in 1956, she went on to win a position in Wisconsin’s state committee, becoming the first Black woman elected to the Democratic party’s National Committee. In 1978, the equal housing advocate broke barriers again when she won the seat for Wisconsin’s secretary of state, becoming the United States’s first Black woman elected statewide to an executive office.

Now, just over six years since her death, Phillips’s pioneering legacy continues to barrel ahead with a new sculpture officially unveiled in Madison’s Capitol Square on Saturday afternoon, July 27. Community members claim the outdoor bronze statue is the country’s first sculptural rendering of a Black woman installed outside a state capitol building. In 2021, a year-long audit by Monument Lab revealed that only six percent of US monuments portray women and ten percent commemorate Black or Indigenous individuals.


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