The Hall of Fame honors exemplary individuals who have made historic contributions to American government.

The Hall of Fame honors exemplary individuals who have made historic contributions to American government. Zaid Hamid

Introducing the 2024 Government Hall of Fame inductees

Mary Frances Berry and James Lee Witt join the sixth class of this distinguished group. All the inductees will be honored at a gala celebration on April 24.

This year marks the sixth anniversary of the Government Hall of Fame, created by Government Executive to recognize those who have made historic achievements in service to the federal government and the American people. Since 2019, a distinguished group of individuals, ranging from Clara Barton to Anthony Fauci, have been inducted into the hall.

Five new inductees join that select club in 2024, people who have demonstrated sustained achievement and unparalleled dedication to public service throughout their careers. They’ll all be honored at a gala “Evening of Honors” on April 24 at the Anthem in Washington, D.C. The annual Fed 100 winners also will be recognized at the gala.

Here are the members of the Government Hall of Fame Class of 2024:

Mary Frances Berry

Cheriss May/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Berry, a historian, academician and civil rights activist, was nominated as assistant secretary for education in the Health, Education, and Welfare Department by President Jimmy Carter in 1977. She was the first Black woman to serve in the role. Three years later Carter appointed her to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. During her long tenure at the agency, she took on President Ronald Reagan, who tried to dismiss Berry. She sued to keep her seat and won. In 1993, Berry became the commission's chairperson and when she left in 2004, Berry said she “had served the commission well and will be remembered as doing such.” The historian is the Geraldine R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought, History and African Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.

Mary McLeod Bethune

The Abbott Sengstacke Family Papers/Robert Abbott Sengstacke/Getty Images

An educator and political organizer, Bethune participated in a White House Conference on Child Welfare and Housing, serving as an advisor to President Calvin Coolidge. She was later appointed to the National Child Welfare Commission by President Herbert Hoover. Bethune was one of the first directors of a federal agency and the highest ranking Black woman in government when she served as director of Negro Affairs of the National Youth Administration under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Bethune also organized and led the “Black Cabinet,” a group of federal employees who served as unofficial advisors to Roosevelt on issues facing Black Americans. The group’s work laid the foundation for the civil rights movement. Bethune served as special assistant to the secretary of war and was part of the advisory board that in 1942 created the Women’s Army Corps, and she fought to make sure it was diverse. Bethune attended the founding conference of the United Nations in 1945, and represented President Harry S. Truman in Liberia.

Ann E. Dunwoody 

Courtesy Ann E. Dunwoody

Retired Gen. Dunwoody’s 38-year military career began as a platoon leader at Fort Sill, Okla., and would include serving as the Parachute Officer, 82nd Airborne Division; strategic planner for the Chief of Staff of the Army; executive officer to the director, Defense Logistics Agency; and deputy chief of staff for Logistics G-4. She was the first woman to lead a battalion for the 82nd Airborne Division, the first woman to serve as general at Fort Bragg and the first woman in the history of the U.S. to achieve a four-star general rank. Dunwoody led the push to integrate women into the Regular Army after the disestablishment of the Women’s Army Corps 1978  and received many awards, including the Distinguished Service Medal and the Defense Superior Service Medal before retiring in 2012.

Gregory L. Robinson

Joel Kowsky/NASA via Getty Images

Robinson, a 33-year NASA veteran, is renowned for turning around the James Webb Space Telescope program, once over budget and behind schedule, into a 21st-century success. His leadership earned him recognition, including TIME Magazine's 100 Most Influential People of 2022 (alongside Apple CEO Tim Cook and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky) and the TIME100 Impact Award. Throughout Robinson’s career, he held key roles – from deputy associate administrator for programs at the NASA Science Mission Directorate, overseeing 114 science flight missions, to deputy center director of the John H. Glenn Research Center to deputy chief engineer to director of the James Webb Space Telescope Program. Robinson received prestigious awards including NASA Presidential Rank Distinguished Executive, the Presidential Rank Meritorious Senior Professionals and Executives Award and 2022 Federal Employee of the Year, NASA Distinguished Service Medal 2022. When he retired in 2022, Robinson reflected on his fulfilling career dedicated to public service: “This was a dream career at an agency that allows you to reach for new heights so that we can reveal the unknown for the benefit of all humanity.” Robinson holds degrees in Mathematics, Electrical Engineering and Business Administration as well as multiple honorary doctorates and currently shares his expertise as a lecturer at Columbia University.

James Lee Witt

Paul Chinn/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images

This former FEMA director worked his way up through state government ranks, serving as head of emergency services in Arkansas before being tapped to helm the federal agency in 1993 by President Clinton. Witt used his Arkansas experience to turn FEMA around, managing 348 presidentially declared disasters during his tenure, and seeing FEMA elevated to Cabinet-level in 1996. After leaving the federal government Witt advised the governor of Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina and helped shape the state’s recovery for over 10 years. He also advised the CEO of BP following the devastating Deepwater Horizon oil spill. He was called upon by New Jersey’s governor following Superstorm Sandy and assisted in their recovery efforts for 5 years. Witt now runs AG Witt, a premier disaster preparedness, response, recovery and mitigation consulting firm.

PREVIOUS INDUCTEES

The members of the class of 2024 join those who have already been inducted into the Government Hall of Fame:

  • Madeleine Albright
  • Thad Allen
  • Apollo 11 Astronauts: Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, Neil Armstrong, and Michael Collins
  • Clara Barton
  • Hubert T. Bell
  • Lonnie Bunch III
  • Ralph Bunche
  • George H.W. Bush
  • Rachel Carson
  • David Chu
  • Francis Collins
  • David O. “Doc” Cooke
  • Ada Deer
  • Frederick Douglass
  • Tammy Duckworth
  • Elizabeth Duke
  • Anthony Fauci
  • Barbara Hackman Franklin
  • Carla Hayden
  • Robert Gates
  • John Glenn
  • Virginia Hall
  • Alexander Hamilton
  • Patricia Roberts Harris
  • Oveta Culp Hobby
  • Walter Hollis
  • Grace Hopper
  • Dwight Ink
  • Shirley Ann Jackson
  • Howard Jenkins Jr.
  • Katherine Johnson
  • Frank Kameny
  • John Koskinen
  • John Lewis
  • Charles Lyman
  • Thurgood Marshall
  • Charles McGee
  • Norman Mineta
  • Patsy Mink
  • Constance Berry Newman
  • Sean O’Keefe
  • Ellen Ochoa
  • Douglas Owsley
  • Ely S. Parker
  • Frances Perkins
  • Colin Powell
  • Condoleezza Rice
  • Elliot Richardson 
  • Alice Rivlin
  • Theodore Roosevelt
  • Donna Shalala
  • Susan Solomon
  • Elmer Staats
  • Kathryn D. Sullivan
  • Linda Thomas-Greenfield
  • Harriet Tubman
  • Paul Volcker
  • James Webb
  • Marshalyn Yeargin-Allsop

SELECTION COMMITTEE

This year’s inductees into the Government Hall of Fame were chosen by a panel made up of former federal officials and government management experts:

  • Tanya Ballard Brown, executive editor, Government Executive
  • Jason Briefel, partner at the law firm Shaw, Bransford & Roth and director of policy and outreach of the Senior Executives Association
  • Calvin Byrd, former senior level advisor for physical security at the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
  • Teresa Gerton, president and CEO of the National Academy of Public Administration
  • Tom Shoop, former editor at large, Government Executive
  • Robert Tobias, former president of the National Treasury Employees Union and distinguished practitioner in residence in Key Executive Leadership Programs at American University