An article from ABC News describes the return of 735 acres of ancestral lands to the Penobscot Nation. The land had been owned by the Elliotsville Foundation, Roxanne Quimby's land trust which also donated the federal lands to form Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument. Quimby's family describes their land donations as part of a reparations process and restoration of ancestral Wabanaki lands.
Ardra Tarbell, Acadia National Park Clerk and Administrative Officer, and Sylvia Cough, secretary to Park Superintendent Benjamin L. Hadley. The two women pose at Sieur de Monts Spring.
A Forbes article describes Roxanne Quimby's business and conservation activities and donation of the land to form Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument. Article includes related images.
A female NPS employee appears to lead educational or reenactment programming with children, some carrying weapons, at Gettysburg National Military Park.
An NPS employee on the National Mall "wearing the 1974 NPS women's uniform with a white turtleneck and platform shoes." (National Park Service Archive)
Presidential proclamation of August 24, 2016 declaring the establishment of Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument, signed by President Barack Obama and recognizing Roxanne Quimby's contribution of funds for establishment of the park:
"WHEREAS, the Roxanne Quimby Foundation has established a substantial endowment with the National Park Foundation to support the administration of a national monument..."