NEWARK, N.J. – BIG EAST Commissioner Val Ackerman has been named to the 2021 class of the New Jersey Hall of Fame (NJHOF), which includes inductees from all walks of life -- Business, Performing Arts, Public Service and Sports.
The New Jersey Hall of Fame (NJHOF) honors citizens who have made invaluable contributions to society, the State of New Jersey and the world beyond. The NJHOF endeavors to present school children with significant and impactful role models to show that they can, and should, strive for excellence.
Ackerman, who was recently announced as a member of the 2021 class of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, is a New Jersey native. She attended Hopewell Valley Central High School in Pennington, where she remains the school’s all-time leading basketball scorer. She was among the first female athletics scholarship recipients at the University of Virginia, from which she graduated in 1981.
Ackerman was named the founding President of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) in 1996 and oversaw the league’s day-to-day operations for its first eight seasons. She is a past President of USA Basketball, which oversees the U.S. men's and women's Olympic basketball program.
Ackerman was named the fifth Commissioner of the BIG EAST Conference on June 26, 2013. She was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2011 and received the Women’s Sports Foundation’s Billie Jean King Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016.
The list of New Jersey Hall of Fame inductees showcases the depth and variety of talent of the Garden State, ranging from founding father Alexander Hamilton to punk rock icon Patti Smith. Other inductees include dynamic businesswoman Louise Scott, famed photographer Dorothea Lange, Baseball Hall of Famer Monte Irvin and the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.
The 13th annual induction ceremony will once again be a virtual event as it was last year, in an abundance of caution amidst the Coronavirus pandemic. It will be broadcast on My9NJ on Saturday, October 16, Sunday, October 17, Saturday, October 23 and Sunday, October 24, as well as on NJ PBS, radio and prominent social media platforms, bringing the event closer than ever to the public. The Class of 2021’s Unsung Hero will be announced in early October.
“We asked New Jerseyans to help choose the next class of heroes and they delivered,” says Jon F. Hanson, chairman of the NJHOF. “We are honored to celebrate the lives and contributions of these notable New Jersey luminaries and greats.”
The New Jersey Hall of Fame Class of 2021:
Arts & Letters
Dorothea Lange*, Hoboken, documentary photographer
Anne Morrow Lindbergh*, Englewood, author and aviator
John Forbes Nash Jr.*, Princeton, mathematician
Gay Talese, Ocean City, writer and journalist
Enterprise
Madeline McWhinney Dale*, Middletown, first female officer/vice-president of the Federal Reserve Bank
Louise Scott*, Newark, founder of chain of beauty salons
Paul Volcker*,Teaneck, 12th Chair of the Federal Reserve
Sara Spencer Washington*, Atlantic City, founder of Apex News and Hair Company
Performing Arts
George Benson, Englewood, jazz guitarist, singer, and songwriter
Sarah Dash, Trenton, award-winning vocalist who co-founded Patti LaBelle & the Bluebelles
Lesley Gore*, Tenafly, singer, songwriter, actress, and activist
Buddy Hackett*, Fort Lee, actor and comedian
Patti Smith, Pitman/Deptford Township, & Lenny Kaye, New Brunswick, Legendary singer-songwriter and her longtime guitarist who were part of the New York City punk rock movement in the 1970s
Mary Chapin Carpenter**, Princeton, country music singer
Public Service
Margaret Bancroft*, Haddonfield, founder of the Haddonfield Bancroft Training School for the multiply disabled
Alexander Hamilton*, Elizabeth, founding father and first secretary of the treasury
David Mixner, Elmer, political activist and author
William Paterson*, South Branch, signer of the U.S. Constitution, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court and 2nd Governor of New Jersey
Gustave F. Perna, Rockaway, U.S. Army four-star general/COO of the federal COVID-19 response
Antonin Scalia*, Trenton, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court from 1986 until his death in 2016
Sports
Val Ackerman, Pennington, first president of the Women’s National Basketball Association
Monte Irvin*, Orange, left and right fielder in the Negro leagues and Major League Baseball who played with the Newark Eagles, New York Giants and Chicago Cubs
Ron Jaworski, Voorhees, former Philadelphia Eagles quarterback and National Football League (NFL) analyst
*Being honored posthumously.
**Previous inductee, but being formally inducted this year.
The 23 inductees in the five categories were chosen out of 50 nominees after a public vote during the month of May.
ABOUT THE NJHOF: Because everyone needs a hero, the New Jersey Hall of Fame (NJHOF) honors citizens who have made invaluable contributions to society, the State of New Jersey and the world beyond. Since 2008, the NJHOF has hosted 12 ceremonies for more than 180 notable individuals and groups in recognition of their induction into the Hall of Fame. The NJHOF endeavors to present school children with significant and impactful role models to show that they can, and should, strive for excellence. The NJHOF is thankful for the support of its many
sponsors, like Hackensack Meridian Health, without which none of our endeavors would be possible. For more information, go to
www.njhalloffame.org.
CONTACT: Natasha Alagarasan,
natasha@princetonsc.com, (609) 789-7818