Category: Women’s History Month

Clientele Spotlight: Celebrating Amazing Women During Women’s History Month

As the weather grows warmer, March is not only a month to admire flowers and celebrate St. Patrick’s day, but it is also a month to celebrate the achievements, talents, and accomplishments of women. 

In honor of Women’s History Month, ExpressTruckTax wants to take the time to highlight some of the amazing women in the trucking industry/ women-owned businesses that have generated their 2290 or 8849 Forms with us.

If you would like your business featured, or want to shout out to a woman-owned trucking company you admire, reach out to support@expresstrucktax.com.

We will feature these businesses through an Instagram and Facebook post upon your approval.


Five Inspiring Stories of Women In Trucking

In celebration of International Women’s Day and Women’s Month, we thought we’d take a look back at four women who broke ground in the trucking industry.

These women helped pave the way for female truck drivers by fighting stereotypes, sexism, and harassment. Here are five inspiring stories of early women in trucking.

Lillie Elizabeth Drennan

The jury is out on which woman was the first licensed female truck driver. However, Lillie Elizabeth Drennan is certainly in the running, having obtained her CDL in 1929.

She and her husband started the Drennan Truck line in 1928. At first, only her husband drove a Model-T Ford but eventually they purchased a second Chevy that Lille drove. 

When she and her husband later divorced, Lillie maintained sole ownership of the company they had started. Until 1952, she ran the business and drove a truck with an apparently perfect safety record (despite lack of HOS regulations at the time).

She received much acclaim throughout her career for her colorful personality and strict training methods for new drivers.

Adriesue “Bitsy” Gomez 

In 1976, Time Magazine featured an article about Bitsy’s game-changing activism on behalf of women in trucking. She formed her own coalition of women truck drivers and fought against sexual harassment and the exclusion of women from truck stops. Through legal action and just plain persistence she helped break down barriers for women truck drivers.

Luella Bates

According to some sources, Luella Bates was actually the very first woman to get her CDL in 1920. But what is certain is that she was the first woman to consistently drive trucks professionally, having been a test driver during the first world war. By most accounts, she is also the first woman to drive across the United States in a truck.

Mazie Lanham

Mazie Lanham was the first female UPS truck driver. She began working for them during World War II as many women began filling in for men in America. UPS continued hiring women as truck drivers during and after the war.

Rusty Dow

Rusty Dow was another woman who was called into service during World War II. She was employed by the Alaska Defense Command and drove over the treacherous ice roads and through the largely untamed wilderness. She became the first woman to drive the entirety of the Alaska Highway in 1944. 

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Top 3 Trucking Awesome Women Of All Time

If you weren’t aware, last month was Women’s History Month. Who would we be not to acknowledge the women who have impacted the trucking industry with huge strides? Here are three women from the past, present, and future who have either paved the way for women truckers trailing the highways, gave them a sense of community, or inspired them to take the leap into a career change.

Past: Lillie Elizabeth Drennan

Drennan became the first licensed female truck driver and trucking-firm owner in 1928. Drennan and her husband started their trucking company as a way to take advantage of an oil boom. A year later Drennan divorced her then-husband, Willard Ernest Drennan and took sole ownership of Drennan Truck Line and in the same year received her commercial truck-driver’s license.

Drennan’s accomplishments did not happen without a fight. During this time the Railroad Commission regulated motor-freight. The Railroad Commission claimed that her partial hearing loss prevented a safety concern, but the determined Drennan challenged them. Her quest was for the commission to find a man with a better record than hers on the road, and when their search came up empty she was awarded her license.

Honorable mention:

Luella Bates – First woman truck driver (1918)

Rusty Dow – First woman to drive with a full load on the Alaska Highway (1944)

Present: Ellen Voie

Voie is the founder, president and CEO of Women In Trucking, a nonprofit that encourages women to find career paths in the trucking industry. In 2018 the National Association of Small Trucking Companies (NASTC) named her the Transportation Person of the Year. Although the organization she founded is a little over a decade she has been in the trucking industry for nearly 4 decades. It all began in 1980 when she earned her diploma in Traffic and Transportation Management while working as the Transportation Manager for a steel fabricating plant in central Wisconsin.

Since then she has received a number of accolades for her work. One of those was a prestigious honor from the White House in 2012, as a Transportation Innovators Champion of Change. More recently she was listed as one of the “30 Most Innovative CEOs to Watch”.

Future: Angela Eliacostas

Recently awarded the “Influential Woman In Trucking Award”, Eliacostas is indeed a woman to pay attention to in the truck industry. She got her start in the industry as a single mother of four, working as a part-time billing clerk for BBI Trucking Company. Over time Eliacostas worked her way up and has now found herself as the founder and CEO of All Girls Transportation and Logistics (AGT).

AGT specializes in integrating transportation and logistics functions for top-tier companies around the world. The company Eliacostas launched, in 2005, is consistently ranked as a top 50 Illinois and top 1000 U.S. certified women-owned business.

The ambition she has to succeed in the trucking industry is owed to her father, a former long-haul trucker. She recalls him giving her a key piece of advice in her early career years – “this is like a vacuum. It’s going to suck you in.” Years later she states that his advice was right, “I got in it, and I just couldn’t get in enough.”

Honorable Mentions

Desiree Wood – Founder of REAL Women In Trucking

Steph ‘Hammer Down’ Custance – Ice Road Trucker cast member

Take the time to honor a woman who makes what you do easier. Whether it is a significant other, a fellow hauler, or anyone who comes to your mind when you hear the term ‘impactful woman’.

The future of the trucking industry is women and it is our duty to make the path for them to enter, clear.

Cheers to impactful women all around. May we know them. May we be them. May we raise them.

Happy (Belated) Women’s History Month!