Opal Lee has spent a lifetime walking for freedom — literally. At 89, she trekked hundreds of miles from Fort Worth to Washington, D.C., each 2½-mile segment representing the two-and-a-half years it took for news of the Emancipation Proclamation to reach Galveston. That march helped secure a place in history: Juneteenth became a federal holiday in 2021. Now, nearly a decade later, her legacy is being celebrated in a very different way — through a Barbie doll that captures the spirit of her lifelong activism.
Lee is now part of Mattel’s Barbie Signature Inspiring Women series, which celebrates real-life figures whose courage and perseverance have shaped history and inspired future generations. The Opal Lee doll wears a blue Opal’s Walk for Freedom T-shirt, white pants, sneakers, and glasses atop her gray curls, standing with a hand on her hip as if poised to keep moving. On the box, one of Lee’s favorite quotes is featured: “If people can be taught to hate, they can be taught to love.” According to the Dallas Morning News, her granddaughter Dione Sims said Lee “screamed in delight” when she first saw the doll and “couldn’t believe it.” With this release, Lee joins trailblazers like Jane Goodall, Venus Williams, Ellen Ochoa, and Maya Angelou in Mattel’s Inspiring Women series.
Over her 99 years, Lee has accumulated a remarkable record of honors. She has received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, and earned more than half a dozen honorary doctorates — yet she remains focused on what matters most: inspiring change, empowering communities, and keeping the memory of Juneteenth alive.
Lee’s commitment to civil rights began early. When she was 12, a mob of white supremacists burned down her family’s Fort Worth home on June 19, 1939 — Juneteenth, the day commemorating the 1865 announcement that enslaved people in Texas were free. That formative experience embedded a deep understanding of freedom’s fragility and propelled her toward a career as a teacher, counselor, and community activist.
Her 2016 walk was more than symbolic. Lee petitioned lawmakers to recognize Juneteenth as a national holiday, and five years later, she saw that dream come true. Today, she continues the tradition with her annual 2.5-mile Opal’s Walk for Freedom events, showing that activism is a lifelong pursuit and that every voice can make a difference.
Mattel said the Barbie honors Lee’s “mission of empowering communities to spark positive change” and her “legacy of perseverance and commitment.” The doll’s release, now available in stores nationwide, brings Lee’s story to a new generation, demonstrating the power of courage, persistence, and hope.