Lynn Malerba, one of the members of the 2024 50 Over 50: Impact list, is the first woman to lead the Mohegan Tribe in nearly 300 years and the first Native American to oversee the production and distribution of currency in U.S. history.
By Erin Spencer Sairam, Forbes Staff
Lynn Malerba’s name appears, in minuscule cursive, on the bills in our wallets, cash registers and banks around the country. As Treasurer of the United States, Malerba “signs” every piece of American currency; she and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen are legally required to do so to make legal tender. It’s easy to pay for your groceries without noticing Malerba’s well-practiced loops, but behind her small signature is a larger-than-life story.
Lynn Malerba in June 1974 following her nursing school graduation
Lynn Malerba
In the lead-up to her name-signing in September 2022, Malerba knew she’d be making history. It would mark both the first time a Native American person would be the U.S. Treasurer and also the first time that the names of two women—Malerba’s and Yellen’s—would appear on U.S. currency. A longtime nurse trained in scribbling patient charts on the go, Malerba practiced a lot to get it right. She also made the decision to sign her name Lynn Roberge Malerba, intentionally including her maiden name to honor her parents, who’d struggled to make ends meet while raising seven children. To have their name on American currency was a full-circle moment, and when she first saw the printed money, she cried.
“My family is just so proud, and what could be better than making not only your immediate family proud, but your larger Mohegan family proud, and Indian country proud?” Malerba says.
US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Treasurer Marilynn Malerba hold notes with their signatures at the…