1. Laverne Cox

2. Aydian Dowling

3. Janet Mock

4. Ben Barres

5. Andreja Pejić

6. Stephen Whittle

7. Jamie Clayton

8. Schuyler Bailar

9. Audrey Middleton

10. Skylar Kergil

11. Caitlyn Jenner

From Caitlyn Jenner to Laverne Cox, 2015 is the year that #TransIsBeautiful. Break the boundaries.
First transgender person to be nominated for a Primetime Emmy, the first transgender person to have a wax figure at Madam Tussauds, and the first transgender person to be on the cover of TIME magazine. 'Nuff said.
As the likely winner of the 2015 "Ultimate Guy Search", Aydian Howling is a transgender model whose FTM magazine photoshoot went viral. In July, he will probably become the first transgender model to be on the cover of Men's Health.
Contributing editor at Marie Claire and Host of #SoPOPular, Janet Mock is a transgender activist who utilises Twitter, Tumblr, and Social Media to raise awareness for the LGBTQI community.
A Harvard alumni and trans activist, Dr. Ben Barres is the Chair of the Neurobiology department at Stanford University School of Medicine. As the first openly transgender member of the US National Academy of Sciences, he has been quietly blazing trails in both the science world and LGBTQ community.
Before her transition, Andreja Pejić was a gender-fluid model who walked the top catwalks for Gaultier, Marc Jacobs, and several other designers. After her transition and decision to publicly identify as a transgender woman, Andreja continues to be a sought-after model and in 2015, became the first transgender model to be profiled by Vogue.
A British Professor of Law, Stephen Whittle fought in the European Court of Human Rights for his right to legally identify as a male and have a child via IVF with his future wife, Sarah Rutherford. His work, manifesting as the research report Engendered Penalties: Transsexual and Transgender People’s Experience of Inequality and Discrimination, was instrumental in passing the UK's Gender Recognition Act 2004, awarding him an OBE and establishing the framework of legal recognition for transgender people.
Although she had previously made waves in Dirty Work and Hung, Jamie Clayton broke out even further in 2015 in Netflix's new show Sense8. Jamie's turn as computer hacker, Nomi, is her meatiest and strongest role yet.
In 2015, Schuyler Bailar will become the first openly transgender swimmer in NCAA history when he competes for Harvard University. The 19 year old is currently documenting his transition on Instagram and has already been profiled by Guardian magazine.
Although some might view Audrey's addition to this list surprising, Audrey Middleton will soon break out into the public conscious in the next few weeks. As a 2015 houseguest on Big Brother 17, she is the first transgender contestant on CBS's reality shows and has already been mentioned several times, including on The Talk, TMZ, EW, and People.
One of the first transgender YouTube vloggers, Skylar Kergil documented his transition in his vlogs, accruing almost 6 million hits. He is a talented musician with an EP "Tell Me a Story" and is the star of PBS's First Person.
And Caitlyn herself. Arguably the most visible transgender person in 2015, Caitlyn has over 2 million Twitter followers whose Diane Swayer interview and documentary I Am Cait are generating substantial visibility for what it means to be transgender. Her Vanity Fair cover has become iconic and a celebration of acceptance for transgender people.
This is 2015, Buzzfeed!