https://www.bls.gov/news.release/pdf/wkyeng.pdf
This gives somewhat different figures. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Yes, a link would be helpful. The starting wage Ward gives sounds more like the average for professionals with post-Bachelor's degrees, than the overall average starting wage.
Also, generally, "wage" would not be used to describe an annual salary for a profession, which seems to be the figure he's giving.
Women's wages started lower and went up less than men's. 18-24 year old women's wages went down, not up. The exception on women vs. men was Hispanic women, who were and remain lower, but who had a greater increase.
Black men get paid less than White women. Hispanic 16-24s get paid more than Black 16-24s, but that disappears at ages 25+ in any category.
The gap in every age group's pay increases until the over 65s, when it drops a bit.
But the increase in numbers of women working was almost double the additional men. (~2 million to ~1 million).
Lots of anomolies to the seemingly general increases, like women construction workers seeing their pay plummet.