When my grandparents got married in 1916, women couldn't vote in the presidential election that took place later that year. I have sometimes wondered if my grandmother or any of the women in the family were bothered by that fact. I realize now, some forty years after starting my genealogy journey, that I would have gained a great deal of insight into my grandparents had I known the answer to that question and others. Did they read the current news about the suffrage movement? Did they discuss suffrage? Where did family members stand on the issue?
August 18, 2020, marked the 100th anniversary of the ratification of the historic 19th amendment. The November 1920 presidential election was the first one in which women could cast a vote. I will probably never know if the women in my family celebrated that historic event by voting in this election but I would like to think they did.
This post presents some of the things my grandparents might have read about, or even experienced, in the time leading up to the culmination of what was a 70-year struggle to win suffrage for women in America.
L-R: Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony ca. 1891 (LOC), Frederick Douglass in 1862 (LOC), William Lloyd Garrison ca. 1870 (LOC). |
Anthony and Stanton were a formidable team, inspiring women across the country. Along with others, they organized, gave speeches and lectures, distributed pamphlets, lobbied, and above all, persisted despite harassment from onlookers that sometimes included having things thrown at them when they ere speaking.
In January 1868, Anthony and Stanton published the first issue of The Revolution, a newspaper devoted to women's issues. Topics such as discrimination against women in the workplace, women's ability to keep the wages they earned, divorce and reproductive rights, as well as women's rights to own property were all linked to women's enfranchisement. With its confrontational tone, the newspaper was considered quite radical. Anthony and Stanton's positions were clearly stated on the paper's masthead:
Cropped image of the front page of The Revolution, Vol. I - No. 2, January 15, 1868. (Wikimedia Commons) |
The 14th Amendment was passed in June 1866, in part to restrict President Andrew Johnson's repeated efforts to do two things – roll back the rights of newly freed African Americans and give as much power back to the southern states as possible during the Redemption Era that followed Reconstruction after the Civil War. The amendment was ratified in July 1868, granting citizenship to everyone born in the United States, regardless of race or color. It also gave all male citizens over twenty-one years of age the right to vote.
Recently emancipated slaves, both male and female, now had full rights and protection under the law. But one word made all the difference in who was eligible to vote – the word "male" clearly excluded women of any color from enfranchisement. This was a problem for some NWSA members since African American males were being given the right to vote before white women.
In spite of the new law, casting a ballot would not come easily for black males. Southern states circumvented the voting portion of the amendment by requiring African American males to pay a "poll tax" to qualify to vote, which most of them could not afford, or to take a literacy test that many of them could not pass.
Intimidation and violence were also used to prevent the men from exercising their right to vote. This prompted the creation of the 15th Amendment, passed in February 1869 and ratified one year later in February 1870. The amendment specifically gave African American men the right to vote, but all women of any color were still excluded. (NPS, National Women's History Museum)
Lucy Stone, on the other hand, supported both the 14th and 15th Amendments, viewing them as steps forward in the struggle for women's enfranchisement – first, African American males, then women no matter their color. Consequently, she and other left the NWSA. Stone and her husband founded the American Woman Suffrage Association (ASWA) in November 1869, a mere six months after the NWSA was founded. The AWSA was committed to a single-issue strategy – winning suffrage for women on a state-by-state basis; members included both men and women, unlike the NWSA. (NPS, NPS)
In 1870, Stone and Blackwell began publishing The Woman's Journal, with Stone as editor. By 1890, Stone's daughter, Alice Blackwell, negotiated the successful merger of the NWSA and AWSA, creating the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). After Lucy Stone's death in 1893, Alice continued in her mother's footsteps, making The Woman's Journal the primary source for the suffrage movement until 1931. (Britannica)
Carrie Chapman Catt in 1914 (LOC) |
Burns and Paul immediately got involved with the NAWSA, participating in marches and giving speeches, just as many other members of the organization did. They also experienced some of the same treatment they encountered in Britain – hostile onlookers, harassment, and being pelted with objects and rotten vegetables. However, things sometimes went to another level.
Such was the case during the National Woman Suffrage Parade in Washington, D.C. on March 3, 1913, the eve of newly elected President Woodrow Wilson's inauguration. Burns and Paul were tasked with planning the parade. Alice Paul specifically chose March 3rd to take advantage of the huge crowds that would be in Washington for the inauguration, which also ensured that updates about the parade would be in newspapers from coast-to-coast. Suffragists from across the country, such as the Washington hikers, made use of pre-parade publicity to make headlines of their own.
A contingency of sixteen women, carrying signs naming each of the seven
states they were from, left New York City on February 12, 1913, to hike 295
miles to Washington, D.C. Despite the frigid winter temperatures, they planned
to complete the hike and participate in the National Woman Suffrage Parade on March
3, 1913.24 (LOC)
|
The parade was an amazing spectacle that began at the Capitol Building and proceeded down Pennsylvania Avenue. More than 5,000 people from across the U.S. and seventeen countries took part in the parade, marching in groups, riding on horseback, in automobiles, or on one of twenty-four floats. There were also "nine band, four mounted brigades, and three heralds." (LOC)
Among the numerous well-known speakers were Emmeline Pankhurst, who traveled from England to participate in the parade, and Helen Keller.
* * *
Left: Women marchers were organized by country, state, occupation, and organization. Miss Inez Milholland and Mrs. Richard Coke Burleson led the march. (LOC)
The cover of the official 20-page program for the Woman Suffrage Procession that took place in Washington, D.C. on March 3, 1913. The program included ample support from a variety of advertisers. (LOC) |
Inez Milholland Boissevain preparing to lead the March 3, 1913, suffrage parade in Washington, D.C. Harris & Ewing, photographer. Boissevain was an attorney and activist. (LOC) |
Marchers with the banner "Sweden" at the Woman Suffrage Parade in Washington, D.C., March 3, 1913. (LOC)
Nurses marching in the Woman Suffrage Parade on March 3, 1913. (LOC)
The marchers found themselves trapped in a sea of hostile, jeering men who yelled
vile insults and sexual propositions at them.
They were manhandled and spat upon. The women reported that they received no
assistance from nearby police officers, who looked on bemusedly or admonished
the women that they wouldn't
be in this predicament if they had stayed home. Although a few women fled the terrifying scene, most
were determined to continue. They locked arms and faced the ambush, some through
tears. When they could, they ignored taunts. Some brandished banner poles, flags, and hatpins to
ward off the attack.
They held their ground until the U.S. Army
troops arrived about an hour later to clear the street so that the procession
could continue. (NPS)
Woman suffrage parade, Washington, D.C., March 3, 1913. George Grantham Bain, photographer. (LOC) |
Women's suffrage procession in Washington, D.C., March 3, 1913, crowd around a Red Cross ambulance. (LOC) |
By 1916, while the NAWSA continued heavy lobbying among members of Congress, the National Woman's Party (NWP), guided by Alice Paul, began to employ more radical methods to keep attention focused on the issue. Among them was picketing, a tactic that had been used only by labor unions thus far. Picketing began at the White House on January 10, 1917, after an unsuccessful meeting between a large group of suffragists and President Woodrow Wilson the previous day. Paul and Burns intensified the campaign by arranging for picketers to be posted around the White House six days a week, regardless of the weather. Picketing continued in this manner for the next two-and-a-half years. (NPS)
Paul called the picketers "Silent Sentinels" because they did not speak the entire time they were on the picket line, letting their presence and the signs they carried convey the message to President Wilson and the public. Often there were special days for particular groups, such as state delegations, colleges, teachers, musicians, and artists, to name a few. President Wilson was tolerant of the picketers at first, but eventually became annoyed because he could not leave the White House by any exit without encountering them which was, of course, Alice Paul's goal. (NPS)
Pennsylvania on the Picket Line, circa 1917. One banner reads, "Mr. President how long must women wait for liberty." Harris & Ewing, photographer. (LOC) |
Maryland Day picketing the White House for suffrage, circa 1917. Harris & Ewing, photographer. (LOC) |
Suffrage pickets marching around the White House – March 4, 1917. Harris & Ewing, photographer. (LOC) |
Alice Paul carries a banner quoting President Wilson as she leaves NWP headquarters with other picketers. Harris & Ewing, photographer. (LOC) |
Cells were squalid and food was worm-ridden. The women demanded to be treated as political prisoners whose living conditions were significantly better, but prison officials refused their requests.
Burns kept a diary while imprisoned at Occoquan in which she describes the women being beaten and thrown around by prison guards. She also describes having her hands shackled to the top of a cell, forcing her to stand all night during the "Night of Terror" on November 14, 1917. Other women who were arrested with her that night endured abuse, as well. Burns spent more time in prison than any other suffragist. (Boundary Stones)
In a speech to Congress on September 30, 1918, Wilson finally gave his support to a Constitutional amendment for woman suffrage, citing women's contributions to the war effort. His shift in attitude changed everything. Eight months later picketing finally ended when Congress passed the 19th Amendment on June 4, 1919 – it was the same amendment written by Susan B. Anthony in 1818, over four decades before. It reads,
"The rights of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex." (U.S. Const. amend. XIX)
Alice Paul, national chairman of the Woman's Party, unfurls the ratification banner at suffrage headquarters in Washington, D.C. Every time a state ratified the 19th Amendment, a star was sewn onto the banner until there were thirty-six. Harris & Ewing, photographer. (LOC) |
Alice Paul's "Jailed for Freedom" pin. (NPS) |