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Wednesday, July 22, 2020

A Lull Before the Storm


     By the end of the nineteenth century, women had won full suffrage in only four states — Wyoming, Colorado, Idaho, and Utah. In 1900, Susan B. Anthony turned over the presidency of the now-united National American Woman Suffrage Association  (NAWSA) to Carrie Chapman Catt, signaling a new generation of leadership.

     During this period, little effort was devoted toward passage of a constitutional amendment. Instead, the association’s work centered around winning voting rights in the individual states. Catt gave speeches and organized women to help plan and execute suffrage campaigns. In many states, men feared that enfranchising women would interfere with political efforts to disenfranchise African-Americans and immigrants. Despite its Quaker roots, NAWSA was not immune to Jim Crow influences. While the national organization did not explicitly prohibit non-white members, it allowed state and local affiliates to set their own membership requirements. Many groups, especially in the South, admitted only white women.
     Catt devised the ‘society plan’ to recruit wealthy members of women's clubs into the NAWSA. These women had organizing experience, time to volunteer, and money to contribute to the cause. While there was a strong black woman’s club movement, Catt did not extend her recruiting efforts to them, even though those groups were often engaged in promoting women’s rights, including suffrage. Consequently, the NAWSA became predominantly white. 

     In 1902, Catt helped to found the International Woman Suffrage Alliance (IWSA). The IWSA brought together groups pursuing votes for women around the world, eventually representing 32 nations. The organization is now known as the International Alliance of Women.
    When Catt’s husband fell ill in 1904, she resigned her NAWSA presidency to care for him. He died in October 1905. 
Anna Howard Shaw
     Anna Howard Shaw succeeded Catt to the NAWSA presidency. Although she was a talented speaker, she lacked the leadership skills of her predecessors. However, when southern NAWSA members formed the Southern Woman Suffrage Conference in 1906, Shaw refused to give the national association’s endorsement to the overtly racist organization.
     During Shaw’s term, members organized other new affiliates. In 1907, Harriet Stanton Blatch (Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s daughter) formed the Equality League of Self-Supporting Women, with membership comprised of professional and industrial working women. This contrasted with Catt’s ‘society plan’ which appealed to upper-class women. The Equality League adopted tactics of English suffragists, including parades, street speakers, and pickets. The League became the Women's Political Union in 1910.  
  
    The National College Equal Suffrage League became an affiliate of the NAWSA in 1908. The organization had been founded in Boston at the beginning of the century as the College Equal Suffrage League.
     The death of Carrie Chapman Catt’s husband was followed by a rapid succession of more deaths among people important to her. Susan B. Anthony died in February 1906, and Catt's mother and younger brother both died in 1907. These sorrows plunged Catt into despair. Her doctor and friends convinced her that traveling abroad would help her recover from the devastating losses. She spent much of the following eight years promoting equal-suffrage rights worldwide as the IWSA president.

      In 1909, Catt and some of her friends founded the Woman Suffrage Party to fight for the vote in New York. Within a year, the Party had 20,000 members. The organization remained independent, but Catt and its other leaders remained loyal to the NAWSA.
      By the end of the decade, the public’s attitude toward the suffrage movement had improved dramatically. Working for the cause had come to be viewed by many as a respectable activity for middle-class women. Infrastructure in support of the suffrage movement had been built. However, from 1896 to 1910 there had been six state campaigns for suffrage. All six failed.
     But the tide was about to turn.

Ann Markim


10 comments:

  1. I love real history posts, and really enjoyed the detail in this one. I'm very familiar with the UK history of female suffrage, but still have much to learn about the USA.

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  2. Thanks for you interest and your comment. In the next installment, I introduce Alice Paul, who was imprisoned fighting for suffrage in England before coming home to lead the efforts in the USA.

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  3. This is great, Ann, especially with an important election coming up. We tend to forget that not so long ago, women didn't have the right and had to fight to be equal. In some aspects we're still carrying on that fight.

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    1. Thank you. The battle for women's rights has been ongoing since the birth of the U.S. So much of that history has not been taught.

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  4. Interesting and well written. Your excerpt from The Unexpected Companion is intriguing. You write well.

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  5. I had no idea of some of the internal conflicts involved in the women's movement. I was surprised to learn that rich white women were welcomed into the group, but women of color were basically ignored. You did a marvelous job of showing the history and inner workings as well as the leaders involved in establishing women's rights. A well researched article, Ann.
    My Grandmother McNeal was involved in fighting for women's rights.
    I wish you all the best...

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  6. Doing the research really opened my eyes to the struggles and conflicts within the suffrage movement. My maternal grandfather was a strong supporter of the cause. Did your mother keep any journals or letters relating to her involvement?

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    1. I don't think my grandmother had any written documentation of her activist participation in the women's rights movement. Pop talked about her involvement and that's how I learned about it. I think it's great that your grandfather was a supporter.

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  7. When I was a child, my Nana belonged to a group called The League of Women Voters. It sounded odd to me because from my perspective of course women could vote. But she was born in 1905, and was in her early teens by the time women had the right to vote -- so of course she took that responsibility very seriously. It's important that we remember this history, including some of the less pleasant aspects, and that we continue to exercise that responsbility. Thanks for this timely post.

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    1. Our local League of Women Voters is very active in registering people to vote. I think the League was founded by Carrie Chapman Catt after the 19th Amendment passed.

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