Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association

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Ratification Day at Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association on September 8, 1919. Ratification Day at Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association (September 8, 1919).png
Ratification Day at Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association on September 8, 1919.

The Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association (MWSA) operated from 1881 to 1920. The organization was part of the broader women's suffrage movement in the United States and it sought to secure the right of women to vote in Minnesota. Its members organized marches, wrote petitions and letters, gathered signatures, gave speeches, and published pamphlets and broadsheets to compel the Minnesota Legislature to pass legislation that recognized their right to vote. As a result of the movement's efforts, the legislature ratified the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1919, which prohibited the denial of citizens to vote based on sex.

Contents

History

Origins in the late 19th century

Sarah Burger Stearns was named the organization's first president in 1881. Sarah Burger Stearns from American Women, 1897.jpg
Sarah Burger Stearns was named the organization's first president in 1881.

In the 1870s, many women across Minnesota organized local women's suffrage groups. In 1875, the Minnesota Legislature recognized women's right to vote in school board elections. However, many women wanted to vote in all elections. Seeing the need for a statewide agency, 14 women formed the Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association (MWSA) in Hastings in 1881. [lower-alpha 1] The Minnesota chapter was affiliated with the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). Among the founders of the MWSA were Harriet Bishop and Sarah Burger Stearns. Stearns became the organization's first president. By 1882, the MWSA had grown to 200 members. In 1885, MWSA-president Martha Ripley convinced NAWSA to hold their annual meeting in Minnesota. This national event demonstrated the importance of the Minnesota chapter to the larger organization. It also drew the attention of Minnesota's male lawmakers. [2]

In 1893, the MWSA convinced the Minnesota Senate to take up women's suffrage legislation. President Julia Bullard Nelson worked with Ignatius Donnelly, a populist state senator. Populist regularly supported a women's suffrage agenda. Nelson herself was a populist school superintendent candidate in 1894. Nelson and Donnelly initially sought the vote for women in municipal elections. However, the Senate went further. Its members voted on a bill to remove the word "male" from the state's voting requirements, which passed on a vote of 32 to 19. The legislation did not pass the Minnesota House of Representatives, a necessary step towards its final enactment. That chamber did not have time to take it up before the legislative session ended. Even if it had passed the state house, however, the voters of Minnesota would have had to approve it before it became law. [2]

After the failure of the 1893 amendment, the suffrage movement continued, but MWSA was unable to build on its earlier success. The MWSA and its ally, the Political Equality Club, placed women's suffrage before the state legislature every session. Each time, the bill either did not advance out of committee or it was defeated on the floor. [2]

In the early 20th century

Hennepin County Suffrage Association's Red Cross Squad in 1918. Hennepin County, Minnesota, Suffrage Association's Red Cross Squad (The Woman Citizen, 1918).png
Hennepin County Suffrage Association's Red Cross Squad in 1918.

During the 1910s, the suffrage movement gained momentum. In 1914, Clara Ueland who would later become the MWSA's president in 1915organized a parade through Minneapolis of over 2,000 suffrage supporters. Media coverage of the event gave the movement renewed attention. During this period, the MWSA had to contend with a rival organization, a Minnesota branch of the National Woman's Party (NWP). The NWP was more radical than the MWSA. It was much more likely to take direct action, such as hunger strikes, than the MWSA. Despite these differences in opinion, the two organizations often worked together. [2]

By 1919, about 30,000 women across the state officially belonged to local suffrage associations. Many joined the MWSA, the NWP, and other organizations. Their numbers and continued activities convinced lawmakers to act. In 1919, the Minnesota legislature recognized women's right to vote in presidential elections. The same year, the legislature ratified the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which stated that "the right 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". The amendment took effect in 1920 after it had been ratified by the required threshold of two-thirds of all states.

Post-Nineteenth Amendment legacy

Minnesota Woman Suffrage Memorial at the State Capitol in 2021. Minnesota Woman Suffrage Memorial-north plaques-03.jpg
Minnesota Woman Suffrage Memorial at the State Capitol in 2021.

With their right to vote secured, the MWSA became the Minnesota chapter of the League of Women Voters, [3] selecting Clara Ueland as their first president. The League was still active in Minnesota politics in the 21st Century, publishing a voting guide to inform voters on candidate positions on issues affecting women. [4]

A permanent fixture dedicated to the achievements of the MWSA was installed on the lawn of the Minnesota State Capitol in 2000 and is known as the Minnesota Woman Suffrage Memorial. [2]

Notes

  1. The charter members of the MWSA were: "Mrs. Harriet E. Bishop, Mrs. Martha Luly, St. Paul; Mrs. A. T. Anderson, Mrs. H. J. Moffit, Mrs. C. Smith, Minneapolis; Mrs. Harriet A. Hobart, Julia Bullard Nelson, Mrs. R. Coons, Red Wing; Sarah Burger Stearns, Duluth; Mrs. L. C. Clarke, Worthington; Mrs. L. G. Finen, Albert Lea; Mrs. K. E. Webster, Mrs. Minnie Reed, Mrs. M. A. VanHoesen, Hastings". [1]

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Timeline of women's suffrage in Maine</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women's suffrage in Maine</span>

While women's suffrage in Maine had an early start, dating back to the 1850s, it was a long, slow road to equal suffrage. Early suffragists brought speakers Susan B. Anthony and Lucy Stone to the state in the mid-1850s. Ann F. Jarvis Greely and other women in Ellsworth, Maine, created a women's rights lecture series in 1857. The first women's suffrage petition to the Maine Legislature was also sent that year. Working-class women began marching for women's suffrage in the 1860s. The Snow sisters created the first Maine women's suffrage organization, the Equal Rights Association of Rockland, in 1868. In the 1870s, a state suffrage organization, the Maine Women's Suffrage Association (MWSA), was formed. Many petitions for women's suffrage were sent to the state legislature. MWSA and the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) of Maine worked closely together on suffrage issues. By the late 1880s the state legislature was considering several women's suffrage bills. While women's suffrage did not pass, during the 1890s many women's rights laws were secured. During the 1900s, suffragists in Maine continued to campaign and lecture on women's suffrage. Several suffrage organizations including a Maine chapter of the College Equal Suffrage League and the Men's Equal Rights League were formed in the 1910s. Florence Brooks Whitehouse started the Maine chapter of the National Woman's Party (NWP) in 1915. Suffragists and other clubwomen worked together on a large campaign for a 1917 voter referendum on women's suffrage. Despite the efforts of women around the state, women's suffrage failed. Going into the next few years, a women's suffrage referendum on voting in presidential elections was placed on the September 13, 1920 ballot. But before that vote, Maine ratified the Nineteenth Amendment on November 5, 1920. It was the nineteenth state to ratify. A few weeks after ratification, MWSA dissolved and formed the League of Women Voters (LWV) of Maine. White women first voted in Maine on September 13, 1920. Native Americans in Maine had to wait longer to vote. In 1924, they became citizens of the United States. However, Maine would not allow individuals living on Indian reservations to vote. It was not until the passage of a 1954 equal rights referendum that Native Americans gained the right to vote in Maine. In 1955 Lucy Nicolar Poolaw (Penobscot) was the first Native American living on a reservation in Maine to cast a vote.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women's suffrage in Pennsylvania</span>

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women's suffrage in North Dakota</span>

Women's suffrage in North Dakota began when North Dakota was still part of the Dakota Territory. During this time activists worked for women's suffrage, and in 1879, women gained the right to vote at school meetings. This was formalized in 1883 when the legislature passed a law where women would use separate ballots for their votes on school-related issues. When North Dakota was writing its state constitution, efforts were made to include equal suffrage for women, but women were only able to retain their right to vote for school issues. An abortive effort to provide equal suffrage happened in 1893, when the state legislature passed equal suffrage for women. However, the bill was "lost," never signed and eventually expunged from the record. Suffragists continued to hold conventions, raise awareness, and form organizations. The arrival of Sylvia Pankhurst in February 1912 stimulated the creation of more groups, including the statewide Votes for Women League. In 1914, there was a voter referendum on women's suffrage, but it did not pass. In 1917, limited suffrage bills for municipal and presidential suffrage were signed into law. On December 1, 1919, North Dakota became the twentieth state to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment.

Ethel Edgerton Hurd (1845–1929) was a physician, a social reformer and a leader in the woman's suffrage movement in the U.S. state of Minnesota. She was a founder of the Political Equality Club of Minneapolis and the Scandinavian Woman Suffrage Association, and a member of the executive board of the Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association. For her activities, she was named to the national roll of honor of the League of Women Voters.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Women's suffrage in Minnesota</span>

Women's suffrage in Minnesota began before the Civil War. The earliest recorded educational work for woman suffrage in Minnesota was in 1847, when Harriet Bishop, a teacher in St. Paul, addressed small gatherings of women in the privacy of their parlors.

References

  1. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony, Susan B.; Gage, Matilda Joslyn, eds. (1886). "Minnesota". History of Woman Suffrage, Volume III. Fowler & Wells. pp. 649–661. Archived from the original on 2019-05-29. Retrieved 2019-03-14.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Weber, Eric W. "Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association". MNopedia . Minnesota Historical Society. Archived from the original on 8 December 2018. Retrieved 26 February 2013.
  3. "League of Women Voters History". Archived from the original on 2013-01-05. Retrieved 2013-03-02.
  4. "League of Women Voters Voting Guide". Archived from the original on 2012-01-20. Retrieved 2013-03-02.

Further reading

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