The movement for women's suffrage in Arizona began in the late 1800s. After women's suffrage was narrowly voted down at the 1891 Arizona Constitutional Convention, prominent suffragettes such as Josephine Brawley Hughes and Laura M. Johns formed the Arizona Suffrage Association and began touring the state campaigning for women's right to vote. Momentum built throughout the decade, and after a strenuous campaign in 1903, a woman's suffrage bill passed both houses of the legislature but was ultimately vetoed by Governor Alexander Oswald Brodie.
Efforts picked up again in 1910 when suffragettes Frances Munds and Pauline O'Neill formed the Arizona Equal Suffrage Association (AESA) and focused on the upcoming Arizona Constitutional Convention. After women's suffrage was again defeated, Munds launched a petition drive to put women's suffrage on the November ballot. She and others succeeded in obtaining the requisite number of signatures, and after a strong campaign, the initiative passed in a landslide vote on November 5, 1912. Women were first able to register to vote in 1913 and voted in the state's primary election in 1914. However, some groups still faced barriers due to literacy tests.
In 1883, Murate Masterson from Prescott introduced a bill to allow women to vote in school board elections. [1] The next year, in 1884, the first chapter of the Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) in Arizona was formed. [2] Josephine Brawley Hughes and Frances Willard toured Arizona to recruit members to the new chapter. [2] The WCTU of Arizona had several successful legislative wins for women's rights. [3] Later Hughes would become president of the state organization in 1890. [4] [3]
In 1891, Henry B. Blackwell and Lucy Stone asked Laura M. Johns, a suffragist from Kansas, to attend the Constitutional Convention for the Territory of Arizona. [5] Johns came to Tucson where she stayed with Josephine Hughes and her husband, Louis C. Hughes. [5] Johns and Josephine Hughes both went to Phoenix to attend the convention. [4] [5] Johns allied with William Herring, a delegate at the convention and the chair of the committee that would hear women's suffrage arguments. [5] Herring was a friend of Hughes and had supported women's suffrage in the past. [6] Johns was able to get permission to address Herring's committee in the parlor of Mrs. E. D. Garlick. [5] The committee went on to report on women's suffrage favorably at the convention and both Hughes and Johns spoke on women's suffrage. [5] The vote to add women's suffrage to the constitution lost by only three votes. [5]
After the convention, Hughes and Garlick formed the Arizona Suffrage Association. [4] [5] Hughes resigned from the WCTU to head the suffrage organization. [6] Johns, who was going to help with suffrage organization in the state, had to go back to Kansas after there was a death in the family. [5] Later, Johns returned to Arizona where she spoke in Phoenix, Tucson and Tempe in 1895. [7] Hughes had been active in organizing clubs around the state. [4] She went as a delegate for Arizona to the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) Convention in January 1896. [5] However, later in 1896, due to a scandal surrounding her husband, she lost much of her influence for a time. [4] Johns again spoke on women's suffrage in Arizona in 1897, addressing the territorial legislature. [7] Pauline O'Neill likely helped influence the passage of the school board suffrage bill in 1897. [8] Women who paid taxes could now vote in those elections. [8] In 1899, O'Neill became the president of the Arizona Suffrage Association. [9] Also in 1899, the school board suffrage law was nearly declared invalid by the Arizona Territorial Supreme Court. [8] [10]
In Winter of 1899, Carrie Chapman Catt and Mary Garrett Hay came to Phoenix during the legislative session. [11] Catt, Hay Frances Munds, and O'Neill lobbied the legislators on women's suffrage. [11] [12] Catt described the majority of men in Arizona as being pro-women's suffrage. [11] Though the efforts of Catt and Hay, a women's suffrage bill was created and passed the lower house of the legislature, but was stalled in the upper house. [13] Members of the legislature received threats from liquor interests if they would vote for women's suffrage. [12] Both women returned the next year and worked with the Arizona Suffrage Association. [13]
Lida P. Robinson, the corresponding secretary of the Arizona Suffrage Association, helped push for the passage of another women's suffrage bill in 1901. [14] In 1902, Robinson called for a suffrage convention to be held in Phoenix. [15] She was elected officer of the Arizona Suffrage Association and Munds became the corresponding and recording secretary. [16] Robinson created a list of suffrage supporters in the state and notified them when issues would come up. [16] Robinson and Munds both had connections with the labor movement and were able to help further organize suffrage groups around the state. [17] Another suffrage mass meeting was held in Phoenix in 1903. [18] Members of the suffrage group lobbied forcefully for women's suffrage. [18] Munds, O'Neill, and Robinson worked with Senator Kean St. Charles to bring the bill to the Territorial Council after it passed the House. [19] The suffrage bill passed both houses of the legislature, but was vetoed by Governor Alexander Oswald Brodie. [4] Publicly, Governor Brodie claimed that the bill would go against the United States Constitution. [19] Privately, he shared that the vote would give Mormons "too much power in government." [19]
The women's suffrage movement in Arizona stalled. Robinson moved out of Arizona in 1905. [14] Efforts to revive organizations with NAWSA field worker, Mary C. C. Bradford, in 1905 were not met with enthusiasm. [16]
Suffrage efforts took on a renewed focus as it looked likely that Arizona would be admitted as a state. [20] Anna Howard Shaw sent NAWSA field worker, Laura Clay, to Arizona in January 1909 to persuade Munds to revive the women's suffrage organizations. [20] [16] Clay and Munds lobbied the territorial legislature in the spring of 1909 on women's suffrage, but bills failed in both houses. [20] Another convention was held in Phoenix that year and the next year, Laura Gregg came to Arizona to organize more women's suffrage groups in Arizona. [21] She met with thousands of people throughout the state, traveling in difficult conditions. [22] Gregg also helped to organize Mormon women who were a significant demographic in the state. [23] Mexican Americans approached her on her trip and asked when suffragists were going to talk to them. [24]
Munds and O'Neill decided to refocus their efforts on getting a women's suffrage amendment in the Arizona Constitution. [25] A new group was formed with Munds as president, the Arizona Equal Suffrage Association (AESA). [26] Munds was determined that only men who supported women's suffrage would be included as delegates to the constitutional convention that was on the horizon. [23] Lobbying efforts only secured the promise of a third of the delegates to vote for women's suffrage. [21] The convention convened in October 1910. [27] Gregg brought a petition for women's suffrage with more than 3,000 signatures in support. [27] Suffragists packed the gallery. [27] Both Munds and Gregg lobbied the delegates for women's suffrage, but they were unsuccessful. [28] George W. P. Hunt, the president of the convention, feared that if women's suffrage was included, the United States would reject Arizona's bid for statehood. [29] Taxpaying women were still allowed to vote in school board elections. [30]
Arizona became a state on February 14, 1912. [10] Hunt became governor of Arizona. [31] Suffragists "bombarded" Hunt with requests for a women's suffrage amendment to the state constitution. [31] Hunt went on to recommend that the Arizona Legislature bring up a women's suffrage bill. [28] Senator John Hughes, son of Josephine Brawley Hughes, brought up a women's suffrage bill. [31] The bill failed by one vote in the Senate, but passed the House. [31]
Munds began a petition campaign to get women's suffrage placed on the November ballot. [31] During six weeks in the scorching Arizona summer suffragists managed to get more than 4,000 signatures from men of all backgrounds from around the state. [32] The initiative for a women's suffrage amendment could now be placed on the ballot. [31] Munds submitted the petition on July 5 to the state legislature and the initiative was placed on the November ballot. [33]
Munds opened up suffrage headquarters in Hotel Adams. [34] She modeled her campaign on those run in California and Washington for women's suffrage. [33] She hired Madge Udall, her son's fiancée, to help run the campaign. [34] NAWSA sent Alice Park to help with the suffrage work and contributed $2,200 for the campaign. [34] Munds and Governor Hunt also contributed money to the cause. [34] Anna Howard Shaw visited, making seven different speeches around Arizona that drew "large and enthusiastic crowds." [34] Laura Gregg Cannon returned to help campaign, especially targeting mining communities. [35] [36] Public officials from Maricopa County volunteered their time to speak throughout the state. [37] During the first Arizona State Fair in October, Munds secured a women's suffrage booth. [38] Suffragists gave out "more than 20,000 buttons, badges, and leaflets" at the fair. [38] Also by October, 95 percent of the labor unions in the state officially endorsed women's suffrage. [39] Suffragists addressed the Democratic and Republican state conventions in October. [37] Socialist Party speakers also worked with the suffragists. [40] Theodore Roosevelt also spoke about his support of women's suffrage during his fall tour of Arizona. [41] Munds also coordinated with local newspapers to get favorable press and opinion pieces on women's suffrage published. [38] A "Votes for Women" banner that "mysteriously appeared and disappeared around" Phoenix made the news four times. [37]
The vote was on November 5, 1912 and Munds worked outside of polling locations in Phoenix. [36] When she found there was voter intimidation from the liquor interests, she found and threatened one of the political bosses aligned with their interests. [36] Her threat worked and he helped stop the intimidation. [36] The suffrage amendment received 13,442 for and 6,202 against. [35]
In 1913, the Arizona State Legislature passed an emergency law to open voter registration books to women. [42] Clara Fish Roberts became the first woman to register to vote in Pima County. [43] Women voters in Arizona were able to participate in the Arizona state primary elections in 1914. [44] Also in 1914, Alice Paul sent Congressional Union (CU) organizers, Josephine Casey and Jane Pincus, to Arizona. [45] The CU organizers campaigned against Democrats and were seen as "outsiders and extremists." [45] March 15, 1915 was the first day that women voters could register to participate in full equal suffrage. [46] The CU came back through Arizona on the Suffrage Special tour in 1916. [47] [48] [49]
When the Nineteenth Amendment went to the states for ratification, Arizona Governor Thomas E. Campbell called for a special legislative session on February 12, 1920. [50] The amendment was ratified by Arizona on the same day. [51]
The Arizona Equal Suffrage Association (AESA) supported a literacy test law, passed in 1909. [52] In 1910 as Frances Munds and Laura Gregg were organizing suffrage groups around the state, Mexican Americans approached them about women's suffrage. [24] Munds and other suffragists did reach out to "prominent members of the educated Mexican American business and political community." [52] Suffrage materials were also translated into Spanish. [52] However, Anglo suffragists like Munds often excluded non-English speaking Mexican Americans in their campaigns. [52] When Arizona became a state, another literacy test law was passed, which largely disenfranchised many Mexican Americans. [30] Around 1915, Black women in Phoenix created the Arizona Federation on Colored Women's Clubs (AFCWC) which worked in the community and also educated voters. [53]
Native American voters were largely excluded from voting because they were considered non-citizens. [54] In 1924, the Indian Citizenship Act meant that Native Americans could be considered citizens without ending their ties to their tribal customs and lands. [54] When the act passed, Attorney General John W. Murphy felt that Native Americans now possessed the requirements to vote. [55] Murphy reached out to county attorneys in the state to get opinions on the decision. [55] Issues with Native Americans living on reservations called into question the eligibility for voting for some county attorneys. [56] Governor Hunt worried about challenges to his next governor's race if Native Americans turned out to vote. [56]
In 1928, Peter Porter (Pima) and Rudolph Johnson (Pima) were not allowed to register to vote in Pinal County. [57] Porter and Johnson challenged the decision with the Arizona Supreme Court. [57] Pinal County argued that since the men lived on reservations, they were not truly residents of Arizona, and they also argued that Native Americans were wards of the state, and therefore could not vote. [57]
When Native Americans returned from serving in World War II, many wanted to vote. [58] The Arizona Attorney General decided that Native American veterans could vote on a case-by-case basis. [58] Harry Austin (Yavapai) and Frank Harrison (Yavapai) challenged the Arizona Supreme Court for Native American voting rights. [59] The Supreme Court of Arizona ruled on July 15, 1948 that Native Americans in Arizona had the right to vote in state elections. [59]
This win did not give full enfranchisement to Native Americans in Arizona. [60] Literacy tests continued to block Native Americans from registering to vote in Arizona. [60] The Voting Rights Act of 1965 helped to some degree, however language assistance help was not a permanent part of the bill. [60] In 1970, English literacy tests were outlawed. [61] In 2020, many Native American women in Arizona were involved in helping their communities out to vote. [62]
Elizabeth Josephine Brawley Hughes was an advocate of women's rights in the United States West region. George W. P. Hunt described her as the Mother of Arizona.
Women's suffrage, or the right of women to vote, was established in the United States over the course of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, first in various states and localities, then nationally in 1920 with the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Pauline Marie O'Neill was an American suffragist and legislator. In addition to her personal accomplishments, she is remembered as the widow of William Owen "Buckey" O'Neill.
Frances Lillian Willard Munds was an American suffragist and leader of the suffrage movement within Arizona. After achieving her goal of statewide women's suffrage, she went on to become a member of the Arizona Senate more than five years before ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution granted the vote to all American women. She lived in Prescott, Arizona and represented Yavapai County in 1915. She was a Democrat.
Women's suffrage was established in the United States on a full or partial basis by various towns, counties, states, and territories during the latter decades of the 19th century and early part of the 20th century. As women received the right to vote in some places, they began running for public office and gaining positions as school board members, county clerks, state legislators, judges, and, in the case of Jeannette Rankin, as a member of Congress.
Women's suffrage efforts in Texas began in 1868 at the first Texas Constitutional Convention. In both Constitutional Conventions and subsequent legislative sessions, efforts to provide women the right to vote were introduced, only to be defeated. Early Texas suffragists such as Martha Goodwin Tunstall and Mariana Thompson Folsom worked with national suffrage groups in the 1870s and 1880s. It wasn't until 1893 and the creation of the Texas Equal Rights Association (TERA) by Rebecca Henry Hayes of Galveston that Texas had a statewide women's suffrage organization. Members of TERA lobbied politicians and political party conventions on women's suffrage. Due to an eventual lack of interest and funding, TERA was inactive by 1898. In 1903, women's suffrage organizing was revived by Annette Finnigan and her sisters. These women created the Texas Equal Suffrage Association (TESA) in Houston in 1903. TESA sponsored women's suffrage speakers and testified on women's suffrage in front of the Texas Legislature. In 1908 and 1912, speaking tours by Anna Howard Shaw helped further renew interest in women's suffrage in Texas. TESA grew in size and suffragists organized more public events, including Suffrage Day at the Texas State Fair. By 1915, more and more women in Texas were supporting women's suffrage. The Texas Federation of Women's Clubs officially supported women's suffrage in 1915. Also that year, anti-suffrage opponents started to speak out against women's suffrage and in 1916, organized the Texas Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage (TAOWS). TESA, under the political leadership of Minnie Fisher Cunningham and with the support of Governor William P. Hobby, suffragists began to make further gains in achieving their goals. In 1918, women achieved the right to vote in Texas primary elections. During the registration drive, 386,000 Texas women signed up during a 17-day period. An attempt to modify the Texas Constitution by voter referendum failed in May 1919, but in June 1919, the United States Congress passed the Nineteenth Amendment. Texas became the ninth state and the first Southern state to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment on June 28, 1919. This allowed white women to vote, but African American women still had trouble voting, with many turned away, depending on their communities. In 1923, Texas created white primaries, excluding all Black people from voting in the primary elections. The white primaries were overturned in 1944 and in 1964, Texas's poll tax was abolished. In 1965, the Voting Rights Act was passed, promising that all people in Texas had the right to vote, regardless of race or gender.
This is a timeline of women's suffrage in Montana. The fight for women's suffrage in Montana started earlier, before even Montana became a state. In 1887, women gained the right to vote in school board elections and on tax issues. In the years that followed, women battled for full, equal suffrage, which culminated in a year-long campaign in 1914 when they became one of eleven states with equal voting rights for most women. Montana ratified the Nineteenth Amendment on August 2, 1919 and was the thirteenth state to ratify. Native American women voters did not have equal rights to vote until 1924.
The women's suffrage movement in Montana started while it was still a territory. The Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) was an early organizer that supported suffrage in the state, arriving in 1883. Women were given the right to vote in school board elections and on tax issues in 1887. When the state constitutional convention was held in 1889, Clara McAdow and Perry McAdow invited suffragist Henry Blackwell to speak to the delegates about equal women's suffrage. While that proposition did not pass, women retained their right to vote in school and tax elections as Montana became a state. In 1895, National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) came to Montana to organize local groups. Montana suffragists held a convention and created the Montana Woman's Suffrage Association (MWSA). Suffragists continued to organize, hold conventions and lobby the Montana Legislature for women's suffrage through the end of the nineteenth century. In the early twentieth century, Jeannette Rankin became a driving force around the women's suffrage movement in Montana. By January 1913, a women's suffrage bill had passed the Montana Legislature and went out as a referendum. Suffragists launched an all-out campaign leading up to the vote. They traveled throughout Montana giving speeches and holding rallies. They sent out thousands of letters and printed thousands of pamphlets and journals to hand out. Suffragists set up booths at the Montana State Fair and they held parades. Finally, after a somewhat contested election on November 3, 1914, the suffragists won the vote. Montana became one of eleven states with equal suffrage for most women. When the Nineteenth Amendment was passed, Montana ratified it on August 2, 1919. It wasn't until 1924 with the passage of the Indian Citizenship Act that Native American women gained the right to vote.
The first women's suffrage group in Georgia, the Georgia Woman Suffrage Association (GWSA), was formed in 1892 by Helen Augusta Howard. Over time, the group, which focused on "taxation without representation" grew and earned the support of both men and women. Howard convinced the National American Women's Suffrage Association (NAWSA) to hold their first convention outside of Washington, D.C., in 1895. The convention, held in Atlanta, was the first large women's rights gathering in the Southern United States. GWSA continued to hold conventions and raise awareness over the next years. Suffragists in Georgia agitated for suffrage amendments, for political parties to support white women's suffrage and for municipal suffrage. In the 1910s, more organizations were formed in Georgia and the number of suffragists grew. In addition, the Georgia Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage also formed an organized anti-suffrage campaign. Suffragists participated in parades, supported bills in the legislature and helped in the war effort during World War I. In 1917 and 1919, women earned the right to vote in primary elections in Waycross, Georgia and in Atlanta respectively. In 1919, after the Nineteenth Amendment went out to the states for ratification, Georgia became the first state to reject the amendment. When the Nineteenth Amendment became the law of the land, women still had to wait to vote because of rules regarding voter registration. White Georgia women would vote statewide in 1922. Native American women and African-American women had to wait longer to vote. Black women were actively excluded from the women's suffrage movement in the state and had their own organizations. Despite their work to vote, Black women faced discrimination at the polls in many different forms. Georgia finally ratified the Nineteenth Amendment on February 20, 1970.
Women's suffrage began in Nevada began in the late 1860s. Lecturer and suffragist Laura de Force Gordon started giving women's suffrage speeches in the state starting in 1867. In 1869, Assemblyman Curtis J. Hillyer introduced a women's suffrage resolution in the Nevada Legislature. He also spoke out on women's rights. Hillyer's resolution passed, but like all proposed amendments to the state constitution, must pass one more time and then go out to a voter referendum. In 1870, Nevada held its first women's suffrage convention in Battle Mountain Station. In the late 1880s, women gained the right to run for school offices and the next year several women are elected to office. A few suffrage associations were formed in the mid 1890s, with a state group operating a few women's suffrage conventions. However, after 1899, most suffrage work slowed down or stopped altogether. In 1911, the Nevada Equal Franchise Society (NEFS) was formed. Attorney Felice Cohn wrote a women's suffrage resolution that was accepted and passed the Nevada Legislature. The resolution passed again in 1913 and will go out to the voters on November 3, 1914. Suffragists in the state organized heavily for the 1914 vote. Anne Henrietta Martin brought in suffragists and trade unionists from other states to help campaign. Martin and Mabel Vernon traveled around the state in a rented Ford Model T, covering thousands of miles. Suffragists in Nevada visited mining towns and even went down into mines to talk to voters. On November 3, the voters of Nevada voted overwhelmingly for women's suffrage. Even though Nevada women won the vote, they did not stop campaigning for women's suffrage. Nevada suffragists aided other states' campaigns and worked towards securing a federal suffrage amendment. On February 7, 1920, Nevada became the 28th state to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment.
The first women's suffrage effort in Florida was led by Ella C. Chamberlain in the early 1890s. Chamberlain began writing a women's suffrage news column, started a mixed-gender women's suffrage group and organized conventions in Florida.
This is a timeline of women's suffrage in Florida. Ella C. Chamberlain began women's suffrage efforts in Florida starting in 1892. However, after Chamberlain leaves the state in 1897, suffrage work largely ceases until the next century. More women's suffrage groups are organized, with the first in the twentieth century being the Equal Franchise League in Jacksonville, Florida in 1912. Additional groups are created around Florida, including a Men's Equal Suffrage League of Florida. Suffragists lobby the Florida Legislature for equal suffrage, hold conventions, and educate voters. Several cities in Florida pass laws allowing women to vote in municipal elections, with Fellsmere being the first in 1915. Zena Dreier becomes the first woman to legally cast a vote in the South on June 19, 1915. On May 26, 1919, women in Orlando vote for the first time. After the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, Helen Hunt West becomes the first woman in Florida to register to vote under equal franchise rules on September 7, 1920. Florida does not ratify the Nineteenth Amendment until May 13, 1969.
This is a timeline of women's suffrage in Arizona. The first women's suffrage bill was brought forward in the Arizona Territorial legislature in 1883, but it did not pass. Suffragists work to influence the Territorial Constitutional Convention in 1891 and lose the women's suffrage battle by only three votes. That year, the Arizona Suffrage Association is formed. In 1897, taxpaying women gain the right to vote in school board elections. Suffragists both from Arizona and around the country continue to lobby the territorial legislature and organize women's suffrage groups. In 1903, a women's suffrage bill passes, but is vetoed by the governor. In 1910, suffragists work to influence the Arizona State Constitutional Convention, but are also unsuccessful. When Arizona becomes a state on February 14, 1912, an attempt to legislate a women's suffrage amendment to the Arizona Constitution fails. Frances Munds mounts a successful ballot initiative campaign. On November 5, 1912, women's suffrage passes in Arizona. In 1913, the voter registration books are opened to women. In 1914, women participate in their first primary elections. Arizona ratified the Nineteenth Amendment on February 12, 1920. However, Native American women and Latinas would wait longer for full voting rights.
This is a timeline of women's suffrage in Maine. Suffragists began campaigning in Maine in the mid 1850s. A lecture series was started by Ann F. Jarvis Greely and other women in Ellsworth, Maine in 1857. The first women's suffrage petition to the Maine Legislature was sent that same year. Women continue to fight for equal suffrage throughout the 1860s and 1870s. The Maine Woman Suffrage Association (MWSA) is established in 1873 and the next year, the first Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) chapter was started. In 1887, the Maine Legislature votes on a women's suffrage amendment to the state constitution, but it does not receive the necessary two-thirds vote. Additional attempts to pass women's suffrage legislation receives similar treatment throughout the rest of the century. In the twentieth century, suffragists continue to organize and meet. Several suffrage groups form, including the Maine chapter of the College Equal Suffrage League in 1914 and the Men's Equal Suffrage League of Maine in 1914. In 1917, a voter referendum on women's suffrage is scheduled for September 10, but fails at the polls. On November 5, 1919 Maine ratifies the Nineteenth Amendment. On September 13, 1920, most women in Maine are able to vote. Native Americans in Maine are barred from voting for many years. In 1924, Native Americans became American citizens. In 1954, a voter referendum for Native American voting rights passes. The next year, Lucy Nicolar Poolaw (Penobscot), is the Native American living on an Indian reservation to cast a vote.
While women's suffrage had an early start in Maine, 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.
Attempts to secure women's suffrage in Wisconsin began before the Civil War. In 1846, the first state constitutional convention delegates for Wisconsin discussed women's suffrage and the final document eventually included a number of progressive measures. This constitution was rejected and a more conservative document was eventually adopted. Wisconsin newspapers supported women's suffrage and Mathilde Franziska Anneke published the German language women's rights newspaper, Die Deutsche Frauen-Zeitung, in Milwaukee in 1852. Before the war, many women's rights petitions were circulated and there was tentative work in forming suffrage organizations. After the Civil War, the first women's suffrage conference held in Wisconsin took place in October 1867 in Janesville. That year, a women's suffrage amendment passed in the state legislature and waited to pass the second year. However, in 1868 the bill did not pass again. The Wisconsin Woman Suffrage Association (WWSA) was reformed in 1869 and by the next year, there were several chapters arranged throughout Wisconsin. In 1884, suffragists won a brief victory when the state legislature passed a law to allow women to vote in elections on school-related issues. On the first voting day for women in 1887, the state Attorney General made it more difficult for women to vote and confusion about the law led to court challenges. Eventually, it was decided that without separate ballots, women could not be allowed to vote. Women would not vote again in Wisconsin until 1902 after separate school-related ballots were created. In the 1900s, state suffragists organized and continued to petition the Wisconsin legislature on women's suffrage. By 1911, two women's suffrage groups operated in the state: WWSA and the Political Equality League (PEL). A voter referendum went to the public in 1912. Both WWSA and PEL campaigned hard for women's equal suffrage rights. Despite the work put in by the suffragists, the measure failed to pass. PEL and WWSA merged again in 1913 and women continued their education work and lobbying. By 1915, the National Woman's Party also had chapters in Wisconsin and several prominent suffragists joined their ranks. The National Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was also very present in Wisconsin suffrage efforts. Carrie Chapman Catt worked hard to keep Wisconsin suffragists on the path of supporting a federal woman's suffrage amendment. When the Nineteenth Amendment went out to the states for ratification, Wisconsin an hour behind Illinois on June 10, 1919. However, Wisconsin was the first to turn in the ratification paperwork to the State Department.
Laura Gregg Cannon was an American lecturer and organizer in the women's suffrage movement. Over the course of almost three decades, she led or supported suffrage activities in fifteen different states. She was a Life Member of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). Cannon edited a suffrage publication and wrote on labor issues. She was a national speaker for the Socialist Party.
Women's suffrage began in North Dakota when it 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.
This is a timeline of women's suffrage in South Dakota. The early history of women's suffrage in the state is shared with North Dakota. When South Dakota became a state, it held a voter referendum in 1890 on an equal suffrage amendment. This effort failed, but suffragists continued to organize and lobby the legislature to pass voter referendums. None passed until 1918. South Dakota ratified the Nineteenth Amendment on December 4, 1919.