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National American Woman Suffrage Association

The National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was an organization formed on February 18, 1890, to advocate in favor of women's suffrage in the United States. It was created by the merger of two existing organizations, the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) and the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA). Its membership, which was about seven thousand at the time it was formed, eventually increased to two million, making it the largest voluntary organization in the nation. It played a pivotal role in the passing of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which in 1920 guaranteed women's right to vote.

National American Woman Suffrage Association
Gardener, Park and Catt at Suffrage House in Washington
AbbreviationNAWSA
PredecessorMerging of the National Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage Association
SuccessorLeague of Women Voters
Formation1890 (1890)
Dissolved1920 (1920)
Key people
Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Carrie Chapman Catt, Lucy Stone
National American Woman Suffrage Association postcard, 1910.

Susan B. Anthony, a long-time leader in the suffrage movement, was the dominant figure in the newly formed NAWSA. Carrie Chapman Catt, who became president after Anthony retired in 1900, implemented a strategy of recruiting wealthy members of the rapidly growing women's club movement, whose time, money and experience could help build the suffrage movement. Anna Howard Shaw's term in office, which began in 1904, saw strong growth in the organization's membership and public approval.

After the Senate decisively rejected the proposed women's suffrage amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1887, the suffrage movement had concentrated most of its efforts on state suffrage campaigns. In 1910 Alice Paul joined the NAWSA and played a major role in reviving interest in the national amendment. After continuing conflicts with the NAWSA leadership over tactics, Paul created a rival organization, the National Woman's Party.

When Catt again became president in 1915, the NAWSA adopted her plan to centralize the organization, and work toward the suffrage amendment as its primary goal. This was done despite opposition from Southern members who believed that a federal amendment would erode states' rights. With its large membership and the increasing number of women voters in states where suffrage had already been achieved, the NAWSA began to operate more as a political pressure group than an educational group. It won additional sympathy for the suffrage cause by actively cooperating with the war effort during World War I. On February 14, 1920, several months prior to the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment, the NAWSA transformed itself into the League of Women Voters, which is still active.

Background

The demand for women's suffrage in the United States was controversial even among women's rights activists in the early days of the movement. In 1848, a resolution in favor of women's right to vote was approved only after vigorous debate at the Seneca Falls Convention, the first women's rights convention. By the time of the National Women's Rights Conventions in the 1850s, the situation had changed, and women's suffrage had become a preeminent goal of the movement.[1] Three leaders of the women's movement during this period, Lucy Stone, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, played prominent roles in the creation of the NAWSA many years later.

In 1866, just after the American Civil War, the Eleventh National Women's Rights Convention transformed itself into the American Equal Rights Association (AERA), which worked for equal rights for both African Americans and white women, especially suffrage.[2] The AERA essentially collapsed in 1869, partly because of disagreement over the proposed Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which would enfranchise African American men. Leaders of the women's movement were dismayed that it would not also enfranchise women. Stanton and Anthony opposed its ratification unless it was accompanied by another amendment that would enfranchise women.[3] Stone supported the amendment. She believed that its ratification would spur politicians to support a similar amendment for women. She said that even though the right to vote was more important for women than for black men, "I will be thankful in my soul if any body can get out of the terrible pit."[4]

In May, 1869, two days after the acrimonious debates at what turned out to be the final AERA annual meeting, Anthony, Stanton and their allies formed the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA). In November 1869, the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) was formed by Lucy Stone, her husband Henry Blackwell, Julia Ward Howe and their allies, many of whom had helped to create the New England Woman Suffrage Association a year earlier as part of the developing split.[5] The bitter rivalry between the two organizations created a partisan atmosphere that endured for decades.[6]

Even after the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified in 1870, differences between the two organizations remained. The AWSA worked almost exclusively for women's suffrage while the NWSA initially worked on a wide range of issues, including divorce reform and equal pay for women. The AWSA included both men and women among its leadership while the NWSA was led by women.[7] The AWSA worked for suffrage mostly at the state level while the NWSA worked more at the national level.[8] The AWSA cultivated an image of respectability while the NWSA sometimes used confrontational tactics. Anthony, for example, interrupted the official ceremonies at the 100th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence to present NWSA's Declaration of Rights for Women.[9] Anthony was arrested in 1872 for voting, which was still illegal for women, and was found guilty in a highly publicized trial.[10]

Progress toward women's suffrage was slow in the period after the split, but advancement in other areas strengthened the underpinnings of the movement. By 1890, tens of thousands of women were attending colleges and universities, up from zero a few decades earlier.[11] There was a decline in public support for the idea of "woman's sphere", the belief that a woman's place was in the home and that she should not be involved in politics. Laws that had allowed husbands to control their wives' activities had been significantly revised. There was a dramatic growth in all-female social reform organizations, such as the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), the largest women's organization in the country. In a major boost for the suffrage movement, the WCTU endorsed women's suffrage in the late 1870s on the grounds that women needed the vote to protect their families from alcohol and other vices.[12]

 
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (seated) with Susan B. Anthony

Anthony increasingly began to emphasize suffrage over other women's rights issues. Her aim was to unite the growing number of women's organizations in the demand for suffrage even if they did not support other women's rights issues. She and the NWSA also began placing less emphasis on confrontational actions and more on respectability. The NWSA was no longer seen as an organization that challenged traditional family arrangements by supporting, for example, what its opponents called "easy divorce". All this had the effect of moving it into closer alignment with the AWSA.[13] The Senate's rejection in 1887 of the proposed women's suffrage amendment to the U.S. Constitution also brought the two organizations closer together. The NWSA had worked for years to convince Congress to bring the proposed amendment to a vote. After it was voted on and decisively rejected, the NWSA began to put less energy into campaigning at the federal level and more at the state level, as the AWSA was already doing.[14]

Stanton continued to promote all aspects of women's rights. She advocated a coalition of radical social reform groups, including Populists and Socialists, who would support women's suffrage as part of a joint list of demands.[15] In a letter to a friend, Stanton said the NWSA "has been growing politic and conservative for some time. Lucy [Stone] and Susan [Anthony] alike see suffrage only. They do not see woman's religious and social bondage, neither do the young women in either association, hence they may as well combine".[16] Stanton, however, had largely withdrawn from the day-to-day activity of the suffrage movement.[17] She spent much of her time with her daughter in England during this period.[18] Despite their different approaches, Stanton and Anthony remained friends and co-workers, continuing a collaboration that had begun in the early 1850s.

Stone devoted most of her life after the split to the Woman's Journal, a weekly newspaper she launched in 1870 to serve as voice of the AWSA.[19] By the 1880s, the Woman's Journal had broadened its coverage and was seen by many as the newspaper of the entire movement.[17]

The suffrage movement was attracting younger members who were impatient with the continuing division, seeing the obstacle more as a matter of personalities than principles. Alice Stone Blackwell, daughter of Lucy Stone, said, "When I began to work for a union, the elders were not keen for it, on either side, but the younger women on both sides were. Nothing really stood in the way except the unpleasant feelings engendered during the long separation".[20]

Merger of rival organizations

Several attempts had been made to bring the two sides together, but without success.[21] The situation changed in 1887 when Stone, who was approaching her 70th birthday and in declining health, began to seek ways of overcoming the split. In a letter to suffragist Antoinette Brown Blackwell, she suggested the creation of an umbrella organization of which the AWSA and the NWSA would become auxiliaries, but that idea did not gain supporters.[17] In November 1887, the AWSA annual meeting passed a resolution authorizing Stone to confer with Anthony about the possibility of a merger. The resolution said the differences between the two associations had "been largely removed by the adoption of common principles and methods."[22] Stone forwarded the resolution to Anthony along with an invitation to meet with her.

Anthony and Rachel Foster, a young leader of the NWSA, traveled to Boston in December 1887, to meet with Stone. Accompanying Stone at this meeting was her daughter Alice Stone Blackwell, who also was an officer of the AWSA. Stanton, who was in England at the time, did not attend. The meeting explored several aspects of a possible merger, including the name of the new organization and its structure. Stone had second thoughts soon afterwards, telling a friend she wished they had never offered to unite, but the merger process slowly continued.[23]

An early public sign of improving relations between the two organizations occurred three months later at the founding congress of the International Council of Women, which the NWSA organized and hosted in Washington in conjunction with the fortieth anniversary of the Seneca Falls Convention. It received favorable publicity, and its delegates, who came from fifty-three women's organizations in nine countries, were invited to a reception at the White House. Representatives from the AWSA were invited to sit on the platform during the meetings along with representatives from the NWSA, signaling a new atmosphere of cooperation.[24]

The proposed merger did not generate significant controversy within the AWSA. The call to its annual meeting in 1887, the one that authorized Stone to explore the possibility of merger, did not even mention that this issue would be on the agenda. This proposal was treated in a routine manner during the meeting and was approved unanimously without debate.[21]

The situation was different within the NWSA, where there was strong opposition from Matilda Joslyn Gage, Olympia Brown and others.[25]Ida Husted Harper, Anthony's co-worker and biographer, said the NWSA meetings that dealt with this issue "were the most stormy in the history of the association."[26] Charging that Anthony had used underhanded tactics to thwart opposition to the merger, Gage formed a competing organization in 1890 called the Woman's National Liberal Union, but it did not develop a significant following.[27]

The AWSA and NWSA committees that negotiated the terms of merger signed a basis for agreement in January, 1889.[28] In February, Stone, Stanton, Anthony and other leaders of both organizations issued an "Open Letter to the Women of America" declaring their intention to work together.[29] When Anthony and Stone first discussed the possibility of merger in 1887, Stone had proposed that she, Stanton and Anthony should all decline the presidency of the united organization. Anthony initially agreed, but other NWSA members objected strongly. The basis for agreement did not include that stipulation.[28]

The AWSA initially was the larger of the two organizations,[30] but it had declined in strength during the 1880s.[31] The NWSA was perceived as the main representative of the suffrage movement, partly because of Anthony's ability to find dramatic ways of bringing suffrage to the nation's attention.[32] Anthony and Stanton had also published their massive History of Woman Suffrage, which placed them at the center of the movement's history and marginalized the role of Stone and the AWSA.[33] Stone's public visibility had declined significantly, contrasting sharply with the attention she had attracted in her younger days as a speaker on the national lecture circuit.[34]

Anthony was increasingly recognized as a person of political importance.[35] In 1890, prominent members of the House and Senate were among the two hundred people who attended her seventieth birthday celebration, a national event that took place in Washington three days before the convention that united the two suffrage organizations. Anthony and Stanton pointedly reaffirmed their friendship at this event, frustrating opponents of merger who had hoped to set them against one another.[31][36]

Founding convention

The National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) was created on February 18, 1890, in Washington by a convention that merged the NWSA and the AWSA. The question of who would lead the new organization had been left to the convention delegates. Stone, from the AWSA, was too ill to attend this convention and was not a candidate.[37] Anthony and Stanton, both from the NWSA, each had supporters.

 
 
Lucy Stone and her husband Henry Blackwell

The AWSA and NWSA executive committees met separately beforehand to discuss their choices for president of the united organization. At the AWSA meeting, Henry Blackwell, Stone's husband, said the NWSA had agreed to avoid mixing in side issues (the approach associated with Stanton) and to focus exclusively on suffrage (the approach of the AWSA and increasingly of Anthony). The executive committee recommended that AWSA delegates vote for Anthony. At the NWSA meeting, Anthony strongly urged its members not to vote for her but for Stanton, saying that a defeat of Stanton would be viewed as a repudiation of her role in the movement.[38]

Elections were held at the convention's opening. Stanton received 131 votes for president, Anthony received 90, and 2 votes were cast for other candidates. Anthony was elected vice president at large with 213 votes, with 9 votes for other candidates. Stone was unanimously elected chair of the executive committee.[39]

As president, Stanton delivered the convention's opening address. She urged the new organization to concern itself with a broad range of reforms, saying, "When any principle or question is up for discussion, let us seize on it and show its connection, whether nearly or remotely, with woman's disfranchisement."[40] She introduced controversial resolutions, including one that called for women to be included at all levels of leadership within religious organizations and one that described liberal divorce laws as a married woman's "door of escape from bondage."[41] Her speech had little lasting impact on the organization, however, because most of the younger suffragists did not agree with her approach.[42]

Stanton and Anthony presidencies

 
Susan B. Anthony and Alice Stone Blackwell signed NAWSA check, written by the group's treasurer Harriet Taylor Upton, payable to Rachel Foster Avery

Stanton's election as president was largely symbolic. Before the convention was over, she left for another extended stay with her daughter in England, leaving Anthony in charge.[43] Stanton retired from the presidency in 1892, after which Anthony was elected to the position that she had in practice been occupying all along.[44] Stone, who died in 1893, did not play a major role in the NAWSA.[45]

The movement's vigor declined in the years immediately after the merger.[46] The new organization was small, having only about 7000 dues-paying members in 1893.[47] It also suffered from organizational problems, not having a clear idea of, for example, how many local suffrage clubs there were or who their officers were.[48]

In 1893, NAWSA members May Wright Sewall, former chair of NWSA's executive committee, and Rachel Foster Avery, NAWSA's corresponding secretary, played key roles in the World's Congress of Representative Women at the World's Columbian Exposition, which was also known as the Chicago World's Fair. Sewall served as chair and Avery as secretary of the organizing committee for the women's congress.[49]

In 1893, the NAWSA voted over Anthony's objection to alternate the site of its annual conventions between Washington and other parts of the country. Anthony's pre-merger NWSA had always held its conventions in Washington to help maintain focus on a national suffrage amendment. Anthony said she feared, accurately as it turned out, that the NAWSA would engage in suffrage work at the state level at the expense of national work.[44] The NAWSA routinely allocated no funding at all for congressional work, which at this stage consisted only of one day of testimony before Congress each year.[50]

Woman's Bible

Stanton's radicalism did not sit well with the new organization. In 1895 she published The Woman's Bible, a controversial best-seller that attacked the use of the Bible to relegate women to an inferior status. Her opponents within the NAWSA reacted strongly. They felt that the book would harm the drive for women's suffrage. Rachel Foster Avery, the organization's corresponding secretary, sharply denounced Stanton's book in her annual report to the 1896 convention. The NAWSA voted to disavow any connection with the book despite Anthony's strong objection that such a move was unnecessary and hurtful.

The negative reaction to the book contributed to a sharp decline in Stanton's influence in the suffrage movement and to her increasing alienation from it.[51] She sent letters to each NAWSA convention, however, and Anthony insisted that they be read even when their topics were controversial.[52] Stanton died in 1902.

Southern strategy

The South had traditionally shown little interest in women's suffrage. When the proposed suffrage amendment to the Constitution was rejected by the Senate in 1887, it received no votes at all from southern senators.[53] This indicated a problem for the future because it was almost impossible for any amendment to be ratified by the required number of states without at least some support from the South.

In 1867, Henry Blackwell proposed a solution: convince southern political leaders that they could ensure white supremacy in their region by enfranchising educated women, who would predominantly be white. Blackwell presented his plan to politicians from Mississippi, who gave it serious consideration, a development that drew the interest of many suffragists. Blackwell's ally in this effort was Laura Clay, who convinced the NAWSA to launch a campaign in the South based on Blackwell's strategy. Clay was one of several southern NAWSA members who objected to the proposed national women's suffrage amendment on the grounds that it would impinge on states' rights.[54]

Susan B. Anthony and Carrie Chapman Catt traveled through the South en route to the NAWSA convention in Atlanta. Anthony asked her old friend Frederick Douglass, a former slave, not to attend the NAWSA convention in Atlanta in 1895, the first to be held in a southern city. Black NAWSA members were excluded from 1903 convention in the southern city of New Orleans. The NAWSA executive board issued a statement during the convention that said, "The doctrine of State's rights is recognized in the national body, and each auxiliary State association arranges its own affairs in accordance with its own ideas and in harmony with the customs of its own section."[55] As NAWSA turned its attention to a Constitutional Amendment, many Southern suffragists remained opposed because a federal amendment would enfranchise Black women. In response, in 1914, Kate Gordon founded the Southern States Woman Suffrage Conference, which opposed the 19th Amendment.

First Catt presidency

Carrie Chapman Catt joined the suffrage movement in Iowa in the mid-1880s. and soon became part of the leadership of the state suffrage association. Married to a wealthy engineer who encouraged her suffrage work, she was able to devote much of her energy to the movement. She led some smaller NAWSA committees, for example serving as Chairman of the Literature Committee in 1893 with the help of Mary Hutcheson Page, another active NAWSA member.[56] In 1895, she was placed in charge of NAWSA's Organizational Committee, where she raised money to put a team of fourteen organizers in the field. By 1899, suffrage organizations had been established in every state. When Anthony retired as NAWSA president in 1900, she chose Catt to succeed her.[57] Anthony remained an influential figure in the organization, however, until she died in 1906.

 
Carrie Chapman Catt

One of Catt's first actions as president was to implement the "society plan," a campaign to recruit wealthy members of the rapidly growing women's club movement, whose time, money and experience could help build the suffrage movement. [58] Primarily composed of middle-class women, the targeted clubs often engaged in civic improvement projects. They generally avoided controversial issues, but women's suffrage increasingly found acceptance among their membership.[59] In 1914, suffrage was endorsed by the General Federation of Women's Clubs, the national body for the club movement.[47]

To make the suffrage movement more attractive to middle- and upper-class women, the NAWSA began to popularize a version of the movement's history that downplayed the earlier involvement of many of its members with such controversial issues as racial equality, divorce reform, working women's rights and critiques of organized religion. Stanton's role in the movement was obscured by this process, as were the roles of black and working women.[60] Anthony, who in her younger days was often treated as a dangerous fanatic, was given a grandmotherly image and honored as a "suffrage saint."[61]

 
Mural in U.S. Capitol featuring NAWSA leaders Anna Howard Shaw and Carrie Chapman Catt at a 1917 suffrage parade, by Allyn Cox

The reform energy of the Progressive Era strengthened the suffrage movement during this period. Beginning around 1900, this broad movement began at the grassroots level with such goals as combating corruption in government, eliminating child labor, and protecting workers and consumers. Many of its participants saw women's suffrage as yet another progressive goal, and they believed that the addition of women to the electorate would help the movement achieve its other goals.[62]

Catt resigned her position after four years, partly because of her husband's declining health and partly to help organize the International Woman Suffrage Alliance, which was created in Berlin in 1904 in coordination with the NAWSA and with Catt as president.[63]

Shaw presidency

In 1904, Anna Howard Shaw, another Anthony protégé, was elected president of the NAWSA, serving more years in that office than any other person. Shaw was an energetic worker and a talented orator. Her administrative and interpersonal skills did not match those that Catt would display during her second term in office, but the organization made striking gains under Shaw's leadership.[64][65]

 
Anna Howard Shaw

In 1906, southern NAWSA members formed the Southern Woman Suffrage Conference with Blackwell's encouragement. Although it had a frankly racist program, it asked for NAWSA's endorsement. Shaw refused, setting a limit on how far the organization was willing to go to accommodate southerners with overtly racist views. Shaw said the organization would not adopt policies that "advocated the exclusion of any race or class from the right of suffrage."[66][67]

In 1907, partly in reaction to NAWSA's "society plan", which was designed to appeal to upper-class women, Harriet Stanton Blatch, daughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, formed a competing organization called the Equality League of Self-Supporting Women.[68] Later known as the Women's Political Union, its membership was based on working women, both professional and industrial. Blatch had recently returned to the United States after several years in England, where she had worked with suffrage groups in the early phases of employing militant tactics as part of their campaign. The Equality League gained a following by engaging in activities that many members of the NAWSA initially considered too daring, such as suffrage parades and open air rallies.[69] Blatch said that when she joined the suffrage movement in the U.S., "The only method suggested for furthering the cause was the slow process of education. We were told to organize, organize, organize, to the end of educating, educating, educating public opinion."[70]

In 1908, the National College Equal Suffrage League was formed as an affiliate of the NAWSA. It had its origins in the College Equal Suffrage League, which was formed in Boston in 1900 at a time when there were relatively few college students in the NAWSA. It was established by Maud Wood Park, who later helped create similar groups in 30 states. Park later became a prominent leader of the NAWSA.[71][72]

By 1908, Catt was once again at the forefront of activity. She and her co-workers developed a detailed plan to unite the various suffrage associations in New York City (and later in the entire state) in an organization modeled on political machines like Tammany Hall. In 1909, they founded the Woman Suffrage Party (WSP) at a convention attended by over a thousand delegates and alternates. By 1910, the WSP had 20,000 members and a four-room headquarters. Shaw was not entirely comfortable with the independent initiatives of the WSP, but Catt and other of its leaders remained loyal to the NAWSA, its parent organization.[73]

In 1909, Frances Squires Potter, a NAWSA member from Chicago, proposed the creation of suffrage community centers called "political settlements." Reminiscent of the social settlement houses, such as Hull House in Chicago, their purpose was to educate the public about suffrage and the practical details of political activity at the local level. The political settlements established by the WSP included suffrage schools that provided training in public speaking to suffrage organizers.[74]

Public sentiment toward the suffrage movement improved dramatically during this period. Working for suffrage came to be seen as a respectable activity for middle-class women. By 1910, NAWSA membership had jumped to 117,000.[75] The NAWSA established its first permanent headquarters that year in New York City, previously having operated mainly out of the homes of its officers.[76] Maud Wood Park, who had been away in Europe for two years, received a letter that year from one of her co-workers in the College Equal Suffrage League who described the new atmosphere by saying, "the movement which when we got into it had about as much energy as a dying kitten, is now a big, virile, threatening thing" and is "actually fashionable now."[77]

The change in public sentiment was reflected in efforts to win suffrage at the state level. In 1896, only four states, all of them in the West, allowed women to vote. From 1896 to 1910, there were six state campaigns for suffrage, and they all failed. The tide began to turn in 1910 when suffrage was won in the state of Washington, followed by California in 1911, Oregon, Kansas and Arizona in 1912, and others afterwards.[78]

 
Program for NAWSA's 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession in Washington

In 1912, W. E. B. Du Bois, president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), publicly challenged NAWSA's reluctance to accept black women. The NAWSA responded in a cordial way, inviting him to speak at its next convention and publishing his speech as a pamphlet.[79] Nonetheless the NAWSA continued to minimize the role of black suffragists. It accepted some black women as members and some black societies as auxiliaries, but its general practice was to turn such requests politely away.[80] This was partly because attitudes of racial superiority were the norm among white Americans of that era, and partly because the NAWSA believed it had little hope of achieving a national amendment without at least some support from southern states that practiced racial segregation.[81]

NAWSA's strategy at that point was to gain suffrage for women on a state-by-state basis until it achieved a critical mass of voters that could push through a suffrage amendment at the national level.[82] In 1913, the Southern States Woman Suffrage Committee was formed in an attempt to stop that process from moving past the state level. It was led by Kate Gordon, who had been the NAWSA's corresponding secretary from 1901 to 1909.[83] Gordon, who was from the southern state of Louisiana, supported women's suffrage, but opposed the idea of a federal suffrage amendment, charging that it would violate states' rights. She said that empowering federal authorities to enforce a constitutional right for women to vote in the South could lead to similar enforcement of the constitutional right of African Americans to vote there, a right that was being evaded, and, in her opinion, rightly so. Her committee was too small to seriously affect the NAWSA's direction, but her public condemnation of the proposed amendment, expressed in terms of vehement racism, deepened fissures within the organization.[84]

Despite the rapid growth in NAWSA membership, discontent with Shaw grew. Her tendency to overreact to those who differed with her had the effect of increasing organizational friction.[85] Several members resigned from executive board in 1910, and the board saw significant changes in its composition every year after that through 1915.[86]

In 1914, Senator John Shafroth introduced a federal amendment that would require state legislatures to put women's suffrage on the state ballot if eight percent of the voters signed a petition to that effect. The NAWSA endorsed the proposed amendment, whereupon the CU accused it of abandoning the drive for a national suffrage amendment. Amid confusion among the membership, delegates at the 1914 convention directed their dissatisfaction at Shaw.[87] Shaw had considered declining the presidency in 1914, but decided to run again. In 1915, she announced that she would not be running for reelection.[88]

Relocation to Warren, Ohio

For several years, Harriet Taylor Upton led the woman suffragist movement in Trumbull County, Ohio. In 1880, Upton's father was elected as a member of the United States Congress as a Republican from Ohio. This connection provided Upton the opportunity to meet Susan B. Anthony, who brought Upton into the suffragist movement.[89]

In 1894, Upton was elected as the NAWSA's treasurer. In addition, Upton served as president of the Ohio association of the national association, from 1899-1908 and 1911–1920. Upton helped relocate the national headquarters for the NAWSA to her home in Warren, Ohio, in 1903. According to the Tribune Chronicle, "it was only supposed to be a temporary move, but it lasted six years. Susan B. Anthony, noted leader of the women's movement, visited Warren many times, including a 1904 trip to attend a national women's rights meeting here."[90]

During this period, the nation's attention regarding women's rights was focused on Warren. The association's offices were located on the ground level of the Trumbull Court House, a building currently occupied by the Probate Court. While the headquarters left the Upton House around 1910, Warren remained active in the suffrage movement. The people of Warren were active in various programs of the national movement for years, until the 19th Amendment was ratified by a sufficient number of states, and authorized by President Wilson in 1920.[91]

In 1993, the Upton House joined the list of historic landmarks.[92]

Split in the movement

A serious challenge to the NAWSA leadership began to develop after a young activist named Alice Paul returned to the U.S. from England in 1910, where she had been part of the militant wing of the suffrage movement. She had been jailed there and had endured forced feedings after going on a hunger strike.[93] Joining the NAWSA, she became the person most responsible for reviving interest within the suffrage movement for a national amendment, which for years had been overshadowed by campaigns for suffrage at the state level.[14]

From Shaw's point of view, the time was right for a renewed emphasis on a suffrage amendment. Gordon and Clay, the most persistent adversaries of a federal suffrage amendment within NAWSA, had been out-maneuvered by their opponents and no longer held national posts.[94] In 1912, Alice Paul was appointed chair of NAWSA's Congressional Committee and charged with reviving the drive for a women's suffrage amendment. In 1913, she and her coworker Lucy Burns organized the Woman Suffrage Procession, a suffrage parade in Washington on the day before Woodrow Wilson's inauguration as president. Onlookers who opposed the march turned the event into a near riot, which ended only when a cavalry unit of the army was brought in to restore order. Public outrage over the incident, which cost the chief of police his job, brought publicity to the movement and gave it fresh momentum.[93]

Paul troubled NAWSA leaders by arguing that because Democrats would not act to enfranchise women even though they controlled the presidency and both houses of Congress, the suffrage movement should work for the defeat of all Democrats regardless of an individual candidate's position on suffrage. NAWSA's policy was to follow the opposite approach, supporting any candidate who endorsed suffrage, regardless of political party.[95] In 1913, Paul and Burns formed the Congressional Union (CU) to work solely for a national amendment and sent organizers into states that already had NAWSA organizations. The relationship between the CU and the NAWSA became unclear and troubled over time.[96]

At the NAWSA convention in 1913, Paul and her allies demanded that the organization focus its efforts on a federal suffrage amendment. The convention instead empowered the executive board to limit the CU's ability to contravene NAWSA policies. After negotiations failed to resolve their differences, the NAWSA removed Paul as head of its Congressional Committee. By February, 1914, the NAWSA and the CU had effectively separated into two independent organizations.[96]

Blatch merged her Women's Political Union into the CU.[97] That organization in turn became the basis for the National Woman's Party (NWP), which Paul formed in 1916.[98] Once again there were two competing national women's suffrage organizations, but the result this time was something like a division of labor. The NAWSA burnished its image of respectability and engaged in highly organized lobbying at both the national and state levels. The smaller NWP also engaged in lobbying but became increasingly known for activities that were dramatic and confrontational, most often in the national capital.[99]

Second Catt presidency, 1915-1920

 
Helen Hamilton Gardener, Carrie Chapman Catt and Maud Wood Park (from left to right) on the balcony of Suffrage House, the Washington headquarters of the National American Woman Suffrage Association

Carrie Chapman Catt, the NAWSA's previous president, was the obvious choice to replace Anna Howard Shaw, but Catt was leading the New York State Woman Suffrage Party, which was in the early stages of a crucial suffrage campaign in that state.[100] The prevailing belief in the NAWSA was that success in a large eastern state would be the tipping point for the national campaign.[101] New York was the largest state in the union, and victory there was a real possibility. Catt agreed to turn the New York work over to others and to accept the NAWSA presidency in December, 1915 on the condition that she could name her own executive board, which previously had always been elected by the annual convention. She appointed to the board women of independent means who could work for the movement full-time.[102]

Backed by an increased level of commitment and unity in the national office, Catt sent its officers into the field to assess the state of the organization and start the process of reorganizing it into a more centralized and efficient operation. Catt described the NAWSA as a camel with a hundred humps, each with a blind driver trying to lead the way. She provided a new sense of direction by sending out a stream of communications to state and local affiliates with policy directives, organizational initiatives and detailed plans of work.[102][103]

The NAWSA previously had devoted much of its effort to educating the public about suffrage, and it had made a significant impact. Women's suffrage had become a major national issue, and the NAWSA was in the process of becoming the nation's largest voluntary organization, with two million members.[104] Catt built on that foundation to convert the NAWSA into an organization that operated primarily as a political pressure group.[84]

1916

At an executive board meeting in March, 1916, Catt described the organization's dilemma by saying, "The Congressional Union is drawing off from the National Association those women who feel it is possible to work for suffrage by the Federal route only. Certain workers in the south are being antagonized because the National is continuing to work for the Federal Amendment. The combination has produced a great muddle".[105] Catt believed that NAWSA's policy of working primarily on state-by-state campaigns was nearing its limits. Some states appeared unlikely ever to approve women's suffrage, in some cases because state laws made constitutional revision extremely difficult, and in others, especially in the Deep South, because opposition was simply too strong.[106] Catt refocused the organization on a national suffrage amendment while continuing to conduct state campaigns where success was a realistic possibility.

When the conventions of the Democratic and Republican parties met in June, 1916, suffragists applied pressure to both. Catt was invited to express her views in a speech to the Republican convention in Chicago. An anti-suffragist spoke after Catt, and as she was telling the convention that women did not want to vote, a crowd of suffragists burst into the hall and filled the aisles. They were soaking wet, having marched in heavy rain for several blocks in a parade led by two elephants. When the flustered anti-suffragist concluded her remarks, the suffragists led a cheer for their cause. At the Democratic convention a week later in St. Louis, suffragists packed the galleries and made their views known during the debate on suffrage.[107]

Both party conventions endorsed women's suffrage but only at the state level, which meant that different states might implement it in different ways and in some cases not at all. Having expected more, Catt called an Emergency Convention, moving the date of the 1916 convention from December to September to begin organizing a renewed push for the federal amendment.[103] The convention initiated a strategic shift by adopting Catt's "Winning Plan". This plan mandated work toward the national suffrage amendment as the priority for the entire organization and authorized the creation of a professional lobbying team to support this goal in Washington. It authorized the executive board to specify a plan of work toward this goal for each state and to take over that work if the state organization refused to comply. It agreed to fund state suffrage campaigns only if they met strict requirements that were designed to eliminate efforts with little chance of succeeding.[108] Catt's plan included milestones for achieving a women's suffrage amendment by 1922.[109] Gordon, whose states' rights approach had been decisively defeated, exclaimed to a friend, "A well-oiled steam roller has ironed this convention flat!"[110]

President Wilson, whose attitude toward women's suffrage was evolving, spoke at the 1916 NAWSA convention. He had been considered an opponent of suffrage when he was governor of New Jersey, but in 1915 he announced that he was traveling from the White House back to his home state to vote in favor of it in New Jersey's state referendum. He spoke favorably of suffrage at the NAWSA convention but stopped short of supporting the suffrage amendment.[111]Charles Evans Hughes, his opponent in the presidential election that year, declined to speak at the convention, but he went farther than Wilson by endorsing the suffrage amendment.[112]

 
Carrie Chapman Catt (right) exiting the White House with Helen Hamilton Gardener

NAWSA's Congressional Committee had been in disarray ever since Alice Paul was removed from it in 1913. Catt reorganized the committee and appointed Maud Wood Park as its head in December, 1916. Park and her lieutenant Helen Hamilton Gardener created what became known as the "Front Door Lobby", so named by a journalist because it operated openly, avoiding the traditional lobbying methods of "backstairs" dealing. A headquarters for the lobbying effort was established in a dilapidated mansion known as Suffrage House. NAWSA lobbyists lodged there and coordinated their activities with daily conferences in its meeting rooms.[113]

In 1916 the NAWSA purchased the Woman's Journal from Alice Stone Blackwell. The newspaper had been established in 1870 by Blackwell's mother, Lucy Stone, and had served as the primary voice of the suffrage movement most of the time since then. It had significant limitations, however. It was a small operation, with Blackwell herself doing most of the work, and with much of its reporting centered on the eastern part of the country at a time when a national newspaper was needed.[114] After the transfer, it was renamed Woman Citizen and merged with The Woman Voter, the journal of the Woman Suffrage Party of New York City, and with National Suffrage News, the former journal of the NAWSA.[115] The newspaper's masthead declared itself to be the NAWSA's official organ.[114]

1917

In 1917 Catt received a bequest of $900,000 from Mrs. Frank (Miriam) Leslie to be used as she thought best for the women's suffrage movement. Catt allocated most of the funds to the NAWSA, with $400,000 applied toward upgrading the Woman Citizen.[116]

In January 1917, Alice Paul's NWP began picketing the White House with banners that demanded women's suffrage. The police eventually arrested over 200 of the Silent Sentinels, many of whom went on hunger strike after being imprisoned. The prison authorities force fed them, creating an uproar that fueled public debate on women's suffrage.[117]

When the U.S. entered World War I in April 1917, the NAWSA cooperated with the war effort. Shaw was appointed as head of the Women's Committee for the Council of National Defense, which was established by the federal government to coordinate resources for the war and to promote public morale. Catt and two other NAWSA members were appointed to its executive committee.[118] The NWP, by contrast, took no part in the war effort and charged that the NAWSA did so at the expense of suffrage work.[119]

In April 1917, Jeannette Rankin of Montana took her seat as the first woman in Congress, having previously served as lobbyist and field secretary for the NAWSA. Rankin voted against the declaration of war.[120]

In November 1917, the suffrage movement achieved a major victory when a referendum to enfranchise women passed by a large margin in New York, the most populous state in the country.[121] The powerful Tammany Hall political machine, which had previously opposed suffrage, took a neutral stance on this referendum, partly because the wives of several Tammany Hall leaders played prominent roles in the suffrage campaign.[122]

1918–19

The House passed the suffrage amendment for the first time in January, 1918, but the Senate delayed its debate on the measure until September. President Wilson took the unusual step of appearing before the Senate to speak on the issue, asking for passage of the amendment as a war measure. The Senate, however, defeated the measure by two votes.[123] The NAWSA launched a campaign to unseat four senators who had voted against the amendment, assembling a coalition of forces that included labor unions and prohibitionists. Two of those four senators were defeated in the federal elections in November.[124]

NAWSA held its Golden Jubilee Convention at the Statler Hotel in St. Louis, Missouri in March 1919. President Catt gave the opening address, in which she urged the delegates to create a league of women voters. A resolution was passed to form this league as a separate unit of NAWSA, with membership coming from states who allowed women to vote. The league was charged with achieving full suffrage and consideration of legislation that affected women in states where they were able to vote. On the last day of the convention, the Missouri senate passed legislation giving women the right to vote in presidential elections in Missouri and a resolution to submit a constitutional amendment for full suffrage. In June of that year, the Nineteenth Amendment was passed.[125]

Passage of the Nineteenth Amendment

After the elections, Wilson called a special session of Congress, which passed the suffrage amendment on June 4, 1919.[126] The struggle now passed to the state legislatures, three-fourths of which would need to ratify the amendment before it would become law.

Catt and the NAWSA executive board had been planning their work in support of the ratification effort since April 1918, over a year before Congress passed the amendment. Ratification committees had already been established in state capitals, each with its own budget and plan of work. Immediately after Congress passed the amendment, Suffrage House and the federal lobbying operation were shut down and resources were diverted to the ratification drive.[127] Catt had a sense of urgency, expecting a slowdown in reform energy after the war, which had ended seven months earlier. Many local suffrage societies had disbanded in states where women could already vote, making it more difficult to organize a quick ratification.[128]

 
Maud Wood Park

By the end of 1919, women effectively could vote for president in states that had a majority of electoral votes.[115] Political leaders who were convinced that women's suffrage was inevitable began to pressure local and national legislators to support it so their party could claim credit for it in future elections. The conventions of both the Democratic and Republican Parties endorsed the amendment in June, 1920.[129]

Former NAWSA members Kate Gordon and Laura Clay organized opposition to the amendment's ratification in the South. They had resigned from the NAWSA in the fall of 1918 at the executive board's request because of their public statements in opposition to a federal amendment.[130] Only three Southern or border states, Arkansas, Texas, and Tennessee, ratified the 19th Amendment, with Tennessee being the crucial 36th state to ratify.

The Nineteenth Amendment, the women's suffrage amendment, became the law of the land on August 26, 1920, when it was certified by the United States Secretary of State.[131]

Transition into the League of Women Voters

Six months before the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified, the NAWSA held its last convention. That convention created the League of Women Voters as the NAWSA's successor on February 14, 1920, with Maud Wood Park, former head of the NAWSA's Congressional Committee, as its president.[132][133] The League of Women Voters was formed to help women play a larger part in public affairs as they won the right to vote. It was meant to help women exercise their right to vote. Before 1973 only women could join the league.

State Organizations working with the NAWSA

See also

References

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  • DuBois, Ellen Carol (1978). Feminism and Suffrage: The Emergence of an Independent Women's Movement in America, 1848–1869. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-8641-6.
  • DuBois, Ellen Carol, ed. (1992). The Elizabeth Cady Stanton–Susan B. Anthony Reader. Boston: Northwestern University Press. ISBN 1-55553-143-1.
  • Flexner, Eleanor (1959). Century of Struggle. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674106536.
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External links

  •   Media related to National American Woman Suffrage Association at Wikimedia Commons
  • Women's Suffrage. From the Library of Congress
  • Grover Batts; Thelma Queen, eds. (1974). . Manuscript Division, Library of Congress. Archived from the original on December 8, 2009. Retrieved 2010-08-03.
  • Votes for Women, Selections from the National American Woman Suffrage Association 1848-1921
  • Elizabeth Smith Miller and Anne Fitzhugh Miller's NAWSA Suffrage Scrapbooks, 1897-1911
  • Webcast-Catch the Suffragist's Spirit; The Miller Scrapbooks From the Library of Congress

national, american, woman, suffrage, association, nawsa, organization, formed, february, 1890, advocate, favor, women, suffrage, united, states, created, merger, existing, organizations, national, woman, suffrage, association, nwsa, american, woman, suffrage, . The National American Woman Suffrage Association NAWSA was an organization formed on February 18 1890 to advocate in favor of women s suffrage in the United States It was created by the merger of two existing organizations the National Woman Suffrage Association NWSA and the American Woman Suffrage Association AWSA Its membership which was about seven thousand at the time it was formed eventually increased to two million making it the largest voluntary organization in the nation It played a pivotal role in the passing of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which in 1920 guaranteed women s right to vote National American Woman Suffrage AssociationGardener Park and Catt at Suffrage House in WashingtonAbbreviationNAWSAPredecessorMerging of the National Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage AssociationSuccessorLeague of Women VotersFormation1890 1890 Dissolved1920 1920 Key peopleSusan B Anthony Elizabeth Cady Stanton Carrie Chapman Catt Lucy StoneNational American Woman Suffrage Association postcard 1910 Susan B Anthony a long time leader in the suffrage movement was the dominant figure in the newly formed NAWSA Carrie Chapman Catt who became president after Anthony retired in 1900 implemented a strategy of recruiting wealthy members of the rapidly growing women s club movement whose time money and experience could help build the suffrage movement Anna Howard Shaw s term in office which began in 1904 saw strong growth in the organization s membership and public approval After the Senate decisively rejected the proposed women s suffrage amendment to the U S Constitution in 1887 the suffrage movement had concentrated most of its efforts on state suffrage campaigns In 1910 Alice Paul joined the NAWSA and played a major role in reviving interest in the national amendment After continuing conflicts with the NAWSA leadership over tactics Paul created a rival organization the National Woman s Party When Catt again became president in 1915 the NAWSA adopted her plan to centralize the organization and work toward the suffrage amendment as its primary goal This was done despite opposition from Southern members who believed that a federal amendment would erode states rights With its large membership and the increasing number of women voters in states where suffrage had already been achieved the NAWSA began to operate more as a political pressure group than an educational group It won additional sympathy for the suffrage cause by actively cooperating with the war effort during World War I On February 14 1920 several months prior to the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment the NAWSA transformed itself into the League of Women Voters which is still active Contents 1 Background 2 Merger of rival organizations 3 Founding convention 4 Stanton and Anthony presidencies 4 1 Woman s Bible 4 2 Southern strategy 4 3 First Catt presidency 5 Shaw presidency 6 Relocation to Warren Ohio 7 Split in the movement 8 Second Catt presidency 1915 1920 8 1 1916 8 2 1917 8 3 1918 19 8 4 Passage of the Nineteenth Amendment 8 5 Transition into the League of Women Voters 8 6 State Organizations working with the NAWSA 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksBackground EditThe demand for women s suffrage in the United States was controversial even among women s rights activists in the early days of the movement In 1848 a resolution in favor of women s right to vote was approved only after vigorous debate at the Seneca Falls Convention the first women s rights convention By the time of the National Women s Rights Conventions in the 1850s the situation had changed and women s suffrage had become a preeminent goal of the movement 1 Three leaders of the women s movement during this period Lucy Stone Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B Anthony played prominent roles in the creation of the NAWSA many years later In 1866 just after the American Civil War the Eleventh National Women s Rights Convention transformed itself into the American Equal Rights Association AERA which worked for equal rights for both African Americans and white women especially suffrage 2 The AERA essentially collapsed in 1869 partly because of disagreement over the proposed Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which would enfranchise African American men Leaders of the women s movement were dismayed that it would not also enfranchise women Stanton and Anthony opposed its ratification unless it was accompanied by another amendment that would enfranchise women 3 Stone supported the amendment She believed that its ratification would spur politicians to support a similar amendment for women She said that even though the right to vote was more important for women than for black men I will be thankful in my soul if any body can get out of the terrible pit 4 In May 1869 two days after the acrimonious debates at what turned out to be the final AERA annual meeting Anthony Stanton and their allies formed the National Woman Suffrage Association NWSA In November 1869 the American Woman Suffrage Association AWSA was formed by Lucy Stone her husband Henry Blackwell Julia Ward Howe and their allies many of whom had helped to create the New England Woman Suffrage Association a year earlier as part of the developing split 5 The bitter rivalry between the two organizations created a partisan atmosphere that endured for decades 6 Even after the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified in 1870 differences between the two organizations remained The AWSA worked almost exclusively for women s suffrage while the NWSA initially worked on a wide range of issues including divorce reform and equal pay for women The AWSA included both men and women among its leadership while the NWSA was led by women 7 The AWSA worked for suffrage mostly at the state level while the NWSA worked more at the national level 8 The AWSA cultivated an image of respectability while the NWSA sometimes used confrontational tactics Anthony for example interrupted the official ceremonies at the 100th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence to present NWSA s Declaration of Rights for Women 9 Anthony was arrested in 1872 for voting which was still illegal for women and was found guilty in a highly publicized trial 10 Progress toward women s suffrage was slow in the period after the split but advancement in other areas strengthened the underpinnings of the movement By 1890 tens of thousands of women were attending colleges and universities up from zero a few decades earlier 11 There was a decline in public support for the idea of woman s sphere the belief that a woman s place was in the home and that she should not be involved in politics Laws that had allowed husbands to control their wives activities had been significantly revised There was a dramatic growth in all female social reform organizations such as the Woman s Christian Temperance Union WCTU the largest women s organization in the country In a major boost for the suffrage movement the WCTU endorsed women s suffrage in the late 1870s on the grounds that women needed the vote to protect their families from alcohol and other vices 12 Elizabeth Cady Stanton seated with Susan B Anthony Anthony increasingly began to emphasize suffrage over other women s rights issues Her aim was to unite the growing number of women s organizations in the demand for suffrage even if they did not support other women s rights issues She and the NWSA also began placing less emphasis on confrontational actions and more on respectability The NWSA was no longer seen as an organization that challenged traditional family arrangements by supporting for example what its opponents called easy divorce All this had the effect of moving it into closer alignment with the AWSA 13 The Senate s rejection in 1887 of the proposed women s suffrage amendment to the U S Constitution also brought the two organizations closer together The NWSA had worked for years to convince Congress to bring the proposed amendment to a vote After it was voted on and decisively rejected the NWSA began to put less energy into campaigning at the federal level and more at the state level as the AWSA was already doing 14 Stanton continued to promote all aspects of women s rights She advocated a coalition of radical social reform groups including Populists and Socialists who would support women s suffrage as part of a joint list of demands 15 In a letter to a friend Stanton said the NWSA has been growing politic and conservative for some time Lucy Stone and Susan Anthony alike see suffrage only They do not see woman s religious and social bondage neither do the young women in either association hence they may as well combine 16 Stanton however had largely withdrawn from the day to day activity of the suffrage movement 17 She spent much of her time with her daughter in England during this period 18 Despite their different approaches Stanton and Anthony remained friends and co workers continuing a collaboration that had begun in the early 1850s Stone devoted most of her life after the split to the Woman s Journal a weekly newspaper she launched in 1870 to serve as voice of the AWSA 19 By the 1880s the Woman s Journal had broadened its coverage and was seen by many as the newspaper of the entire movement 17 The suffrage movement was attracting younger members who were impatient with the continuing division seeing the obstacle more as a matter of personalities than principles Alice Stone Blackwell daughter of Lucy Stone said When I began to work for a union the elders were not keen for it on either side but the younger women on both sides were Nothing really stood in the way except the unpleasant feelings engendered during the long separation 20 Merger of rival organizations EditSeveral attempts had been made to bring the two sides together but without success 21 The situation changed in 1887 when Stone who was approaching her 70th birthday and in declining health began to seek ways of overcoming the split In a letter to suffragist Antoinette Brown Blackwell she suggested the creation of an umbrella organization of which the AWSA and the NWSA would become auxiliaries but that idea did not gain supporters 17 In November 1887 the AWSA annual meeting passed a resolution authorizing Stone to confer with Anthony about the possibility of a merger The resolution said the differences between the two associations had been largely removed by the adoption of common principles and methods 22 Stone forwarded the resolution to Anthony along with an invitation to meet with her Anthony and Rachel Foster a young leader of the NWSA traveled to Boston in December 1887 to meet with Stone Accompanying Stone at this meeting was her daughter Alice Stone Blackwell who also was an officer of the AWSA Stanton who was in England at the time did not attend The meeting explored several aspects of a possible merger including the name of the new organization and its structure Stone had second thoughts soon afterwards telling a friend she wished they had never offered to unite but the merger process slowly continued 23 An early public sign of improving relations between the two organizations occurred three months later at the founding congress of the International Council of Women which the NWSA organized and hosted in Washington in conjunction with the fortieth anniversary of the Seneca Falls Convention It received favorable publicity and its delegates who came from fifty three women s organizations in nine countries were invited to a reception at the White House Representatives from the AWSA were invited to sit on the platform during the meetings along with representatives from the NWSA signaling a new atmosphere of cooperation 24 The proposed merger did not generate significant controversy within the AWSA The call to its annual meeting in 1887 the one that authorized Stone to explore the possibility of merger did not even mention that this issue would be on the agenda This proposal was treated in a routine manner during the meeting and was approved unanimously without debate 21 The situation was different within the NWSA where there was strong opposition from Matilda Joslyn Gage Olympia Brown and others 25 Ida Husted Harper Anthony s co worker and biographer said the NWSA meetings that dealt with this issue were the most stormy in the history of the association 26 Charging that Anthony had used underhanded tactics to thwart opposition to the merger Gage formed a competing organization in 1890 called the Woman s National Liberal Union but it did not develop a significant following 27 The AWSA and NWSA committees that negotiated the terms of merger signed a basis for agreement in January 1889 28 In February Stone Stanton Anthony and other leaders of both organizations issued an Open Letter to the Women of America declaring their intention to work together 29 When Anthony and Stone first discussed the possibility of merger in 1887 Stone had proposed that she Stanton and Anthony should all decline the presidency of the united organization Anthony initially agreed but other NWSA members objected strongly The basis for agreement did not include that stipulation 28 The AWSA initially was the larger of the two organizations 30 but it had declined in strength during the 1880s 31 The NWSA was perceived as the main representative of the suffrage movement partly because of Anthony s ability to find dramatic ways of bringing suffrage to the nation s attention 32 Anthony and Stanton had also published their massive History of Woman Suffrage which placed them at the center of the movement s history and marginalized the role of Stone and the AWSA 33 Stone s public visibility had declined significantly contrasting sharply with the attention she had attracted in her younger days as a speaker on the national lecture circuit 34 Anthony was increasingly recognized as a person of political importance 35 In 1890 prominent members of the House and Senate were among the two hundred people who attended her seventieth birthday celebration a national event that took place in Washington three days before the convention that united the two suffrage organizations Anthony and Stanton pointedly reaffirmed their friendship at this event frustrating opponents of merger who had hoped to set them against one another 31 36 Founding convention EditThe National American Woman Suffrage Association NAWSA was created on February 18 1890 in Washington by a convention that merged the NWSA and the AWSA The question of who would lead the new organization had been left to the convention delegates Stone from the AWSA was too ill to attend this convention and was not a candidate 37 Anthony and Stanton both from the NWSA each had supporters Lucy Stone and her husband Henry Blackwell The AWSA and NWSA executive committees met separately beforehand to discuss their choices for president of the united organization At the AWSA meeting Henry Blackwell Stone s husband said the NWSA had agreed to avoid mixing in side issues the approach associated with Stanton and to focus exclusively on suffrage the approach of the AWSA and increasingly of Anthony The executive committee recommended that AWSA delegates vote for Anthony At the NWSA meeting Anthony strongly urged its members not to vote for her but for Stanton saying that a defeat of Stanton would be viewed as a repudiation of her role in the movement 38 Elections were held at the convention s opening Stanton received 131 votes for president Anthony received 90 and 2 votes were cast for other candidates Anthony was elected vice president at large with 213 votes with 9 votes for other candidates Stone was unanimously elected chair of the executive committee 39 As president Stanton delivered the convention s opening address She urged the new organization to concern itself with a broad range of reforms saying When any principle or question is up for discussion let us seize on it and show its connection whether nearly or remotely with woman s disfranchisement 40 She introduced controversial resolutions including one that called for women to be included at all levels of leadership within religious organizations and one that described liberal divorce laws as a married woman s door of escape from bondage 41 Her speech had little lasting impact on the organization however because most of the younger suffragists did not agree with her approach 42 Stanton and Anthony presidencies Edit Susan B Anthony and Alice Stone Blackwell signed NAWSA check written by the group s treasurer Harriet Taylor Upton payable to Rachel Foster Avery Stanton s election as president was largely symbolic Before the convention was over she left for another extended stay with her daughter in England leaving Anthony in charge 43 Stanton retired from the presidency in 1892 after which Anthony was elected to the position that she had in practice been occupying all along 44 Stone who died in 1893 did not play a major role in the NAWSA 45 The movement s vigor declined in the years immediately after the merger 46 The new organization was small having only about 7000 dues paying members in 1893 47 It also suffered from organizational problems not having a clear idea of for example how many local suffrage clubs there were or who their officers were 48 In 1893 NAWSA members May Wright Sewall former chair of NWSA s executive committee and Rachel Foster Avery NAWSA s corresponding secretary played key roles in the World s Congress of Representative Women at the World s Columbian Exposition which was also known as the Chicago World s Fair Sewall served as chair and Avery as secretary of the organizing committee for the women s congress 49 In 1893 the NAWSA voted over Anthony s objection to alternate the site of its annual conventions between Washington and other parts of the country Anthony s pre merger NWSA had always held its conventions in Washington to help maintain focus on a national suffrage amendment Anthony said she feared accurately as it turned out that the NAWSA would engage in suffrage work at the state level at the expense of national work 44 The NAWSA routinely allocated no funding at all for congressional work which at this stage consisted only of one day of testimony before Congress each year 50 Woman s Bible Edit Stanton s radicalism did not sit well with the new organization In 1895 she published The Woman s Bible a controversial best seller that attacked the use of the Bible to relegate women to an inferior status Her opponents within the NAWSA reacted strongly They felt that the book would harm the drive for women s suffrage Rachel Foster Avery the organization s corresponding secretary sharply denounced Stanton s book in her annual report to the 1896 convention The NAWSA voted to disavow any connection with the book despite Anthony s strong objection that such a move was unnecessary and hurtful The negative reaction to the book contributed to a sharp decline in Stanton s influence in the suffrage movement and to her increasing alienation from it 51 She sent letters to each NAWSA convention however and Anthony insisted that they be read even when their topics were controversial 52 Stanton died in 1902 Southern strategy Edit The South had traditionally shown little interest in women s suffrage When the proposed suffrage amendment to the Constitution was rejected by the Senate in 1887 it received no votes at all from southern senators 53 This indicated a problem for the future because it was almost impossible for any amendment to be ratified by the required number of states without at least some support from the South In 1867 Henry Blackwell proposed a solution convince southern political leaders that they could ensure white supremacy in their region by enfranchising educated women who would predominantly be white Blackwell presented his plan to politicians from Mississippi who gave it serious consideration a development that drew the interest of many suffragists Blackwell s ally in this effort was Laura Clay who convinced the NAWSA to launch a campaign in the South based on Blackwell s strategy Clay was one of several southern NAWSA members who objected to the proposed national women s suffrage amendment on the grounds that it would impinge on states rights 54 Susan B Anthony and Carrie Chapman Catt traveled through the South en route to the NAWSA convention in Atlanta Anthony asked her old friend Frederick Douglass a former slave not to attend the NAWSA convention in Atlanta in 1895 the first to be held in a southern city Black NAWSA members were excluded from 1903 convention in the southern city of New Orleans The NAWSA executive board issued a statement during the convention that said The doctrine of State s rights is recognized in the national body and each auxiliary State association arranges its own affairs in accordance with its own ideas and in harmony with the customs of its own section 55 As NAWSA turned its attention to a Constitutional Amendment many Southern suffragists remained opposed because a federal amendment would enfranchise Black women In response in 1914 Kate Gordon founded the Southern States Woman Suffrage Conference which opposed the 19th Amendment First Catt presidency Edit Carrie Chapman Catt joined the suffrage movement in Iowa in the mid 1880s and soon became part of the leadership of the state suffrage association Married to a wealthy engineer who encouraged her suffrage work she was able to devote much of her energy to the movement She led some smaller NAWSA committees for example serving as Chairman of the Literature Committee in 1893 with the help of Mary Hutcheson Page another active NAWSA member 56 In 1895 she was placed in charge of NAWSA s Organizational Committee where she raised money to put a team of fourteen organizers in the field By 1899 suffrage organizations had been established in every state When Anthony retired as NAWSA president in 1900 she chose Catt to succeed her 57 Anthony remained an influential figure in the organization however until she died in 1906 Carrie Chapman Catt One of Catt s first actions as president was to implement the society plan a campaign to recruit wealthy members of the rapidly growing women s club movement whose time money and experience could help build the suffrage movement 58 Primarily composed of middle class women the targeted clubs often engaged in civic improvement projects They generally avoided controversial issues but women s suffrage increasingly found acceptance among their membership 59 In 1914 suffrage was endorsed by the General Federation of Women s Clubs the national body for the club movement 47 To make the suffrage movement more attractive to middle and upper class women the NAWSA began to popularize a version of the movement s history that downplayed the earlier involvement of many of its members with such controversial issues as racial equality divorce reform working women s rights and critiques of organized religion Stanton s role in the movement was obscured by this process as were the roles of black and working women 60 Anthony who in her younger days was often treated as a dangerous fanatic was given a grandmotherly image and honored as a suffrage saint 61 Mural in U S Capitol featuring NAWSA leaders Anna Howard Shaw and Carrie Chapman Catt at a 1917 suffrage parade by Allyn Cox The reform energy of the Progressive Era strengthened the suffrage movement during this period Beginning around 1900 this broad movement began at the grassroots level with such goals as combating corruption in government eliminating child labor and protecting workers and consumers Many of its participants saw women s suffrage as yet another progressive goal and they believed that the addition of women to the electorate would help the movement achieve its other goals 62 Catt resigned her position after four years partly because of her husband s declining health and partly to help organize the International Woman Suffrage Alliance which was created in Berlin in 1904 in coordination with the NAWSA and with Catt as president 63 Shaw presidency EditIn 1904 Anna Howard Shaw another Anthony protege was elected president of the NAWSA serving more years in that office than any other person Shaw was an energetic worker and a talented orator Her administrative and interpersonal skills did not match those that Catt would display during her second term in office but the organization made striking gains under Shaw s leadership 64 65 Anna Howard Shaw In 1906 southern NAWSA members formed the Southern Woman Suffrage Conference with Blackwell s encouragement Although it had a frankly racist program it asked for NAWSA s endorsement Shaw refused setting a limit on how far the organization was willing to go to accommodate southerners with overtly racist views Shaw said the organization would not adopt policies that advocated the exclusion of any race or class from the right of suffrage 66 67 In 1907 partly in reaction to NAWSA s society plan which was designed to appeal to upper class women Harriet Stanton Blatch daughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton formed a competing organization called the Equality League of Self Supporting Women 68 Later known as the Women s Political Union its membership was based on working women both professional and industrial Blatch had recently returned to the United States after several years in England where she had worked with suffrage groups in the early phases of employing militant tactics as part of their campaign The Equality League gained a following by engaging in activities that many members of the NAWSA initially considered too daring such as suffrage parades and open air rallies 69 Blatch said that when she joined the suffrage movement in the U S The only method suggested for furthering the cause was the slow process of education We were told to organize organize organize to the end of educating educating educating public opinion 70 In 1908 the National College Equal Suffrage League was formed as an affiliate of the NAWSA It had its origins in the College Equal Suffrage League which was formed in Boston in 1900 at a time when there were relatively few college students in the NAWSA It was established by Maud Wood Park who later helped create similar groups in 30 states Park later became a prominent leader of the NAWSA 71 72 By 1908 Catt was once again at the forefront of activity She and her co workers developed a detailed plan to unite the various suffrage associations in New York City and later in the entire state in an organization modeled on political machines like Tammany Hall In 1909 they founded the Woman Suffrage Party WSP at a convention attended by over a thousand delegates and alternates By 1910 the WSP had 20 000 members and a four room headquarters Shaw was not entirely comfortable with the independent initiatives of the WSP but Catt and other of its leaders remained loyal to the NAWSA its parent organization 73 In 1909 Frances Squires Potter a NAWSA member from Chicago proposed the creation of suffrage community centers called political settlements Reminiscent of the social settlement houses such as Hull House in Chicago their purpose was to educate the public about suffrage and the practical details of political activity at the local level The political settlements established by the WSP included suffrage schools that provided training in public speaking to suffrage organizers 74 Public sentiment toward the suffrage movement improved dramatically during this period Working for suffrage came to be seen as a respectable activity for middle class women By 1910 NAWSA membership had jumped to 117 000 75 The NAWSA established its first permanent headquarters that year in New York City previously having operated mainly out of the homes of its officers 76 Maud Wood Park who had been away in Europe for two years received a letter that year from one of her co workers in the College Equal Suffrage League who described the new atmosphere by saying the movement which when we got into it had about as much energy as a dying kitten is now a big virile threatening thing and is actually fashionable now 77 The change in public sentiment was reflected in efforts to win suffrage at the state level In 1896 only four states all of them in the West allowed women to vote From 1896 to 1910 there were six state campaigns for suffrage and they all failed The tide began to turn in 1910 when suffrage was won in the state of Washington followed by California in 1911 Oregon Kansas and Arizona in 1912 and others afterwards 78 Program for NAWSA s 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession in Washington In 1912 W E B Du Bois president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People NAACP publicly challenged NAWSA s reluctance to accept black women The NAWSA responded in a cordial way inviting him to speak at its next convention and publishing his speech as a pamphlet 79 Nonetheless the NAWSA continued to minimize the role of black suffragists It accepted some black women as members and some black societies as auxiliaries but its general practice was to turn such requests politely away 80 This was partly because attitudes of racial superiority were the norm among white Americans of that era and partly because the NAWSA believed it had little hope of achieving a national amendment without at least some support from southern states that practiced racial segregation 81 NAWSA s strategy at that point was to gain suffrage for women on a state by state basis until it achieved a critical mass of voters that could push through a suffrage amendment at the national level 82 In 1913 the Southern States Woman Suffrage Committee was formed in an attempt to stop that process from moving past the state level It was led by Kate Gordon who had been the NAWSA s corresponding secretary from 1901 to 1909 83 Gordon who was from the southern state of Louisiana supported women s suffrage but opposed the idea of a federal suffrage amendment charging that it would violate states rights She said that empowering federal authorities to enforce a constitutional right for women to vote in the South could lead to similar enforcement of the constitutional right of African Americans to vote there a right that was being evaded and in her opinion rightly so Her committee was too small to seriously affect the NAWSA s direction but her public condemnation of the proposed amendment expressed in terms of vehement racism deepened fissures within the organization 84 Despite the rapid growth in NAWSA membership discontent with Shaw grew Her tendency to overreact to those who differed with her had the effect of increasing organizational friction 85 Several members resigned from executive board in 1910 and the board saw significant changes in its composition every year after that through 1915 86 In 1914 Senator John Shafroth introduced a federal amendment that would require state legislatures to put women s suffrage on the state ballot if eight percent of the voters signed a petition to that effect The NAWSA endorsed the proposed amendment whereupon the CU accused it of abandoning the drive for a national suffrage amendment Amid confusion among the membership delegates at the 1914 convention directed their dissatisfaction at Shaw 87 Shaw had considered declining the presidency in 1914 but decided to run again In 1915 she announced that she would not be running for reelection 88 Relocation to Warren Ohio EditFor several years Harriet Taylor Upton led the woman suffragist movement in Trumbull County Ohio In 1880 Upton s father was elected as a member of the United States Congress as a Republican from Ohio This connection provided Upton the opportunity to meet Susan B Anthony who brought Upton into the suffragist movement 89 In 1894 Upton was elected as the NAWSA s treasurer In addition Upton served as president of the Ohio association of the national association from 1899 1908 and 1911 1920 Upton helped relocate the national headquarters for the NAWSA to her home in Warren Ohio in 1903 According to the Tribune Chronicle it was only supposed to be a temporary move but it lasted six years Susan B Anthony noted leader of the women s movement visited Warren many times including a 1904 trip to attend a national women s rights meeting here 90 During this period the nation s attention regarding women s rights was focused on Warren The association s offices were located on the ground level of the Trumbull Court House a building currently occupied by the Probate Court While the headquarters left the Upton House around 1910 Warren remained active in the suffrage movement The people of Warren were active in various programs of the national movement for years until the 19th Amendment was ratified by a sufficient number of states and authorized by President Wilson in 1920 91 In 1993 the Upton House joined the list of historic landmarks 92 Split in the movement EditA serious challenge to the NAWSA leadership began to develop after a young activist named Alice Paul returned to the U S from England in 1910 where she had been part of the militant wing of the suffrage movement She had been jailed there and had endured forced feedings after going on a hunger strike 93 Joining the NAWSA she became the person most responsible for reviving interest within the suffrage movement for a national amendment which for years had been overshadowed by campaigns for suffrage at the state level 14 Alice Paul From Shaw s point of view the time was right for a renewed emphasis on a suffrage amendment Gordon and Clay the most persistent adversaries of a federal suffrage amendment within NAWSA had been out maneuvered by their opponents and no longer held national posts 94 In 1912 Alice Paul was appointed chair of NAWSA s Congressional Committee and charged with reviving the drive for a women s suffrage amendment In 1913 she and her coworker Lucy Burns organized the Woman Suffrage Procession a suffrage parade in Washington on the day before Woodrow Wilson s inauguration as president Onlookers who opposed the march turned the event into a near riot which ended only when a cavalry unit of the army was brought in to restore order Public outrage over the incident which cost the chief of police his job brought publicity to the movement and gave it fresh momentum 93 Paul troubled NAWSA leaders by arguing that because Democrats would not act to enfranchise women even though they controlled the presidency and both houses of Congress the suffrage movement should work for the defeat of all Democrats regardless of an individual candidate s position on suffrage NAWSA s policy was to follow the opposite approach supporting any candidate who endorsed suffrage regardless of political party 95 In 1913 Paul and Burns formed the Congressional Union CU to work solely for a national amendment and sent organizers into states that already had NAWSA organizations The relationship between the CU and the NAWSA became unclear and troubled over time 96 At the NAWSA convention in 1913 Paul and her allies demanded that the organization focus its efforts on a federal suffrage amendment The convention instead empowered the executive board to limit the CU s ability to contravene NAWSA policies After negotiations failed to resolve their differences the NAWSA removed Paul as head of its Congressional Committee By February 1914 the NAWSA and the CU had effectively separated into two independent organizations 96 Blatch merged her Women s Political Union into the CU 97 That organization in turn became the basis for the National Woman s Party NWP which Paul formed in 1916 98 Once again there were two competing national women s suffrage organizations but the result this time was something like a division of labor The NAWSA burnished its image of respectability and engaged in highly organized lobbying at both the national and state levels The smaller NWP also engaged in lobbying but became increasingly known for activities that were dramatic and confrontational most often in the national capital 99 Second Catt presidency 1915 1920 Edit Helen Hamilton Gardener Carrie Chapman Catt and Maud Wood Park from left to right on the balcony of Suffrage House the Washington headquarters of the National American Woman Suffrage Association Carrie Chapman Catt the NAWSA s previous president was the obvious choice to replace Anna Howard Shaw but Catt was leading the New York State Woman Suffrage Party which was in the early stages of a crucial suffrage campaign in that state 100 The prevailing belief in the NAWSA was that success in a large eastern state would be the tipping point for the national campaign 101 New York was the largest state in the union and victory there was a real possibility Catt agreed to turn the New York work over to others and to accept the NAWSA presidency in December 1915 on the condition that she could name her own executive board which previously had always been elected by the annual convention She appointed to the board women of independent means who could work for the movement full time 102 Backed by an increased level of commitment and unity in the national office Catt sent its officers into the field to assess the state of the organization and start the process of reorganizing it into a more centralized and efficient operation Catt described the NAWSA as a camel with a hundred humps each with a blind driver trying to lead the way She provided a new sense of direction by sending out a stream of communications to state and local affiliates with policy directives organizational initiatives and detailed plans of work 102 103 The NAWSA previously had devoted much of its effort to educating the public about suffrage and it had made a significant impact Women s suffrage had become a major national issue and the NAWSA was in the process of becoming the nation s largest voluntary organization with two million members 104 Catt built on that foundation to convert the NAWSA into an organization that operated primarily as a political pressure group 84 1916 Edit At an executive board meeting in March 1916 Catt described the organization s dilemma by saying The Congressional Union is drawing off from the National Association those women who feel it is possible to work for suffrage by the Federal route only Certain workers in the south are being antagonized because the National is continuing to work for the Federal Amendment The combination has produced a great muddle 105 Catt believed that NAWSA s policy of working primarily on state by state campaigns was nearing its limits Some states appeared unlikely ever to approve women s suffrage in some cases because state laws made constitutional revision extremely difficult and in others especially in the Deep South because opposition was simply too strong 106 Catt refocused the organization on a national suffrage amendment while continuing to conduct state campaigns where success was a realistic possibility When the conventions of the Democratic and Republican parties met in June 1916 suffragists applied pressure to both Catt was invited to express her views in a speech to the Republican convention in Chicago An anti suffragist spoke after Catt and as she was telling the convention that women did not want to vote a crowd of suffragists burst into the hall and filled the aisles They were soaking wet having marched in heavy rain for several blocks in a parade led by two elephants When the flustered anti suffragist concluded her remarks the suffragists led a cheer for their cause At the Democratic convention a week later in St Louis suffragists packed the galleries and made their views known during the debate on suffrage 107 Both party conventions endorsed women s suffrage but only at the state level which meant that different states might implement it in different ways and in some cases not at all Having expected more Catt called an Emergency Convention moving the date of the 1916 convention from December to September to begin organizing a renewed push for the federal amendment 103 The convention initiated a strategic shift by adopting Catt s Winning Plan This plan mandated work toward the national suffrage amendment as the priority for the entire organization and authorized the creation of a professional lobbying team to support this goal in Washington It authorized the executive board to specify a plan of work toward this goal for each state and to take over that work if the state organization refused to comply It agreed to fund state suffrage campaigns only if they met strict requirements that were designed to eliminate efforts with little chance of succeeding 108 Catt s plan included milestones for achieving a women s suffrage amendment by 1922 109 Gordon whose states rights approach had been decisively defeated exclaimed to a friend A well oiled steam roller has ironed this convention flat 110 President Wilson whose attitude toward women s suffrage was evolving spoke at the 1916 NAWSA convention He had been considered an opponent of suffrage when he was governor of New Jersey but in 1915 he announced that he was traveling from the White House back to his home state to vote in favor of it in New Jersey s state referendum He spoke favorably of suffrage at the NAWSA convention but stopped short of supporting the suffrage amendment 111 Charles Evans Hughes his opponent in the presidential election that year declined to speak at the convention but he went farther than Wilson by endorsing the suffrage amendment 112 Carrie Chapman Catt right exiting the White House with Helen Hamilton Gardener NAWSA s Congressional Committee had been in disarray ever since Alice Paul was removed from it in 1913 Catt reorganized the committee and appointed Maud Wood Park as its head in December 1916 Park and her lieutenant Helen Hamilton Gardener created what became known as the Front Door Lobby so named by a journalist because it operated openly avoiding the traditional lobbying methods of backstairs dealing A headquarters for the lobbying effort was established in a dilapidated mansion known as Suffrage House NAWSA lobbyists lodged there and coordinated their activities with daily conferences in its meeting rooms 113 In 1916 the NAWSA purchased the Woman s Journal from Alice Stone Blackwell The newspaper had been established in 1870 by Blackwell s mother Lucy Stone and had served as the primary voice of the suffrage movement most of the time since then It had significant limitations however It was a small operation with Blackwell herself doing most of the work and with much of its reporting centered on the eastern part of the country at a time when a national newspaper was needed 114 After the transfer it was renamed Woman Citizen and merged with The Woman Voter the journal of the Woman Suffrage Party of New York City and with National Suffrage News the former journal of the NAWSA 115 The newspaper s masthead declared itself to be the NAWSA s official organ 114 1917 Edit In 1917 Catt received a bequest of 900 000 from Mrs Frank Miriam Leslie to be used as she thought best for the women s suffrage movement Catt allocated most of the funds to the NAWSA with 400 000 applied toward upgrading the Woman Citizen 116 In January 1917 Alice Paul s NWP began picketing the White House with banners that demanded women s suffrage The police eventually arrested over 200 of the Silent Sentinels many of whom went on hunger strike after being imprisoned The prison authorities force fed them creating an uproar that fueled public debate on women s suffrage 117 When the U S entered World War I in April 1917 the NAWSA cooperated with the war effort Shaw was appointed as head of the Women s Committee for the Council of National Defense which was established by the federal government to coordinate resources for the war and to promote public morale Catt and two other NAWSA members were appointed to its executive committee 118 The NWP by contrast took no part in the war effort and charged that the NAWSA did so at the expense of suffrage work 119 In April 1917 Jeannette Rankin of Montana took her seat as the first woman in Congress having previously served as lobbyist and field secretary for the NAWSA Rankin voted against the declaration of war 120 In November 1917 the suffrage movement achieved a major victory when a referendum to enfranchise women passed by a large margin in New York the most populous state in the country 121 The powerful Tammany Hall political machine which had previously opposed suffrage took a neutral stance on this referendum partly because the wives of several Tammany Hall leaders played prominent roles in the suffrage campaign 122 1918 19 Edit The House passed the suffrage amendment for the first time in January 1918 but the Senate delayed its debate on the measure until September President Wilson took the unusual step of appearing before the Senate to speak on the issue asking for passage of the amendment as a war measure The Senate however defeated the measure by two votes 123 The NAWSA launched a campaign to unseat four senators who had voted against the amendment assembling a coalition of forces that included labor unions and prohibitionists Two of those four senators were defeated in the federal elections in November 124 NAWSA held its Golden Jubilee Convention at the Statler Hotel in St Louis Missouri in March 1919 President Catt gave the opening address in which she urged the delegates to create a league of women voters A resolution was passed to form this league as a separate unit of NAWSA with membership coming from states who allowed women to vote The league was charged with achieving full suffrage and consideration of legislation that affected women in states where they were able to vote On the last day of the convention the Missouri senate passed legislation giving women the right to vote in presidential elections in Missouri and a resolution to submit a constitutional amendment for full suffrage In June of that year the Nineteenth Amendment was passed 125 Passage of the Nineteenth Amendment Edit After the elections Wilson called a special session of Congress which passed the suffrage amendment on June 4 1919 126 The struggle now passed to the state legislatures three fourths of which would need to ratify the amendment before it would become law Catt and the NAWSA executive board had been planning their work in support of the ratification effort since April 1918 over a year before Congress passed the amendment Ratification committees had already been established in state capitals each with its own budget and plan of work Immediately after Congress passed the amendment Suffrage House and the federal lobbying operation were shut down and resources were diverted to the ratification drive 127 Catt had a sense of urgency expecting a slowdown in reform energy after the war which had ended seven months earlier Many local suffrage societies had disbanded in states where women could already vote making it more difficult to organize a quick ratification 128 Maud Wood Park By the end of 1919 women effectively could vote for president in states that had a majority of electoral votes 115 Political leaders who were convinced that women s suffrage was inevitable began to pressure local and national legislators to support it so their party could claim credit for it in future elections The conventions of both the Democratic and Republican Parties endorsed the amendment in June 1920 129 Former NAWSA members Kate Gordon and Laura Clay organized opposition to the amendment s ratification in the South They had resigned from the NAWSA in the fall of 1918 at the executive board s request because of their public statements in opposition to a federal amendment 130 Only three Southern or border states Arkansas Texas and Tennessee ratified the 19th Amendment with Tennessee being the crucial 36th state to ratify The Nineteenth Amendment the women s suffrage amendment became the law of the land on August 26 1920 when it was certified by the United States Secretary of State 131 Transition into the League of Women Voters Edit Six months before the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified the NAWSA held its last convention That convention created the League of Women Voters as the NAWSA s successor on February 14 1920 with Maud Wood Park former head of the NAWSA s Congressional Committee as its president 132 133 The League of Women Voters was formed to help women play a larger part in public affairs as they won the right to vote It was meant to help women exercise their right to vote Before 1973 only women could join the league State Organizations working with the NAWSA Edit Alabama Alabama Equal Suffrage Association 134 Arizona Arizona Equal Suffrage Campaign Committee Arkansas Arkansas Woman Suffrage Association 135 and Political Equality League Delaware Delaware Equal Suffrage Association 136 137 Hawaii National Women s Equal Suffrage Association of Hawai i 138 Indiana Women s Franchise League of Indiana Kentucky Kentucky Equal Rights Association Maine Maine Women s Suffrage Association 139 Nevada Nevada Equal Franchise Society 140 New Mexico Santa Fe chapter of NAWSA 141 North Dakota North Dakota Votes for Women League 142 Texas Texas Equal Suffrage Association 143 Virginia Equal Suffrage League of Virginia West Virginia West Virginia Equal Suffrage AssociationSee also Edit Feminism portal Wikisource has original text related to this article National American Woman Suffrage Association List of suffragists and suffragettes List of women s rights activists Timeline of women s suffrage Timeline of women s suffrage in the United States Women s suffrage organizationsReferences Edit DuBois 1978 p 41 Stanton Anthony Gage Harper 1881 1922 Vol 2 pp 171 72 Rakow amp Kramarae 2001 p 47 Cullen DuPont 2000 p 13 American Equal Rights Association DuBois 1978 pp 164 167 189 196 DuBois 1978 p 173 DuBois 1978 pp 192 196 197 Scott amp Scott 1982 p 17 Flexner 1959 pp 163 64 Ann D Gordon The Trial of Susan B Anthony A Short Narrative Federal Judicial Center Retrieved 2015 05 30 Solomon Barbara Miller 1985 In the Company of Educated Women A History of Women and Higher Education in America p 63 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 03639 6 Flexner 1959 pp 174 76 Dubois 1992 pp 172 175 a b Gordon Ann D Woman Suffrage Not Universal Suffrage by Federal Amendment in Wheeler Marjorie Spruill ed 1995 Votes for Women The Woman Suffrage Movement in Tennessee the South and the Nation pp 8 14 16 Knoxville University of Tennessee Press ISBN 0 87049 836 3 Dubois 1992 pp 172 183 Letter from Stanton to Olympia Brown May 8 1888 quoted in Barry 1988 p 293 a b c McMillen 2008 pp 224 225 Dubois 1992 p 183 McMillen 2015 pp 188 190 Alice Stone Blackwell 1930 Lucy Stone Pioneer of Woman s Rights p 229 Boston Little Brown and company Reprinted by University Press of Virginia in 2001 ISBN 0 8139 1990 8 a b Gordon 2009 pp 54 55 Gordon 2009 pp 52 53 McMillen 2015 pp 233 234 Barry 1988 pp 283 287 Dubois 1992 p 179 Ida Husted Harper The Life and Work of Susan B Anthony 1898 1908 Vol 2 p 632 Barry 1988 pp 296 299 a b Anthony Katherine 1954 Susan B Anthony Her Personal History and Her Era New York Doubleday p 391 See also Harper 1898 1908 Vol 2 pp 629 630 McMillen 2008 p 227 McMillen 2015 p 185 a b Gordon 2009 p xxv Scott amp Scott 1982 p 19 Tetrault 2014 p 137 McMillen 2015 pp 221 23 Gordon Ann D Knowing Susan B Anthony The Stories We Tell of a Life in Ridarsky Christine L and Huth Mary M editors 2012 Susan B Anthony and the Struggle for Equal Rights Rochester NY University of Rochester Press pp 202 204 ISBN 978 1 58046 425 3 Lynn Sherr 1995 Failure is Impossible Susan B Anthony in Her Own Words New York Times Books Random House p 310 ISBN 0 8129 2718 4 McMillen 2008 p 228 Gordon 2009 p 246 Stanton Anthony Gage 1881 1922 Vol 4 p 174 Dubois 1992 p 226 Stanton Anthony Gage 1881 1922 Vol 4 pp 164 165 Dubois 1992 p 222 McMillen 2015 p 240 a b Flexner 1959 pp 212 213 McMillen 2015 p 241 Scott amp Scott 1982 p p 22 a b Dubois 1992 p 178 Scott amp Scott 1982 pp 24 25 Sewall May Wright editor 1894 The World s Congress of Representative Women New York Rand McNally p 48 Graham 1996 p 8 Dubois 1992 pp 182 188 91 Griffith 1984 p 205 McMillen 2008 p 207 Wheeler 1993 pp 113 15 Graham 1996 p 23 National American Women Suffrage 1893 The Hand Book of the National American Woman Suffrage Association and Proceedings of the Annual Convention Graham 1996 p 7 Graham 1996 pp 36 37 Stephen M Buechler The Transformation of the Woman Suffrage Movement The Case of Illinois 1850 1920 1986 pp 154 57 Graham 1996 p 43 Graham 1996 pp 47 48 Scott amp Scott 1982 pp 28 29 Flexner 1959 pp 231 32 Franzen 2014 pp 2 96 141 189 Franzen challenges the traditional view that Shaw was an ineffective leader Fowler 1986 p 25 Franzen 2014 p 109 Wheeler 1993 pp 120 21 Graham 1996 pp 39 82 Flexner 1959 pp 242 46 Flexner 1959 p 243 Maud Wood Park Britannica Online Encyclopedia Retrieved 2014 07 15 Jana Nidiffer Suffrage FPS and History of Higher Education in Allen Elizabeth J et al 2010 Reconstructing Policy in Higher Education pp 45 47 New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 99776 8 Graham 1996 pp 55 56 Graham 1996 pp 56 57 Graham 1996 pp 51 52 Flexner 1959 pp 241 251 Graham 1996 p 54 Wheeler Marjorie Spruil 1995 Introduction A Short History of the Woman Suffrage Movement in America In Wheeler Marjorie Spruil ed One Woman One Vote Rediscovering the Woman Suffrage Movement Troutdale Oregon NewSage Press pp 11 14 ISBN 978 0939165261 Franzen 2014 pp 138 39 Graham 1996 pp 23 24 Franzen 2014 pp 8 81 Franzen 2014 p 189 Flexner 1959 p 298 a b Graham 1996 pp 83 118 Flexner 1959 p 241 Flexner 1959 p 250 Franzen 2014 pp 156 57 Franzen 2014 pp 156 162 Kraditor Aileen S 1981 The Ideas of the Woman Suffrage Movement 1890 1920 1965 New York W W Norton amp Co p 268 Warren Played Big Role in Women s Suffragist Movement The Tribune Chronicle August 26 1975 Warren Played Big Role in Women s Suffrage Movement The Tribune Chronicle August 26 1975 Johnson Stephanie January 23 1993 Upton House to join list of historic landmarks The Tribune Chronicle a b Flexner 1959 pp 255 57 Franzen 2014 pp 140 142 Scott amp Scott 1982 p 31 a b Flexner 1959 pp 257 59 Fowler 1986 p 146 Walton Mary 2008 A Woman s Crusade Alice Paul and the Battle for the Ballot New York Palgrave Macmillan pp 133 158 ISBN 978 0 230 61175 7 Scott amp Scott 1982 pp 32 33 Fowler 1986 pp 28 29 Franzen 2014 p 142 a b Flexner 1959 pp 265 67 a b Van Voris 1987 pp 131 32 Scott amp Scott 1982 p 39 Flexner 1959 p 267 Fowler 1986 pp 143 144 Graham 1996 pp 84 85 Graham 1996 pp 87 90 Flexner 1959 p 274 Graham 1996 p 88 Flexner 1959 pp 271 272 Graham 1996 p 187 endnote 25 Graham 1996 pp 90 93 a b Fowler 1986 pp 116 117 a b The record of the Leslie woman suffrage commission inc 1917 1929 by Rose Young Fowler 1986 pp 118 19 Flexner 1959 pp 275 79 Graham 1996 p 103 Flexner 1959 pp 276 377 endnote 16 Van Voris 1987 p 139 Scott amp Scott 1982 p 41 Flexner 1959 p 282 Flexner 1959 pp 283 300 304 Graham 1996 pp 119 122 Corbett Katharine T 1999 In Her Place A Guide to St Louis Women s History St Louis MO Missouri History Museum Flexner 1959 pp 307 308 Graham 1996 pp 129 130 Graham 1996 pp 127 131 Graham 1996 pp 141 146 Graham 1996 pp 118 136 142 The Nineteenth Amendment Library of Congress Retrieved September 22 2015 Kay J Maxwell April 2007 The League of Women Voters Through the Decades Founding and Early History League of Women Voters Retrieved July 12 2015 Van Voris 1987 pp 157 153 Yarbrough Cynthia J April 22 2006 Finding a Voice The Woman s Suffrage Movement in the South Thesis University of Tennessee Knoxville p 18 Rollberg Jeanne Norton November 24 2020 Arkansas Woman Suffrage Association AWSA Encyclopedia of Arkansas Retrieved December 31 2020 Anthony 1902 p 564 Hoffecker Carol E Spring 1983 Delaware s Woman Suffrage Campaign PDF Delaware History 20 3 150 152 Yasutake Rumi Biographical Sketch of Wilhelmina Kekelaokalaninui Widemann Dowsett Biographical Database of NAWSA Suffragists 1890 1920 via Alexander Street Risk Shannon M 2009 In Order to Establish Justice The Nineteenth Century Woman Suffrage Movements of Maine and New Brunswick Thesis University of Maine CiteSeerX 10 1 1 428 3747 p 162 Martin Anne 1913 Woman Suffrage PDF In Davis Sam P ed History of Nevada Vol II Reno The Elms Publishing Co Inc p 783 Young Janine A May 11 1984 For the Best Interests of the Community The Origins and Impact of the Women s Suffrage Movement in New Mexico 1900 1930 PDF Thesis University of New Mexico p 61 Harper 1922 p 501 502 Humphrey Janet G 15 June 2010 Texas Equal Suffrage Association Handbook of Texas Online Texas State Historical Association Bibliography EditAdams Katherine H and Keene Michael L Alice Paul and the American Suffrage Campaign Urbana University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 07471 4 Anthony Susan B 1902 Anthony Susan B Harper Ida Husted eds The History of Woman Suffrage Vol 4 Indianapolis The Hollenbeck Press Barry Kathleen 1988 Susan B Anthony A Biography of a Singular Feminist New York Ballantine Books ISBN 0 345 36549 6 Boylan Anne 2016 Women s Rights in the United States A History in Documents New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 195 33829 4 Cullen DuPont Kathryn 2000 The Encyclopedia of Women s History in America second ed New York Facts on File ISBN 0 8160 4100 8 DuBois Ellen Carol 1978 Feminism and Suffrage The Emergence of an Independent Women s Movement in America 1848 1869 Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 8641 6 DuBois Ellen Carol ed 1992 The Elizabeth Cady Stanton Susan B Anthony Reader Boston Northwestern University Press ISBN 1 55553 143 1 Flexner Eleanor 1959 Century of Struggle Cambridge MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674106536 Fowler Robert Booth 1986 Carrie Catt Feminist Politician Boston Northeastern University Press ISBN 0 930350 86 3 Franzen Trisha 2014 Anna Howard Shaw The Work of Woman Suffrage Urbana University of Illinois Press ISBN 978 0 252 07962 7 Freeman Jo 2008 We Will Be Heard Women s Struggles for Political Power in the United States New York Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 7425 5608 9 Frost Knappman Elizabeth Cullen DuPont Kathryn 2009 Women s Suffrage in America New York Facts on File ISBN 978 0 8160 5693 4 Gordon Ann D ed 2009 The Selected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B Anthony Their Place Inside the Body Politic 1887 to 1895 Vol 5 of 6 New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 2321 7 Graham Sara Hunter 1996 Woman Suffrage and the New Democracy New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 06346 6 Griffith Elisabeth 1984 In Her Own Right The Life of Elizabeth Cady Stanton Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195034400 Harper Ida Husted 1922 The History of Woman Suffrage New York J J Little amp Ives Company McMillen Sally Gregory 2008 Seneca Falls and the Origins of the Women s Rights Movement New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 518265 1 McMillen Sally Gregory 2015 Lucy Stone An Unapologetic Life New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 977839 3 Rakow Lana F Kramarae Cheris eds 2001 The Revolution in Words Righting Women 1868 1871 Vol 4 of Women s Source Library New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 25689 6 Scott Anne Firor Scott Andrew MacKay 1982 One Half the People The Fight for Woman Suffrage Chicago University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 01005 1 Stanton Elizabeth Cady Anthony Susan B Gage Matilda Joslyn Harper Ida 1881 1922 History of Woman Suffrage in six volumes Rochester NY Susan B Anthony Charles Mann Press Tetrault Lisa 2014 The Myth of Seneca Falls Memory and the Women s Suffrage Movement 1848 1898 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 1 4696 1427 4 Van Voris Jacqueline 1987 Carrie Chapman Catt A Public Life The Feminists Press at the City University of New York ISBN 978 1 55861 139 9 Walton Mary A Woman s Crusade Alice Paul and the Battle for the Ballot New York Palgrave Macmillan 2010 ISBN 978 0 230 61175 7 Wheeler Marjorie Spruill 1993 New Women of the New South The Leaders of the Woman Suffrage Movement in the Southern States New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 507583 8 External links Edit Media related to National American Woman Suffrage Association at Wikimedia Commons Women s Suffrage From the Library of Congress Grover Batts Thelma Queen eds 1974 National American Woman Suffrage Association A Register of Its Records in the Library of Congress Manuscript Division Library of Congress Archived from the original on December 8 2009 Retrieved 2010 08 03 Votes for Women Selections from the National American Woman Suffrage Association 1848 1921 Elizabeth Smith Miller and Anne Fitzhugh Miller s NAWSA Suffrage Scrapbooks 1897 1911 Webcast Catch the Suffragist s Spirit The Miller Scrapbooks From the Library of Congress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National American Woman Suffrage Association amp oldid 1142577054, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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