United States Women's Suffrage timeline
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Source: The Susan B. Anthony Center for Women's Leadership
http://www.rochester.edu/SBA/timeline1.html
Prepared by Mary M. Huth, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, University of Rochester Libraries, February 1995.
1792 to 1920
1792 British author Mary Wollstonecraft argues for the equality of the sexes in her book, the Vindication of the Rights of Women.
1793 January 3: Lucretia Mott is born in Nantucket, MA.
1815 November 12: Elizabeth Cady Stanton is born in Johnstown, NY.
1818 August 13: Lucy Stone is born in West Brookfield, MA.
1820 February 15: Susan B. Anthony is born in Adams, MA.
1821 Emma Willard founds the Troy Female Seminary, the first school to offer girls classical and scientific studies on a collegiate level.
1828 Englishwoman Frances Wright is the first woman to address an American audience composed of both men and women.
1833 Oberlin College is founded as the first coeducational institution of higher learning.
1837 Mount Holyoke, the first college for women, is founded by Mary Lyon in South Hadley, MA.
1840 The World's Anti-Slavery Convention is held in London, England. When the women delegates from the United States are not allowed to participate, Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton determine to have a women's rights convention when they return home.
1845 Margaret Fuller publishes Woman in the Nineteenth Century, which has a profound influence on the development of American feminist theory.
1847 February 14: Anna Howard Shaw is born in Newcastle-on-Tyne, England.
1848 July 19: The first woman's rights convention is called by Mott and Stanton. It is held on July 20 at the Wesleyan Chapel in Seneca Falls, NY. August 2: A reconvened session of the woman's rights convention is held at the Unitarian Church in Rochester, NY. Amelia Bush is chosen chair, and becomes the first woman to preside over a meeting attended by both men and women. New York State Legislature passes a law which gives women the right to retain possession of property they owned prior to their marriage.
1849 Elizabeth Blackwell graduates from Geneva College in Geneva, NY with the first medical degree awarded to a woman.
1851
Amelia Bloomer publishes in her Seneca Falls newspaper, The Lily, a description
of a comfortable, loose-fitting costume consisting of a short skirt worn over
pantaloons. Even though the outfit was first worn by Elizabeth Smith Miller, it
becomes known as the "Bloomer."
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony meet and begin their fifty-year
collaboration to win for women their economic, educational, social, and civil
rights.
Sojourner Truth delivers her "And Ain't I a Woman Speech" at the Woman's Rights
Convention in Akron, OH.
1853 Antoinette Brown Blackwell, an 1847 Oberlin graduate, is ordained as the minister of the First Congregational Church in Butler and Savannah, NY. She is the first woman to be ordained in the United States by a mainstream denomination.
1855 Elizabeth Cady Stanton makes an unprecedented appearance before the New York State Legislature to speak in favor of expanding the Married Woman's Property Law.
1859 January 9: Carrie Chapman Catt is born in Ripon, WI.
1863 Stanton and Anthony organize the Women's Loyal National League and gather 300,000 signatures on a petition demanding that the Senate abolish slavery by constitutional amendment.
1866 The American Equal Rights Association is founded with the purpose to secure for all Americans their civil rights irrespective of race, color, or sex. Lucretia Mott is elected president. To test women's constitutional right to hold public office, Stanton runs for Congress receiving 24 of 12,000 votes cast.
1867
Stanton, Anthony, and Lucy Stone address a subcommittee of the New York State
Constitutional Convention requesting that the revised constitution include woman
suffrage. Their efforts fail.
Kansas holds a state referendum on whether to enfranchise blacks and/or women.
Lucy Stone, Susan B. Anthony, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton traverse the state
speaking in favor of women suffrage. Both black and women suffrage is voted
down.
1868
Stanton and Anthony launch their women's rights newspaper, the Revolution,
in New York City.
Anthony organizes the Working Women's Association, which encourages women to
form unions to win higher wages and shorter hours.
The 14th amendment to the U. S. Constitution is adopted. The amendment grants
suffrage to former male African-American slaves, but not to women. Anthony and
Stanton bitterly oppose the amendment, which for the first time explicitly
restricts voting rights to "males." Many of their former allies in the
abolitionist movement, including Lucy Stone, support the amendment.
1869 National Woman Suffrage Association is founded with Elizabeth
Cady Stanton as president.
American Woman Suffrage Association is founded with Henry Ward Beecher as
president.
Wyoming Territory grants suffrage to women.
1870 Utah Territory grants suffrage to women.
First issue of the Woman's Journal is published with Lucy Stone and her
husband Henry Blackwell as editors.
1871 Victoria Woodhull addresses the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives arguing that women have the right to vote under the 14th amendment. The Committee issues a negative report.
1872 In Rochester, NY, Susan B. Anthony registers and votes contending that the 14th amendment gives her that right. Several days later she is arrested.
1873 At Anthony's trial the judge does not allow her to testify on her own behalf, dismisses the jury, rules her guilty, and fines her $100. She refuses to pay.
1874 In Minor v. Happersett, the Supreme Court descides that citizenship does not give women the right to vote and that women's political rights are under the jurisdiction of each individual state.
1876 Stanton writes a Declaration and Protest of the Women of the United States to be read at the centennial celebration in Philadelphia. When the request to present the Declaration is denied, Anthony and four other women charge the speakers' rostrum and thrust the document into the hands of Vice-President Thomas W. Ferry.
1879 Belva Lockwood becomes the first woman lawyer admitted to practice before the Supreme Court.
1880 November 11: Lucretia Mott dies.
New York state grants school suffrage to women.
1882 The House of Representatives and the Senate appoint Select Committees on Woman Suffrage.
1885 January 11: Alice Paul is born.
1887 The first three volumes of the History of Woman Suffrage, edited by Susan B. Anthony, Matilda Joslyn Gage and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, is published.
1888 The International Council for Women is founded and holds its first meeting in Washington, DC.
1890 After
several years of negotiations, the NWSA and the AWSA merge to form the National
American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) with Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan
B. Anthony and Lucy Stone as officers.
Wyoming joins the union as the first state with voting rights for women. By 1900
women also have full suffrage in Utah, Colorado and Idaho.
New Zealand is the first nation to give women suffrage.
1892 Susan B. Anthony becomes president of the NAWSA.
1893 October 18: Lucy Stone dies.
1895 Elizabeth Cady Stanton publishes The Woman's Bible, a critical examination of the Bible's teaching about women. The NAWSA censures the work.
1900 Anthony resigns as president of the NAWSA and is succeeded by Carrie Chapman Catt.
1902
October 26: Elizabeth Cady Stanton dies.
Women of Australia are enfranchised.
1903 Carrie Chapman Catt resigns as president of the NAWSA and Anna Howard Shaw becomes president.
1906 March 13: Susan B. Anthony dies. Women of Finland are enfranchised.
1907 Harriet Stanton Blatch, daughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, founds the Equality League of Self-Supporting Women, later called the Women's Political Union.
1908 March 8: International Women's Day is celebrated for the first time.
1910 The Women's Political Union holds its first suffrage parade in New York City.
1911 National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage is founded.
1912 Suffrage referendums are passed in Arizona, Kansas, and Oregon.
1913 Alice Paul organizes a suffrage parade in Washington, DC, the day of Woodrow Wilson's inauguration.
1914
Montana and Nevada grant voting rights to women.
Alice Paul and Lucy Burns organize the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage.
It merges in 1917 with the Woman's Party to become the National Woman's Party.
1915
Suffrage referendum in New York State is defeated.
Carrie Chapman Catt is elected president of the NAWSA.
Women of Denmark are enfranchised.
1916
Jeannette Rankin, a Republican from Montana, is elected to the House of
Representatives and becomes the first woman to serve in Congress.
President Woodrow Wilson addresses the NAWSA.
1917
Members of the National Woman's Party picket the White House. Alice Paul and
ninety-six other suffragists are arrested and jailed for "obstructing traffic."
When they go on a hunger strike to protest their arrest and treatment, they are
force-fed.
Women win the right to vote in North Dakota, Ohio, Indiana, Rhode Island,
Nebraska, Michigan, New York, and Arkansas.
1918 Women
of Austria, Canada, Czechoslovakia, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Poland, Scotland,
and Wales are enfranchised.
House of Representatives passes a resolution in favor of a woman suffrage
amendment. The resolution is defeated by the Senate.
1919 Women
of Azerbaijan Republic, Belgium, British East Africa, Holland, Iceland,
Luxembourg, Rhodesia, and Sweden are enfranchised.
The Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution granting women the vote is adopted
by a joint resolution of Congress and sent to the states for ratification.
July 2: Anna Howard Shaw dies.
New York and twenty-one other states ratify the Nineteenth Amendment.
1920 Henry
Burn casts the deciding vote that makes Tennessee the thirty-sixth, and final
state, to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment.
August 26: The Nineteenth Amendment is adopted and
the women of the United States are finally enfranchised.