“THE MEMORY OF AUGUST”
August is a
month of many anniversaries. Some are great memories, like the passage of
the Voting Rights Act in 1965, which ended neo-slavery in the United
States. Some are horrible, like the
bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and like the passage of the Gulf of Tonkin
Resolution, which basically authorized the Vietnam War. There are many others, but two more are
coming in these next two weeks, one a work of justice and the other a
disaster. This week marks the 99th
anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment, and next week
marks the 400th anniversary of Africans being brought as slaves to
the English colonies in Virginia (one year before the Mayflower arrived). This week, it’s on to the 19th
Amendment, which gave white women the right to vote.
This work
was a couple of centuries in the making, but its official beginning is marked
as the Seneca Falls Convention in New York in 1848, organized by Elizabeth Cady
Stanton and Lucretia Mott. At this
convention, attended by 300 delegates, a “Declaration of Sentiments” was
adopted, urging that women be given the vote.
The three Amendments passed after the Civil War (13-15th)
basically re-wrote the U.S. Constitution, but they did not address the rights
of women. There was a bitter fight over
the 15th Amendment, which basically gave the right to vote to black
men. Abolitionists like Frederick
Douglass argued against including women in this amendment, because he did not
think that the votes would be there for both.
Stanton and Susan B. Anthony and others argued strongly that women
should be included in the voting rights amendment. Women were not included in the Amendment, and
they began the work for passing a new amendment to the Constitution.
A new
Amendment to grant the vote to women was introduced into Congress in 1878, but
it got nowhere. Stanton and Anthony were
joined by a new generation of leaders like Alice Paul, Lucy Burns, Ida Wells,
Mary Church Terrell, and Carrie Chapman Catt to work for this amendment. The same struggles ensued – some like Burns wanted
to approach the problem by going through the state constitutions. Some, like Paul and Catt and Wells, wanted to
get the federal constitution changed. As
always, the issue of race was central too – would they address voting rights
for all women, or just women classified as “white?” Like the struggle over the 15th
Amendment, this would be a hard struggle, and although there is no racial
classification mentioned in the 19th Amendment, there was no
guarantee for votes for all women.
After much
hard work, especially by the National Women’s Party, President Woodrow Wilson
agreed to call a special session of Congress in 1919 to press for the passage
of the 19th Amendment. It
passed the House on May 21, passed the Senate on June 4, and thus this is the 100th
anniversary of congressional passage of the 19th Amendment. But, it could not become law until three
quarters of the states passed it. It was
sent to the states for ratification, needing 36 to pass. Many states passed it quickly, although
states such as Vermont, Delaware, and Connecticut declined to ratify it. That process moved it into 1920, and states
began to pass it. The state of
Washington passed it, becoming the 35th state to do so. That pushed the struggle to the state of
Tennessee, which became the symbol of the last hope, because the remaining
states were all in the former Confederacy, and those prospects did not look
good, although Arkansas and Texas had already passed it.
There was a
harsh and difficult battle in Tennessee over the 19th Amendment (for
a good history on this, see “The Women’s Hour” by Elaine Weiss). The votes needed to pass it were hard to come
by, though initial procedural votes to move it were tied at 45-45. Still, with a tie vote, it could not be
moved. A final vote would be held the
next day, and in the meantime, one of the legislators who had opposed it had a
change of heart. Harry Burns found a
note from his mother, which indicated that he should vote for ratification. The next day he shocked everyone by changing
his position and voting for ratification, and the 19th Amendment
moved to ratification by that one vote.
After his vote, Harry Burns had to flee the building to save his life,
but on August 18, 1920, the 19th Amendment was ratified. On August 26, the U.S. Congress certified the
vote, and the 19th Amendment was added to the U.S.
Constitution.
That margin
of one vote indicates the tenuousness of human rights in the “land of the
free.” One of my early conversations
with Caroline’s paternal grandmother, Sophie Leach, was about the 19th
Amendment. She indicated that she did
not think that women should have gotten the vote as a young mother, but when
they got the right to vote, she was always going to vote. And she did vote in every election until her
death in 1978: 58 years of voting. In
our day when many hard-won rights are once again in contention, let us remember
this story. Let us celebrate the hard
work of those who helped us attain some human rights in this country, but let
us also remember how tenuous they are.
Hate, like kudzu, has deep roots, and it is always resprouting and
seeking to spread. Let us be those
tenders of the garden who seek to uproot the weeds of hate and oppression and
who seek to grow the flowers of equity and justice. We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.
Wonderful and richly informative post, Nibs. Thank you. I love it "flowers of equity and justice."
ReplyDeleteThanks, Anita!
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