IN THE
SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES,
2D SESSION, 49TH CONGRESS,
DECEMBER 8, 1886, AND JANUARY 23, 1887,
By
Senators H.W. Blair,
J.E. Brown, J.N. Dolph,
G.G. Vest, and Geo.
F. Hoar.
Washington.
1887.
Wednesday, December 8, 1886.
On the joint resolution (S. proposing
an amendment to the Constitution of the United States
extending the right of suffrage to women.
Mr. Blair said:
Mr. President: I ask the
Senate to proceed to the consideration of Order of
Business 122, being the joint resolution (S. proposing
an amendment to the Constitution of the United States
extending the right of suffrage to women.
The motion was agreed to.
The president pro tempore. The joint
resolution will be read.
The Chief Clerk read as follows:
Joint resolution proposing
an amendment to the Constitution of the
United States extending the
right of suffrage to women.
Resolved by the Senate and House
of Representatives of the United States of America
in Congress assembled (two-thirds of each House concurring
therein), That the following article be proposed
to the Legislatures of the several States as an
amendment to the Constitution of the United States;
which, when ratified by three-fourths of the said
Legislatures, shall be valid as part of said Constitution,
namely:
Article .
Section 1. The rights
of citizens of the United States to vote
shall not be denied or abridged
by the United States or by any
State on account of sex.
Sec. 2. The Congress
shall have power, by appropriate legislation,
to enforce the provisions
of this article.
Mr. Blair. Mr. President,
the question before the Senate is this: Shall
a joint resolution providing for an amendment of the
national Constitution, so that the right of citizens
of the United States to vote shall not be denied or
abridged by the United States, or by any State, on
account of sex, and that Congress shall have power
to enforce the article, be submitted to the Legislatures
of the several States for ratification or rejection?
The answer to this question does not
depend necessarily upon the reply to that other question,
whether women ought to be permitted to exercise the
right or privilege of suffrage as do men. The
Legislatures of the several States must decide this
in ratifying or rejecting the proposed amendment.
Upon solemn occasions concerning grave
public affairs, and when large numbers of the citizens
of the country desire to test the sentiments of the
people upon an amendment of the organic law in the
manner provided to be done by the provisions of that
law, it may well become the duty of Congress to submit
the proposition to the amending power, which is the
same as that which created the original instrument
itself the people of the several States.
It can hardly be claimed that two-thirds
of each branch of Congress must necessarily be convinced
that the Constitution should be amended as proposed
in the joint resolution to be submitted before it has
discretion to submit the same to the judgment of the
States. Any citizen has the right to petition
or, through his representative, to bring in his bill
for redress of grievances, or to promote the public
good by legislation; and it can hardly be maintained
that, before any citizen or large body of citizens
shall have the privilege of introducing a bill to
the great legislative tribunal, which alone has primary
jurisdiction of the organic law and power to amend
or change it, the Congress, which under the Constitution
is simply the moving or initiating power, must by
a two-thirds vote approve the proposition at issue
before its discussion shall be permitted in the forum
of the States. To hold such a doctrine would
be contrary to all our ideas of free discussion, and
to lock up the institutions and the interests of a
great and progressive people in fetters of brass.
It is only essential that two-thirds
of each House of the Congress shall deem it necessary
for the public good, that the amendment be proposed
to the States for their action. But two-thirds
of the Congress will hardly consider it “necessary”
to submit a joint resolution proposing an amendment
of the National Constitution to the States for consideration,
unless the subject matter be of grave importance,
with strong reasons in its favor, and a large support
already developed among the people themselves.
If there be any principle upon which
our form of government is founded, and wherein it
is different from aristocracies, monarchies, and despotisms,
that principle is this:
Every human being of mature powers,
not disqualified by ignorance, vice or crime, is the
equal of and is entitled to all the rights and privileges
which belong to any other such human being under the
law.
The independence, equality, and dignity
of all human souls is the fundamental assertion of
those who believe in what we call human freedom.
This principle will hardly be denied by any one, even
by those who oppose the adoption of the resolution.
But we are informed that infants, idiots, and women
are represented by men. This cannot reasonably
be claimed unless it be first shown that the consent
of these classes has been given to such representation,
or that they lack the capacity to consent. But
the exclusion of these classes from participation
in the Government deprives them of the power of assent
to representation even when they possess the requisite
ability; and to say there can be representation which
does not presuppose consent or authority on the part
of the principal who is represented is to confound
all reason and to assert in substance that all actual
power, whether despotic or otherwise, is representative,
and therefore free. In this sense the Czar represents
his whole people, just as voting men represent women
who do not vote at all.
True it is that the voting men, by
excluding women and other classes from the suffrage,
by that act charge themselves with the trust of administering
justice to all, even as the monarch whose power is
based upon force is bound to rule uprightly.
But if it be true that “all just government
is founded upon the consent of the governed,”
then the government of woman by man, without her consent,
given in her sovereign capacity, if indeed she be
an intelligent creature, and provided she be competent
to exercise the power of suffrage, which is the sovereignty,
even if that government be wise and just in itself,
is a violation of natural right and an enforcement
of servitude and slavery against her on the part of
man. If woman, like the infant or the defective
classes, be incapable of self-government, then republican
society may exclude her from all participation in the
enactment and enforcement of the laws under which she
lives. But in that case, like the infant and
the fool and the unconsenting subject of tyrannical
forms of government, she is ruled and not represented
by man.
Thus much I desire to say in the beginning
in reply to the broad assumption of those who deny
women the suffrage by saying that they are already
represented by their fathers, their husbands, their
brothers, and their sons, or to state the proposition
in its only proper form, that woman whose assent can
only be given by an exercise of sovereignty on her
part is represented by man who denies and by virtue
of power and possession refuses to her the exercise
of the suffrage whereby that representation can be
made valid.
The claim, then, of the minority of
the committee that woman is represented by the other
sex is not well founded, and is based upon the same
assumption of power which lies at the base of all government
anti-republican in form. It can not be claimed
that she is as a free being already represented, for
she can only be represented according to her will
by the exercise of her will through the suffrage itself.
As already observed, the exclusion
of woman from the suffrage under our form of government
can be justified upon proof, and only upon proof,
that by reason of her sex she is incompetent to exercise
that power. This is a question of fact.
The common ground upon which all agree
may be stated thus: All males having certain
qualifications are in reason and in law entitled to
vote. Those qualifications affect either the body
or the mind or both.
First, the attainment of a certain
age. The age in itself is not material, but maturity
of mental and moral development is material, soundness
of body in itself not being essential, and want of
it alone never working forfeiture of the right, although
it may prevent its exercise.
Age as a qualification for suffrage
is by no means to be confounded with age as a qualification
for service in war. Society has well established
the distinction, and that one has no relation whatever
to the other; the one having reference to physical
prowess, while the other relates only to the mental
and moral state. This is shown by the ages fixed
by law for these qualifications, that of eighteen years
being fixed as the commencement of the term of presumed
fitness for military service, and forty-five years
as the period of its termination; while the age of
presumed fitness for the suffrage, which requires
no physical superiority certainly, is set at twenty-one
years, when still greater strength of body has been
attained than at the period when liability to the
dangers and hardships of war commences; and there
are at least three millions more male voters in our
country than of the population liable by law to the
performance of military duty. It is still further
to be observed, that the right of suffrage continues
as long as the mind lasts, while ordinary liability
to military service ceases at a period when the physical
powers, though still strong, are beginning to wane.
The truth is, that there is no legal or natural connection
between the right or liability to fight and the right
to vote.
The right to fight may be exercised
voluntarily or the liability to fight may be enforced
by the community whenever there is an invasion of
right, and the extent to which the physical forces
of society may be called upon in self-defense or in
justifiable revolution is measured not by age or sex,
but by necessity, and may go so far as to call into
the field old men and women and the last vestige of
physical force. It can not be claimed that woman
has no right to vote because she is not liable to
fight, for she is so liable, and the freest government
on the face of the earth has the reserved power under
the call of necessity to place her in the forefront
of battle itself, and more than this, woman has the
right, and often has exercised it, to go there.
If any one could question the existence
of this reserved power of society to call the force
of woman to the common defense, either in the hospital
or the field, it would be woman, who has been deprived
of participation in the government and in shaping
the public policy which has resulted in dire emergency
to the state. But in all times, and under all
forms of government and of social existence, woman
has given her body and her soul to the common defense.
The qualification of age, then, is
imposed for the purpose of securing mental and moral
fitness for the suffrage on the part of those who
exercise it. It has no relation to the possession
of physical powers at all.
All other qualifications imposed upon
male citizens, save only that of their sex, as prerequisites
to the exercise of suffrage have the same objects
in view, and can have no other.
The property qualification is, to
my mind, an invasion of natural right, which elevates
mere property to an equality with life and personal
liberty, and ought never to be imposed upon the suffrage.
But, however that may be, its application or removal
has no relation to sex, and its only object is to
secure the exercise of the suffrage under a stronger
sense of obligation and responsibility a
qualification, be it observed, of no consequence save
as it influences the mind of the voter in the exercise
of his right.
The same is true of the qualifications
of sanity, education, and obedience to the laws, which
exclude dementia, ignorance, and crime from participation
in the sovereignty. Every condition or qualification
imposed upon the exercise of the suffrage by the citizen
save only sex has for its only object or possible justification
the possession of mental and moral fitness, and has
no relation to physical power.
The question then arises why is the
qualification of masculinity required at all?
The distinction between human beings
by reason of sex is a physical distinction. The
soul is of no sex. If there be a distinction of
soul by reason of the physical difference, or accompanying
that physical difference, woman is the superior of
man in mental and moral qualities. In proof of
this see the report of the minority and all the eulogiums
of woman pronounced by those who, like the serpent
of old, would flatter her vanity that they may continue
to wield her power.
I repeat it, that the soul is of no
sex, and that sex is, so far as the possession and
exercise of human rights and powers are concerned,
but a physical property, in which the female is just
as important as the male, and the possessor thereof
under just as great need of power in the organization
and management of society and the government of society
as man; and if there be a difference, she, by reason
of her average physical inferiority, is really protected,
and ought to be protected, by a superior mental and
moral fitness to give direction to the course of society
and the policy of the state. If, then, there be
a distinction between the souls of human beings resulting
from sex, I claim that, by the report of the minority
and the universal testimony of all men, woman is better
fitted for the exercise of the suffrage than man.
It is claimed by some that the suffrage
is an inherent natural right, and by others that it
is merely a privilege extended to the individual by
society in its discretion. However this may be,
practically any extension of the exercise of the suffrage
to individuals or classes not now enjoying it must
be by concession of those who already possess it,
and such extension without revolution will be through
the suffrage itself exercised by those who have it
under existing forms.
The appeal by those who have it not
must be made to those who are asked to part with a
portion of their own power, and it is not strange
that human nature, which is an essential element in
the male sex, should hesitate and delay to yield one-half
its power to those whose cause, however strong in
reason and justice, lacks that physical force which
so largely has been the means by which the masses of
men themselves hare wrung their own rights from rulers
and kings.
It is not strange that when overwhelmed
with argument and half won by appeals to his better
nature to concede to woman her equal power in the
state, and ashamed to blankly refuse that which he
finds no reason for longer withholding, man avoids
the dilemma by a pretended elevation of his helpmeet
to a higher sphere, where, as an angel, she has certain
gauzy ethereal resources and superior functions, occupations,
and attributes which render the possession of mere
earthly every-day powers and privileges non-essential
to woman, however mere mortal men themselves may find
them indispensable to their own freedom and happiness.
But to the denial of her right to
vote, whether that denial be the blunt refusal of
the ignorant or the polished evasion of the refined
courtier and politician, woman can oppose only her
most solemn and perpetual appeal to the reason of
man and to the justice of Almighty God. She must
continually point out the nature and object of the
suffrage and the necessity that she possess it for
her own and the public good.
What, then, is the suffrage, and why
is it necessary that woman should possess and exercise
this function of freemen? I quote briefly from
the report of the committee:
The rights for the maintenance of which
human governments are constituted are life, liberty,
and property. These rights are common to
men and women alike, and whatever citizen or subject
exists as a member of any body-politic, under any
form of government, is entitled to demand from
the sovereign power the full protection of these
rights.
This right to the protection of rights
appertains to the individual, not to the family
alone, or to any form of association, whether
social or corporate. Probably not more than five-eighths
of the men of legal age, qualified to vote, are heads
of families, and not more than that proportion
of adult women are united with men in the legal
merger of married life. It is, therefore,
quite incorrect to speak of the state as an aggregate
of families duly represented at the ballot-box
by their male head. The relation between
the government and the individual is direct; all
rights are individual rights, all duties are individual
duties.
Government in its two highest functions
is legislative and judicial. By these powers
the sovereignty prescribes the law, and directs
its application to the vindication of rights and the
redress of wrongs. Conscience and intelligence
are the only forces which enter into the exercise
of this highest and primary function of government.
The remaining department is the executive or administrative,
and in all forms of government the republican
as well as in tyranny the primary element
of administration is force, and even in this department
conscience and intelligence are indispensable
to its direction.
If now we are to decide who of our sixty
millions of human beings are to constitute the
citizenship of this Republic and by virtue of
their qualifications to be the law-making power, by
what tests shall the selection be determined?
The suffrage which is the sovereignty
is this great primary law-making power. It
is not the executive power proper at all. It
is not founded upon force. Only that degree
of physical strength which is essential to a sound
body the home of the healthy mental and
moral constitution the sound soul in the
sound body is required in the performance of the
function of primary legislation. Never in
the history of this or any other genuine republic
has the law-making power, whether in general elections
or in the framing of laws in legislative assemblies,
been vested in individuals who have exercised
it by reason of their physical powers. On
the contrary, the physically weak have never for that
reason been deprived of the suffrage nor of the
privilege of service in the public councils so
long as they possessed the necessary powers of
locomotion and expression, of conscience and intelligence,
which are common to all. The aged and the physically
weak have, as a rule, by reason of superior wisdom
and moral sense, far more than made good any bodily
inferiority by which they have differed from the
more robust members of the community in the discussion
and decisions of the ballot-box and in councils of
the state.
The executive power of itself is a mere
physical instrumentality an animal
quality and it is confided from necessity
to those individuals who possess that quality, but
always with danger, except so far as wisdom and
virtue control its exercise. And it is obvious
that the greater the mass of higher and spiritual
forces, whether found in those to whom the execution
of the law is assigned or in the great mass by
whom the suffrage is exercised, and who direct
the execution of the law, the greater will be
the safety and the surer will be the happiness of the
state.
It is too late to question the intellectual
and moral capacity of woman to understand great
political issues (which are always primarily questions
of conscience questions of the intelligent
application of the principles of right and of wrong
in public and private affairs) and properly decide
them at the polls. Indeed, so far as your
committee are aware, the pretense is no longer advanced
that woman should not vote by reason of her mental
or moral unfitness to perform this legislative
function; but the suffrage is denied to her because
she can not hang criminals, suppress mobs, nor
handle the enginery of war. We have already seen
the untenable nature of this assumption, because those
who make it bestow the suffrage upon very large
classes of men who, however well qualified they
may be to vote, are physically unable to perform
any of the duties which appertain to the execution
of the law and the defense of the state.
Scarcely a Senator on this floor is liable by
law to perform a military or other administrative
duty, yet the rule so many set up against the right
of women to vote would disfranchise nearly this
whole body.
But it unnecessary to grant that woman
can not fight. History is full of examples
of her heroism in danger, of her endurance and fortitude
in trial, and of her indispensable and supreme service
in hospital and field; and in the handling of the
deft and horrible machinery and infernal agencies
which science and art have prepared and are preparing
for human destruction in future wars, woman may
perform her whole part in the common assault or the
common defense. It is hardly worth while to consider
this trivial objection that she is incompetent
for purposes of national murder or of bloody self-defense
as the basis of the denial of a great fundamental
right, when we consider that if that right were given
to her she would by its exercise almost certainly abolish
this great crime of the nations, which has always
inflicted upon her the chief burden of woe.
It will be admitted that the act of
voting is operative in government only as a means
of deciding upon the adoption or rejection of measures
or of the selection of officers to enact, administer,
and execute the laws.
In the discharge of these functions
it also must be admitted that intelligence and conscience
are the faculties requisite to secure their proper
performance.
In this day when woman has demonstrated
that she is fully the intellectual equal of man in
the profound as well as in the politer walks of learning in
art, science, literature, and, considering her opportunities,
that she is not his inferior in any of the professions
or in the great mass of useful occupations, while she
is, in fact, becoming the chief educator of the race
and is the acknowledged support of the great ministrations
of charity and religion; when in such great organizations
as the suffrage associations, missionary societies,
the National Woman’s Christian Temperance Union,
and even upon the still larger scale of international
action, she has exhibited her power by mere moral
influences and the inspiration of great purposes,
without the aid of legal penalties or even of tangible
inconveniences, to mold and direct the discordant thought
and action of thousands and millions of people scattered
over separate States, and sometimes even living in
countries hostile to each other to the accomplishment
of great earthly or heavenly ends, it is unreasonable
to deny to woman the suffrage in political affairs
upon the false allegation that she is wanting in the
very qualities most indispensable and requisite for
the proper exercise of this great right.
The advocates of universal male suffrage
have long since ceased to deny the ballot to woman
upon the ground that she is unfit or incompetent to
exercise it.
There is a class of high-stepping
objectors, like Ouida, who decry the sound judgment
and moral excellence of woman as compared with man,
but in the same breath these people deny the suffrage
to the masses of men and advocate “the just
supremacy of the fittest,” so that no time need
be wasted in refutation of those malignant and libelous
aspersions upon our mothers, sisters, and wives, which,
when carried to logical conclusions by their own authors,
deny the fundamental principles of liberty to man
and woman alike, and reassert in its baldest form the
dogma that “the existing system of electoral
power all over the world is absurd, and will remain
so because in no nation is there the courage, perhaps
in no nation is there the intellectual power, capable
of putting forward and sustaining the logical doctrine
of the just supremacy of the fittest.”
In fact the minority of the committee,
and this is true of all honest, intelligent men who
believe in the republican system of government at
all, concede that woman has the capacity and moral
fitness requisite to exercise the ballot. That
class of women represented by the author of “Letters
from a Chimney Corner,” whose work has been adopted
by the minority as the basis of their report, speaking
through the “fair authoress,” say that
“if women were to be considered in their highest
and final estate as merely individual beings, and if
the right to the ballot were to be conceded to man
as an individual, it might perhaps he logically argued
that women also possessed the inherent right to vote.”
Let me read from the views of the minority on page
1:
The undersigned minority of the Committee
of the Senate on Woman Suffrage, to whom was referred
Senate Resolution N, proposing an amendment
to the Constitution of the United States to grant
the right to vote to the women of the United States,
beg leave to submit the following minority report,
consisting of extracts from a little volume entitled,
“Letters from a Chimney Corner,” written
by a highly cultivated lady, Mrs. ,
of Chicago, This gifted lady has discussed the
question with so much clearness and force that
we make no apology to the Senate for substituting quotations
from her book in place of anything we might produce.
We quote first from chapter 3, which is entitled
“The value of suffrage to women much overestimated.”
The fair authoress says:
“If women were to be considered
in their highest and final estate as merely individual
beings, and if the right to the ballot were to
be conceded to man as an individual, it might perhaps
be logically argued that women also possessed
the inherent right to vote. But from the
oldest times, and through all the history of the
race, has run the glimmer of an idea, more or less
distinguishable in different ages and under different
circumstances, that neither man nor woman is, as
such, individual; that neither being is of itself
a whole, a unit, but each requires to be supplemented
by the other before its true structural integrity
can be achieved. Of this idea, the science of
botany furnishes the moat perfect illustration.
The stamens on the one hand, and the ovary and
pistil on the other, may indeed reside in one
blossom, which then exists in a married or reproductive
state. But equally well, the stamens or male
organs may reside in one plant, and the ovary
and pistil or female organs may reside in another.
In that case, the two plants are required to make one
structurally complete organization. Each is
but half a plant, an incomplete individual by
itself. The life principle of each must be
united to that of the other; the twain must be indeed
one flesh before the organization is either structurally
or functionally complete.”
This is a concession of the whole
argument, unless the highest and final estate of woman
is to be something else than a mere individual.
It would also follow that if such be her destiny that
is, to be something else than a mere “individual
being” and if for that reason she
is to be denied the suffrage, then man equally should
be denied the ballot if his highest and final estate
is to be something else than a “mere individual.”
Thereupon the minority of the committee,
through the “Fair Authoress,” proceed
to show that both man and woman are designed for a
higher final estate to wit, that of matrimony.
It seems to be conceded that man is just as much fitted
for matrimony as woman herself, and thereupon the
whole subject is illuminated with certain botanical
lore about stamens and pistils, which, however relevant
to matrimony, does not seem to me to prove that therefore
woman should not vote unless at the same time it proves
that man should not vote either. And certainly
it can not apply to those women any more than to those
men whose highest and final estate never is merged
in the family relation at all, and even “Ouida”
concedes “that the project ... to give votes
only to unmarried women may be dismissed without discussion,
as it would be found to be wholly untenable.”
There is no escape from it. The
discussion has passed so far that among intelligent
people who believe in the republican form that
is, free government all mature men and women
have under the same circumstance and conditions the
same rights to defend, the same grievances to redress,
and, therefore, the same necessity for the exercise
of this great fundamental right, of all human beings
in free society. For the right to vote is the
great primitive right. It is the right in which
all freedom originates and culminates. It is the
right from which all others spring, in which they
merge, and without which they fall whenever assailed.
This right makes, and is all the difference
between government by and with the consent of the
governed and government without and against the consent
of the governed; and that is the difference between
freedom and slavery. If the right to vote be not
that difference, what is? No, sir. If either
sex as a class can dispense with the right to vote,
then take it from the strong, and no longer rob the
weak of their defense for the benefit of the strong.
But it is impossible to conceive of
the suffrage as a right dependent at all upon such
an irrelevant condition as sex. It is an individual,
a personal right. It may be withheld by force;
but if withheld by reason of sex it is a moral robbery.
But it is said that the duties of
maternity disqualify for the performance of the act
of voting. It can not be, and I think is not
claimed by any one, that the mother who otherwise would
be fit to vote is rendered mentally or morally less
fit to exercise this high function in the state because
of motherhood. On the contrary, if any woman
has a motive more than another person, man or woman,
to secure the enactment and enforcement of good laws,
it is the mother, who, beside her own life, person,
and property, to the protection of which the ballot
is as essential as to the same rights possessed by
man, has her little contingent of immortal beings
to conduct safely to the portals of active life through
all the snares and pitfalls woven around them by bad
men and bad laws which bad men have made, or good
laws which bad men, unhindered by the good, have defied
or have prostituted, and rightly to prepare, them
for the discharge of all the duties of their day and
generation, including the exercise of the very right
denied to their mother.
Certainly, if but for motherhood she
should vote, then ten thousand times more necessary
is it that the mother should be guarded and armed
with this great social and political power for the
sake of all men and women who are yet to be.
But it is said that she has not the time. Let
us see. By the best deductions I can make from
the census and from other sources there are 15,000,000
women of voting age in this country at the present
time, of whom not more than 10,000,000 are married
and not more than 7,500,000 are still liable to the
duties of maternity, for it will be remembered that
a large proportion of the mothers of our country at
any given time are below the voting age, while of those
who are above it another large proportion have passed
beyond the point of this objection. Not more
than one-half the female population of voting age
are liable to this objection. Then why disfranchise
the 7,500,000, the other half, as to whom your objection,
even if valid as to any, does not apply at all; and
these, too, as a class the most mature and therefore
the best qualified to vote of any of their sex?
But how much is there of this objection of want of
time or physical strength to vote, in its application
to women who are bearing and training the coming millions?
The families of the country average five persons in
number. If we assume that this gives an average
of three children to every pair, which is probably
the full number, or if we assume that every married
mother, after she becomes of voting age, bears three
children, which is certainly the full allowance, and
that twenty-four years are consumed in doing it, there
is one child born every eight years whose coming is
to interfere with the exercise of a duty of privilege
which, in most States, and in all the most important
elections, occurs only one day in two years.
That same mother will attend church
at least forty times yearly on the average from her
cradle to her grave, beside an infinity of other social,
religious, and industrial obligations which she performs
and assumes to perform because she is a married woman
and a mother rather than for any other reason whatever.
Yet it is proposed to deprive women yes,
all women alike of an inestimable privilege
and the chief power which can be exercised by any
free individual in the state for the reason that on
any given day of election not more than one woman
in twenty of voting age will probably not be able to
reach the polls. It does seem probable that on
these interesting occasions if the husband and wife
disagree in politics they could arrange a pair, and
the probability is, that arrangement failing, one could
be consummated with some other lady in like fortunate
circumstances, of opposite political opinions.
More men are kept from the polls by drunkenness, or,
being at the polls, vote under the influence of strong
drink, to the reproach and destruction of our free
institutions, and who, if woman could and did vote,
would cast the ballot of sobriety, good order, and
reform under her holy influences, than all those who
would be kept from any given election by the necessary
engagements of mothers at home.
When one thinks of the innumerable
and trifling causes which keep many of the best of
men and strongest opponents of woman suffrage from
the polls upon important occasions it is difficult
to be tolerant of the objection that woman by reason
of motherhood has no time to vote. Why, sir,
the greater exposure of man to the casualties of life
actually disables him in such way as to make it physically
impossible for him to exercise the franchise more
frequently than is the case with women, including
mothers and all. And if this liability to lose
the opportunity to exercise the right once or possibly
twice in a lifetime is a reason that women should
not he allowed to vote at all, why should men not
be disfranchised also by the same rule?
But it is urged that woman does not
desire the privilege. If the right exist at all
it is an individual right, and not one which belongs
to a class or to the sex as such. Yet men tell
us that they will vote the suffrage to women whenever
the majority of women desire it. Are, then, our
rights the property of the majority of a disfranchised
class to which we may chance to belong? What
would we say if it were seriously proposed to recall
the suffrage from all colored or from all white men
because a majority of either class should decline or
for any cause fail to vote? I know that it is
said that the suffrage is a privilege to be extended
by those who have it to those who have it not.
But the matter of right, of moral right, to the franchise
does not depend upon the indifference of those who
possess it or of those who do not possess it to the
desire of those women who desire to enjoy their right
and to discharge their duty. If one or many choose
not to claim their right it is no argument for depriving
me of mine or one woman of hers. There are many
reasons why some women declare themselves opposed
to the extension of suffrage to their sex. Some
well-fed and pampered, without serious experiences
in life, are incapable of comprehending the subject
at all. Vast numbers, who secretly and earnestly
desire it from the long habit of deference to the
wishes of the other sex, upon whom they are so entirely
dependent while disfranchised, and knowing the hostility
of their “protectors” to the agitation
of the subject, conceal their real sentiments, and
the “lord” of the family referring this
question to his wife, who has heard him sneer or worse
than sneer at suffragists for half a lifetime, ought
not to expect an answer which she knows will subject
her to his censure and ridicule or even his unexpressed
disapprobation.
It is like the old appeal of the master
to his slave to know if he would be free. Full
well did the wise and wary slave know that happiness
depended upon declared contentment with his lot.
But all the same the world does move. Colored
men are free. Colored men vote. Women will
vote. A little further on I shall revert to the
evidence of a general and growing desire on her part
and on the part of just and intelligent men that the
suffrage be extended to women.
But we are told that husband and wife
will disagree and thus the suffrage will destroy the
family and ruin society. If a married couple
will quarrel at all, they will find the occasion, and
it were fortunate indeed if their contention might
concern important affairs. There is no peace
in the family save where love is, and the same spirit
which enables the husband and wife to enforce the toleration
act between themselves in religious matters will keep
the peace between them in political discussions.
At all events, this argument is unworthy of notice
at all unless we are to push it to its logical conclusion,
and, for the sake of peace in the family, to prohibit
woman absolutely the exercise of freedom of thought
and speech. Men live with their countrymen and
disagree with them in politics, religion, and ten
thousand of the affairs of life, as often the trifling
as the important. What harm, then, if woman be
allowed her thought and vote upon the tariff, education,
temperance, peace and war, and whatsoever else the
suffrage decides?
But we are told that no government,
of which we have authentic history, ever gave to woman
a share in the sovereignty.
This is not true, for the annals of
monarchies and despotisms have been rendered illustrious
by queens of surpassing brilliance and power.
But even if it be true that no republic ever enfranchised
woman with the ballot even so until within
one hundred years universal or even general suffrage
was unknown among men.
Has the millennium yet dawned?
Is all progress at an end? If that which is should
therefore remain, why abolish the slavery of men?
But we are informed that woman does
not vote when she has the opportunity. Wherever
she has the unrestricted right she exercises it.
The records of Wyoming and Washington demonstrate the
fact.
And in these Territories, too, as
well as wherever else she has exercised the suffrage,
she has elevated man to her own level, and has made
the voting precinct as respectable and decorous as
the lecture-room or the assemblies of the devout.
All the experience there is refutes the apprehension
of those who fear that woman will either neglect the
discharge of her great duty, when allowed its fair
and equal exercise, or that the rude and baser sort
will overwhelm and banish the noble and refined.
But to my mind it seems like trifling
with a great subject to dwell upon topics like this.
It can only be justified by the continual iteration
of the objection by the opponents of woman suffrage,
who in the lack of substantial grounds whereupon to
base their opposition to the exercise of a great right
by one-half the community declare that there is no
time in which woman can vote.
I will now read an extract from the
report of the majority of the committee, showing to
a certain extent the degree of consequence which this
movement has assumed, its extent throughout our country,
and something of its duration. I have not the
latest data, for since this report was compiled there
has been action in several States, and a great deal
of popular discussion and a vast amount of demonstration
from the action of popular assemblies.
The committee say:
This movement for woman suffrage has
developed during the last half century into one
of great strength. The first petition was presented
to the Legislature of New York in 1835. It was
repeated in 1846, and since that time the petition
has been urged upon nearly every Legislature in
the Northern States. Five States have voted
upon the question of amending their constitutions by
striking out the word “male” from the
suffrage clause Kansas in 1867, Michigan
in 1874, Colorado in 1877, Nebraska in 1882, and Oregon
in 1884.
The ratio of the popular vote in each
case was about one-third for the amendment and
two-thirds against it. Three Territories have
or have had full suffrage for women. In two,
Wyoming since 1869 and Washington since 1883,
the experiment (!) is an unqualified success.
In Utah Miss Anthony keenly and justly observes that
suffrage is as much of a success for the Mormon
women as for the men.
In eleven States school suffrage for
women exists. In Kansas, from her admission
as a State. In Kentucky and Michigan fully as
long a time. School suffrage for women also
exists in Colorado, Minnesota, New Hampshire,
Massachusetts, Vermont, New York, Nebraska, and
Oregon.
In all these States, except Minnesota,
school suffrage was extended to women by the respective
Legislatures, and in Minnesota by the popular
vote, in November, 1876. Not only these eleven
States, but in nearly all the other Northern and
Western States women are elected to the offices
of county and city superintendent of public schools
and as members of school boards. In Louisiana
the constitution of 1879 makes women eligible to
school offices.
It may also be observed as indicating
a rising and controlling public sentiment in recognition
of the right and capacity of woman for public
affairs that she is eligible to such offices as that
of county clerk, register of deeds, and the like
in many and perhaps in all the States. Kansas
and Iowa elected several women to these positions
in the election of November, 1885, while President
Grant alone appointed more than five thousand
women to the office of postmaster; and although
many women have been appointed in the Departments
and to pension agencies and like important employments
and trusts, so far as your committee are aware
no charge of incompetency or of malfeasance in
office has ever yet been sustained against a woman.
It may be further stated in this connection
that nearly every Northern State has had before
it from time to time since 1870 a bill for the
submission of the question of woman suffrage to the
popular vote. In some instances such a resolution
has been passed at one session and failed to be
ratified at another by from one to three votes;
thus Iowa passed it in 1870, killed it in 1872; passed
it in 1874, failed to do so in 1876; passed it in 1878,
and failed in 1880; passed it again in 1882, and
defeated it in 1884; four times over and over,
and this winter these heroic and indomitable women
are trying it in Iowa again.
If men were to make such a
struggle for their rights it would be
considered a fine thing, and
there would be books and even poetry
written about it.
In New York, since 1880, the women have
urged this great measure before the Legislature
each year. There it takes the form of a bill
to prohibit the disfranchisement of women. This
bill has several times come within five votes
of passing the assembly.
In many States well sustained efforts
for municipal suffrage have been made, and, as
if in rebuke to the conservatism, or worse, of this
great Republic, this right of municipal suffrage is
already enjoyed in the province of Ontario, Canada,
and throughout the island of Great Britain by
unmarried women to the same extent as by men,
there being the same property qualification required
of each.
The movement for the amendment of the
National Constitution began by petitioning Congress
December, 1865, and since 1869 there have been
consecutive applications to every Congress praying
for the submission to the States of a proposition
similar to the joint resolution herewith reported
to the Senate.
The petitions have come from all parts
of the country; more especially from the Northern
and Western States, although there is an extensive
and increasing desire for the suffrage existing among
the women in the Southern States, as we are informed
by those whose interest in the subject makes them
familiar with the real state of feeling in that
part of our country. It is impossible to
know just what proportion of the people men
and women have expressed their desire
by petition to the National Legislature during
the last twenty years, but we are informed by Miss
Anthony that in the year 1871 Senator Sumner collected
the petitions from the files of the Senate and
House of Representatives, and that there were
then an immense number. A far greater number have
been presented since that time, and the same lady
is our authority for the estimate that in all
more than two hundred thousand petitions, by select
and representative men and women, have been poured
upon Congress in behalf of this prayer of woman
to be free. Who is so interested in the framing
of the law as woman, whose only defense is the
law? There never was a stronger exhibition of
popular demand by American citizens to be heard
in the court of the people for the vindication
of a fundamental right.
Since the submission of the report
the attempt has been made to secure action in several
of the State Legislatures. One which came very
near being successful was made in the State of Vermont.
The suffrage was extended, if I am not incorrectly
informed, so far as the action of the house of representatives
of that State could give it, and an effort being made
to propose some restriction and condition upon the
suffrage it was defeated, when, as I am told by the
friends of the movement, if it could have reached
a vote in the Vermont Legislature on the naked proposition
of suffrage to women as suffrage is extended to men,
they felt the very greatest confidence that they would
have been able to secure favorable action by the Legislature
of that State.
Miss Anthony informs me since she
came here at the present session (and I am sorry I
have not had the opportunity of extended conference
with her) that in the State of Kansas, where she spent
several weeks in the discussion of the subject before
vast masses of people, the largest halls, rinks, and
places for the accommodation of popular assemblages
in the State were crowded to overflowing to listen
to her address. In every instance she has taken
a vote of those vast audiences as to whether they
were in favor of woman suffrage or against it, and
in no single instance has there been a solitary vote
against the extension of the right, but affirmative
and universal action of those great assemblies demanding
that it be extended to women. And like demonstrations
of popular approval are developing in all parts of
the country, perhaps not to so marked an extent as
these which I have just stated; but it is a growing
feeling in this country that women should have this
right, and above all woman and man demanding that
she should have the opportunity to try her case before
the American people, that this right of petition should
be heeded by Congress and the joint resolution for
the submission of the matter for discussion by the
States should be passed by the necessary two-thirds
vote.
It is sometimes, too, urged against
this movement for the submission of a resolution for
a national constitutional amendment that women should
go to the States and fight it out there. But we
did not send the colored man to the States. No
other amendment touching the general national interest
is left to be fought out by individual action in the
individual States. Under the terms of the Constitution
itself the people of the United States, having some
universal common interest affected by law or by the
want of law, are invited to come to this body and
try here their question of right, or at all events
through the agency of Congress to submit that proposition
to the people at large in order that in the general
national forum it may receive discussion, and by the
action of three-fourths of the States, if favorable,
their idea may be incorporated in the fundamental law.
I will not detain the Senate further
in the discussion of this subject.
It should be borne in mind that the
proposition is to submit to men the question whether
woman shall vote. The jury will certainly not
be prejudiced in her favor as against the public good.
There can be no danger of a verdict in her favor contrary
to the evidence in the case.
We ask only for her an opportunity
to bring her suit in the great court for the amendment
of fundamental law. It is impossible for any
right mind to escape the impression of solemn responsibility
which attaches to our decision. Ridicule and
wit of whatever quality are here as much out of place
as in the debates upon the Declaration of Independence.
We are affirming or denying the right of petition which
by all law belongs as much to women as to men.
Millions of women and thousands of men in our own
country demand that she at least have the opportunity
to be heard. Hear, even if you strike.
The lamented Anthony, so long the
object of reverence, affection, and pride in this
body, among the last acts of his public life, in signing
the favorable report of this resolution, made the following
declaration:
The Constitution is wisely conservative
in the provision of its own amendment. It
is eminently proper that whenever a large number
of the people have indicated a desire for an amendment
the judgment of the amending power should be consulted.
In view of the extensive agitation of the question
of woman suffrage, and the numerous and respectable
petitions that have been presented to Congress
in its support, I unite with the committee in recommending
that the proposed amendment be submitted to the States.
H.B. Anthony.
Profoundly convinced of the justice
of woman’s demand for the suffrage, and that
the proper method of securing the right is by an amendment
of the national Constitution, I urge the adoption of
the joint resolution upon the still broader ground
so clearly and calmly stated by the great Senator
whose words I have just read. I appeal to you,
Senators, to grant this petition of woman that she
may be heard for her claim of right. How could
you reject that petition, even were there but one
faint voice beseeching your ear? How can you deny
the demand of millions who believe in suffrage for
women, and who can not be forever silenced, for they
give voice to the innate cry of the human heart that
justice be done not alone to man, but to that half
of this nation which now is free only by the grace
of the other, and that by our action to-day we indorse,
if we do not initiate, a movement which, in the development
of our race, shall guarantee liberty to all without
distinction of sex, even as our glorious Constitution
already grants the suffrage to every citizen without
distinction of color or race.
Further consideration of the resolution
postponed until January 25, 1887, when it was resumed,
as follows:
Tuesday, January 25, 1887.
Woman suffrage.
Mr. Blair. I now move that
the Senate proceed to consider the joint resolution
(S. proposing an amendment to the Constitution
of the United States extending the right of suffrage
to women.
The motion was agreed to; and the Senate, as in Committee
of the
Whole, proceeded to consider the joint resolution.
The presiding officer. The joint resolution
will be read.
The Chief Clerk read the joint resolution, as follows:
Resolved (two-thirds of each House
concurring therein), That the following article
be proposed to the Legislatures of the several States
as an amendment to the Constitution of the United States:
which, when ratified by three-fourths of the said
Legislatures, shall be valid as part of said Constitution,
namely:
Article .
Section 1. The right
of citizens of the United States to vote
shall not be denied or abridged
by the United States or by any
State on account of sex.
Se. The Congress
shall have power, by appropriate legislation,
to enforce the provisions
of this article.
Mr. Brown. Mr. President,
the joint resolution introduced by my friend, the
Senator from New Hampshire [Mr. Blair], proposing
an amendment to the Constitution of the United States,
conferring the right to vote upon the women of the
United States, is one of paramount importance, as
it involves great questions far reaching in their
tendency, which seriously affect the very pillars of
our social fabric, which involve the peace and harmony
of society, the unity of the family, and much of the
future success of our Government. The question
should therefore he met fairly and discussed with firmness,
but with moderation and forbearance.
No one contributes anything valuable
to the debate by the use of harsh terms, or by impugning
motives, or by disparaging the arguments of the opposition.
Where the prosperity of the race and the peace of society
are involved, we should, on both sides, meet fairly
the arguments of our respective opponents.
This question has been discussed a
great deal outside of Congress, sometimes in bad temper
and sometimes illogically and unprofitably, but the
advocates of the proposed amendment and the opponents
of it have each put forth, probably in their strongest
form, the reasons and arguments which are considered
by each as conclusive in favor of the cause they advocate.
I do not expect to contribute much that is new on
a subject that has been so often and so ably discussed;
but what I have to say will be in the main a reproduction
in substance of what I and others have already said
on the subject, and which I think important enough
to be placed upon the record in the argument of the
case.
In connection with my friend, the
honorable Senator from Missouri [Mr. Cockrell],
I have in a report set forth substantially the reasons
and arguments which to my mind establish the fact that
the proposed legislation would be injudicious and
unwise, and I shall not hesitate to reiterate here
such portions of what was then said as seem to me to
be important.
I believe that the Creator intended
that the sphere of the males and females of our race
should be different, and that their duties and obligations,
while they differ materially, are equally important
and equally honorable, and that each sex is equally
well qualified by natural endowments for the discharge
of the important duties which pertain to each, and
that each sex is equally competent to discharge those
duties.
We find an abundance of evidence,
both in the works of nature and in the Divine revelation,
to establish the fact that the family properly regulated
is the foundation and pillar of society, and is the
most important of any other human institution.
In the Divine economy it is provided
that the man shall be the head of the family, and
shall take upon himself the solemn obligation of providing
for and protecting the family.
Man, by reason of his physical strength,
and his other endowments and faculties, is qualified
for the discharge of those duties that require strength
and ability to combat with the sterner realities and
difficulties of life. The different classes of
outdoor labor which require physical strength and
endurance are by nature assigned to man, the head
of the family, as part of his task. He discharges
such labors as require greater physical endurance
and strength than the female sex are usually found
to possess.
It is not only his duty to provide
for and protect the family, but as a member of the
community it is also his duty to discharge the laborious
and responsible obligations which the family owe to
the State, and which obligations must be discharged
by the head of the family, until the male members
of the family have grown up to manhood and are able
to aid in the discharge of those obligations, when
it becomes their duty each in his turn to take charge
of and rear a family, for which he is responsible.
Among other duties which the head
of the family owes to the State, is military duty
in time of war, which he, when able-bodied, is able
to discharge, and which the female members of the
family are unable to discharge.
He is also under obligation to discharge
jury duty, and by himself or his representatives to
perform his part of the labor necessary to construct
and keep in order roads, bridges, streets, and all
grades of public highways. And in this progressive
age upon the male sex is devolved the duty of constructing
and operating our railroads, and the engines and other
rolling-stock with which they are operated; of building,
equipping, and launching, shipping and other water
craft of every character necessary for the transportation
of passengers and freight upon our rivers, our lakes,
and upon the high seas.
The labor in our fields, sowing, cultivating,
and reaping crops must be discharged mainly by the
male sex, as the female sex, for want of physical
strength, are generally unable to discharge these duties.
As it is the duty of the male sex to perform the obligations
to the State, to society, and to the family, already
mentioned, with numerous others that might be enumerated,
it is also their duty to aid in the government of
the State, which is simply a great aggregation of
families. Society can not be preserved nor can
the people be prosperous without good government.
The government of our country is a government of the
people, and it becomes necessary that the class of
people upon whom the responsibility rests should assemble
together and consider and discuss the great questions
of governmental policy which from time to time are
presented for their decision.
This often requires the assembling
of caucuses in the night time, as well as public assemblages
in the daytime. It is a laborious task, for which
the male sex is infinitely better fitted than the female
sex; and after proper consideration and discussion
of the measures that may divide the country from time
to time, the duty devolves upon those who are responsible
for the government, at times and places to be fixed
by law, to meet and by ballot to decide the great
questions of government upon which the prosperity
of the country depends.
These are some of the active and sterner
duties of life to which the male sex is by nature
better fitted than the female sex. If in carrying
out the policy of the State on great measures adjudged
vital such policy should lead to war, either foreign
or domestic, it would seem to follow very naturally
that those who have been responsible for the management
of the State should be the parties to take the hazards
and hardships of the struggle.
Here, again, man is better fitted
by nature for the discharge of the duty woman
is unfit for it. So much for some of the duties
imposed upon the male sex, for the discharge of which
the Creator has endowed them with proper strength
and faculties.
On the other hand, the Creator has
assigned to woman very laborious and responsible duties,
by no means less important than those imposed upon
the male sex, though entirely different in their character.
In the family she is a queen. She alone is fitted
for the discharge of the sacred trust of wife and
the endearing relation of mother.
While the man is contending with the
sterner duties of life, the whole time of the noble,
affectionate, and true woman is required in the discharge
of the delicate and difficult duties assigned her in
the family circle, in her church relations, and in
the society where her lot is cast. When the husband
returns home weary and worn in the discharge of the
difficult and laborious task assigned him, he finds
in the good wife solace and consolation, which is nowhere
else afforded. If he is despondent and distressed,
she cheers his heart with words of kindness; if he
is sick or languishing, she soothes, comforts, and
ministers to him as no one but an affectionate wife
can do. If his burdens are onerous, she divides
their weight by the exercise of her love and her sympathy.
But a still more important duty devolves
upon the mother. After having brought into existence
the offspring of the nuptial union, the children are
dependent upon the mother as they are not upon any
other human being. The trust is a most sacred,
most responsible, and most important one. To
watch over them in their infancy, and as the mind
begins to expand to train, direct, and educate it in
the paths of virtue and usefulness is the high trust
assigned to the mother. She trains the twig as
the tree should be inclined.
She molds the character. She
educates the heart as well as the intellect, and she
prepares the future man, now the boy, for honor or
dishonor. Upon the manner in which she discharges
her duty depends the fact whether he shall in future
be a useful citizen or a burden to society. She
inculcates lessons of patriotism, manliness, religion,
and virtue, fitting the man by reason of his training
to be an ornament to society, or dooming him by her
neglect to a life of dishonor and shame. Society
acts unwisely when it imposes upon her the duties
that by common consent have always been assigned to
the stronger and sterner sex, and the discharge of
which causes her to neglect those sacred and all important
duties to her children and to the society of which
they are members.
In the church, by her piety, her charity,
and her Christian purity, she not only aids society
by a proper training of her own children, but the
children of others, whom she encourages to come to
the sacred altar, are taught to walk in the paths
of rectitude, honor, and religion. In the Sunday-school
room the good woman is a princess, and she exerts
an influence which purifies and ennobles society, training
the young in the truths of religion, making the Sunday-school
the nursery of the church, and elevating society to
the higher planes of pure religion, virtue, and patriotism.
In the sick room and among the humble, the poor, and
the suffering, the good woman, like an angel of light,
cheers the hearts and revives the hopes of the poor,
the suffering, and the despondent.
It would be a vain attempt to undertake
to enumerate the refining, endearing, and ennobling
influences exercised by the true woman in her relations
to the family and to society when she occupies the
sphere assigned to her by the laws of nature and the
Divine inspiration, which are our surest guide for
the present and the future life. But how can
woman be expected to meet these heavy responsibilities,
and to discharge these delicate and most important
duties of wife, Christian, teacher, minister of mercy,
friend of the suffering, and consoler of the despondent
and needy, if we impose upon her the grosser, rougher,
and harsher duties which nature has assigned to the
male sex?
If the wife and the mother is required
to leave the sacred precincts of home, and to attempt
to do military duty when the state is in peril; or
if she is to be required to leave her home from day
to day in attendance upon the court as a juror, and
to be shut up in the jury room from night to night
with men who are strangers while a question of life
or property is being discussed; if she is to attend
political meetings, take part in political discussions,
and mingle with the male sex at political gatherings;
if she is to become an active politician; if she is
to attend political caucuses at late hours of the night;
if she is to take part in all the unsavory work that
may be deemed necessary for the triumph of her party;
and if on election day she is to leave her home and
go upon the streets electioneering for votes for the
candidates who receive her support, and mingling among
the crowds of men who gather round the polls, she
is to press her way through them to the precinct and
deposit her ballot; if she is to take part in the
corporate struggles of the city or town in which she
resides, attend to the duties of his honor, the mayor,
the councilman, or of policeman, to say nothing of
the many other like obligations which are disagreeable
even to the male sex, how is she, with all these heavy
duties of citizen, politician, and officeholder resting
upon her shoulders, to attend to the more sacred,
delicate, and refining trust to which we have already
referred, and for which she is peculiarly fitted by
nature? If she is to discharge the duties last
mentioned, how is she, in connection with them, to
discharge the more refining, elevating, and ennobling
duties of wife, mother, Christian, and friend, which
are found in the sphere where nature has placed her?
Who is to care for and train the children while she
is absent in the discharge of these masculine duties?
If it were proper to reverse the order
of nature and assign woman to the sterner duties devolved
upon the male sex, and to attempt to assign man to
the more refining, delicate, and ennobling duties of
the woman, man would be found entirely incompetent
to the discharge of the obligations which nature has
devolved upon the gentler sex, and society must be
greatly injured by the attempted change. But if
we are told that the object of this movement is not
to reverse this order of nature, but only to devolve
upon the gentler sex a portion of the more rigorous
duties imposed by nature upon the stronger sex, we
reply that society must be injured, as the woman would
not be able to discharge those duties so well, by
reason of her want of physical strength, as the male,
upon whom they are devolved, and to the extent that
the duties are to be divided, the male would be infinitely
less competent to discharge the delicate and sacred
trusts which nature has assigned to the female.
But it has been said that the present
law is unjust to woman; that she is often required
to pay tax on the property she holds without being
permitted to take part in framing or administering
the laws by which her property is governed, and that
she is taxed without representation. That is
a great mistake.
It may be very doubtful whether the
male or female sex in the present state of things
has more influence in the administration of the affairs
of the Government and the enactment of the laws by
which we are governed.
While the woman does not discharge
military duty, nor does she attend courts and serve
on juries, nor does she labor on the public streets,
bridges, or highways, nor does she engage actively
and publicly in the discussion of political affairs,
nor does she enter the crowded precincts of the ballot-box
to deposit her suffrage, still the intelligent, cultivated,
noble woman is a power behind the throne. All
her influence is in favor of morality, justice, and
fair dealing, all her efforts and her counsel are
in favor of good government, wise and wholesome regulations,
and a faithful administration of the laws. Such
a woman, by her gentleness, kindness, and Christian
bearing, impresses her views and her counsels upon
her father, her husband, her brothers, her sons, and
her other male friends who imperceptibly yield to her
influence many times without even being conscious of
it. She rules not with a rod of iron, but with
the queenly scepter; she binds not with hooks of steel
but with silken cords; she governs not by physical
efforts, but by moral suasion and feminine purity and
delicacy. Her dominion is one of love, not of
arbitrary power.
We are satisfied, therefore, that
the pure, cultivated, and pious ladies of this country
now exercise a very powerful, but quiet, imperceptible
influence in popular affairs, much greater than they
can ever again exercise if female suffrage should be
enacted and they should be compelled actively to take
part in the affairs of state and the corruptions
of party politics.
It would be a gratification, and we
are always glad to see the ladies gratified, to many
who have espoused the cause of woman suffrage if they
could take active part in political affairs, and go
to the polls and cast their votes alongside the male
sex; but while this would be a gratification to a
large number of very worthy and excellent ladies who
take a different view of the question from that which
we entertain, we feel that it would be a great cruelty
to a much larger number of the cultivated, refined,
delicate, and lovely women of this country who seek
no such distinction, who would enjoy no such privilege,
who would with woman-like delicacy shrink from the
discharge of any such obligation, and who would sincerely
regret that, what they consider the folly of the state,
had imposed upon them any such unpleasant duties.
But should female suffrage be once
established it would become an imperative necessity
that the very large class, indeed much the largest
class, of the women of this country of the character
last described should yield, contrary to their inclinations
and wishes, to the necessity which would compel them
to engage in political strife. We apprehend no
one who has properly considered this question will
doubt if female suffrage should be established that
the more ignorant and less refined portions of the
female population of this country, to say nothing
of the baser class of females, laying aside feminine
delicacy and disregarding the sacred duties devolving
upon them, to which we have already referred, would
rush to the polls and take pleasure in the crowded
association which the situation would compel, of the
two sexes in political meetings, and at the ballot-box.
If all the baser and more ignorant
portion of the female sex crowd to the polls and deposit
their suffrage this compels the very large class of
intelligent, virtuous, and refined females, including
wives and mothers, who have much more important duties
to perform, to leave their sacred labors at home,
relinquishing for a time the God-given important trust
which has been placed in their hands, to go contrary
to their wishes to the polls and vote, to counteract
the suffrage of the less worthy class of our female
population. If they fail to do this the best
interests of the country must suffer by a preponderance
of ignorance and vice at the polls.
It is now a problem which perplexes
the brain of the ablest statesmen to determine how
we will best preserve our republican system as against
the demoralizing influence of the large class of our
present citizens and voters who by reason of their
illiteracy are unable to read or write the ballot
they cast.
Certainly no statesman who has carefully
observed the situation would desire to add very largely
to this burden of ignorance. But who does not
apprehend the fact if universal female suffrage should
be established that we will, especially in the Southern
States, add a very large number to the voting population
whose ignorance utterly disqualifies them for discharging
the trust. If our colored population who were
so recently slaves that even the males who are voters
have had but little opportunity to educate themselves
or to be educated, whose ignorance is now exciting
the liveliest interest of our statesmen, are causes
of serious apprehension, what is to be said in favor
of adding to the voting population all the females
of that race, who, on account of the situation in
which they have been placed, have had much less opportunity
to be educated than even the males of their own race.
We do not say it is their fault that
they are not educated, but the fact is undeniable
that they are grossly ignorant, with very few exceptions,
and probably not one in a hundred of them could read
and write the ballot that they would be authorized
to cast. What says the statesman to the propriety
of adding this immense mass of ignorance to the voting
population of the Union in its present condition?
It may be said that their votes could
be offset by the ballots of the educated and refined
ladies of the white race in the same section; but
who does not know that the ignorant female voters would
be at the polls en masse, while the refined
and educated, shrinking from public contact on such
occasions, would remain at home and attend to their
domestic and other important duties, leaving the country
too often to the control of those who could afford
under the circumstances to take part in the strifes
of politics, and to come in contact with the unpleasant
surroundings before they could reach the polls.
Are we ready to expose the country to the demoralization,
and our institutions to the strain, which would be
placed upon them for the gratification of a minority
of the virtuous and good of our female population
at the expense of the mortification of a very large
majority of the same sex?
It has been frequently urged with
great earnestness by those who advocate woman suffrage
that the ballot is necessary to the women to enable
them to protect themselves in securing occupations,
and to enable them to realize the same compensation
for the like labor which is received by men.
This argument is plausible, but upon a closer examination
it will be found to possess but little real force.
The price of labor is and must continue to be governed
by the law of supply and demand, and the person who
has the most physical strength to labor, and the most
pursuits requiring such strength open for employment,
will always command the higher prices.
Ladies make excellent teachers in
public schools; many of them are every way the equals
of their male competitors, and still they secure less
wages than males. The reason is obvious.
The number of ladies who offer themselves as teachers
is much larger than the number of males who are willing
to teach. The larger number of females offer to
teach because other occupations are not open to them.
The smaller number of males offer to teach because
other more profitable occupations are open to most
males who are competent to teach. The result is
that the competition for positions of teachers to
be filled by ladies is so great as to reduce the price:
but as males can not be employed at that price, and
are necessary in certain places in the schools, those
seeking their services have to pay a higher rate for
them.
Persons having a larger number of
places open to them with fewer competitors command
higher wages than those who have a smaller number
of places open to them with more competitors.
This is the law of society. It is the law of
supply and demand, which can not be changed by legislation.
Then it follows that the ballot can not enable those
who have to compete with the larger number to command
the same prices as those who compete with the smaller
number in the labor market. As the Legislature
has no power to regulate in practice that of which
the advocates of woman suffrage complain, the ballot
in the hands of females could not aid its regulation.
The ballot can not impart to the female
physical strength which she does not possess, nor
can it open to her pursuits which she does not have
physical ability to engage in; and as long as she lacks
the physical strength to compete with men in the different
departments of labor, there will be more competition
in her department, and she must necessarily receive
less wages.
But it is claimed again, that females
should have the ballot as a protection against the
tyranny of bad husbands. This is also delusive.
If the husband is brutal, arbitrary, or tyrannical,
and tyrannizes over her at home, the ballot in her
hands would be no protection against such injustice,
but the husband who compelled her to conform to his
wishes in other respects would also compel her to use
the ballot, if she possessed it, as he might please
to dictate. The ballot would therefore be of
no assistance to the wife in such case, nor could
it heal family strifes or dissensions. On the
contrary, one of the gravest objections to placing
the ballot in the hands of the female sex is that
it would promote unhappiness and dissensions in the
family circle. There should be unity and harmony
in the family.
At present the man represents the
family in meeting the demands of the law and of society
upon the family. So far as the rougher, coarser
duties are concerned, the man represents the family,
and the individuality of the woman is not brought
into prominence; but when the ballot is placed in
the hands of woman her individuality is enlarged,
and she is expected to answer for herself the demands
of the law and of society on her individual account,
and not as the weaker member of the family to answer
by her husband. This naturally draws her out
from the dignified and cultivated refinement of her
womanly position, and brings her into a closer contact
with the rougher elements of society, which tends
to destroy that higher reverence and respect which
her refinement and dignity in the relation of wife
and mother have always inspired in those who approached
her in her honorable and useful retirement.
When she becomes a voter she will
be more or less of a politician, and will form political
alliances or unite with political parties which will
frequently be antagonistic to those to which her husband
belongs. This will introduce into the family circle
new elements of disagreement and discord which will
frequently end in unhappy divisions, if not in separation
or divorce. This must frequently occur when she
becomes an active politician, identified with a party
which is distasteful to her husband. On the other
hand, if she unites with her husband in party associations
and votes with him on all occasions so as not to disturb
the harmony and happiness of the family, then the
ballot is of no service as it simply duplicates the
vote of the male on each side of the question and
leaves the result the same.
Again, if the family is the unit of
society, and the state is composed of an aggregation
of families, then it is important to society that
there be as many happy families as possible, and it
becomes the duty of man and woman alike to unite in
the holy relations of matrimony.
As this is the only legal and proper
mode of rendering obedience to the early command to
multiply and replenish the earth, whatever tends to
discourage the holy relation of matrimony is in disobedience
of this command, and any change which encourages such
disobedience is violative of the Divine law, and can
not result in advantage to the state. Before
forming this relation it is the duty of young men who
have to take upon themselves the responsibilities of
providing for and protecting the family to select
some profession or pursuit that is most congenial
to their tastes, and in which they will be most likely
to be successful; but this can not be permitted to
the young ladies, or if permitted it can not be practically
carried out after matrimony.
As it might frequently happen that
the young man had selected one profession or pursuit,
and the young lady another, the result would be that
after marriage she must drop the profession or pursuit
of her choice, and employ herself in the sacred duties
of wife and mother at home, and in rearing, educating,
and elevating the family, while the husband pursues
the profession of his choice.
It may be said, however, that there
is a class of young ladies who do not choose to marry,
and who select professions or avocations and follow
them for a livelihood. This is true, but this
class, compared with the number who unite in matrimony
with the husbands of their choice, is comparatively
very small, and it is the duty of society to encourage
the increase of marriages rather than of celibacy.
If the larger number of females select pursuits or
professions which require them to decline marriage,
society to that extent is deprived of the advantage
resulting from the increase of population by marriage.
It is said by those who have examined
the question closely that the largest number of divorces
is now found in the communities where the advocates
of female suffrage are most numerous, and where the
individuality of woman as related to her husband, which
such a doctrine inculcates, is increased to the greatest
extent.
If this be true, it is a strong plea
in the interests of the family and of society against
granting the petition of the advocates of woman suffrage.
After all, this is a local question,
which properly belongs to the different States of
the Union, each acting for itself, and to the Territories
of the Union, when not acting in conflict with the
laws of the United States.
The fact that a State adopts the rule
of female suffrage neither increases nor diminishes
its power in the Union, as the number of Representatives
in Congress to which each State is entitled and the
number of members in the electoral college appointed
by each is determined by its aggregate population
and not by the proportion of its voting population,
so long as no race or class as defined by the Constitution
is excluded from the exercise of the right of suffrage.
Now, Mr. President, I shall make no
apology for adding to what I have said some extracts
from an able and well-written volume, entitled “Letters
from the Chimney Corner,” written by a highly
cultivated lady of Chicago. This gifted lady
has discussed the question with so much clearness
and force that I can make no mistake by substituting
some of the thoughts taken from her book for anything
I might add on this question. While discussing
the relations of the sexes, and showing that neither
sex is of itself a whole, a unit, and that each requires
to be supplemented by the other before its true structural
integrity can be achieved, she adds:
Now, everywhere throughout nature,
to the male and female ideal, certain distinct powers
and properties belong. The lines of demarkation
are not always clear, not always straight lines:
they are frequently wavering, shadowy, and difficult
to follow, yet on the whole whatever physical strength,
personal aggressiveness, the intellectual scope and
vigor which manage vast material enterprises are emphasized,
there the masculine ideal is present. On the other
hand, wherever refinement, tenderness, delicacy, sprightliness,
spiritual acumen, and force, are to the fore, there
the feminine ideal is represented, and these terms
will be found nearly enough for all practical purposes
to represent the differing endowments of actual men
and women. Different powers suggest different
activities, and under the division of labor here indicated
the control of the state, legislation, the power of
the ballot, would seem to fall to the share of man.
Nor does this decision carry with it any injustice,
any robbery of just or natural right to woman.
In her hands is placed a moral and
spiritual power far greater than the power of the
ballot. In her married or reproductive state the
forming and shaping of human souls in their most plastic
period is her destiny. Nor do her labors or her
responsibilities end with infancy or childhood.
Throughout his entire course, from the cradle to the
grave, man is ever under the moral and spiritual influence
and control of woman. With this power goes a
tremendous responsibility for its true management
and use. If woman shall ever rise to the full
height of her power and privileges in this direction,
she will have enough of the world’s work upon
her hands without attempting legislation.
It may be argued that the possession
of civil power confers dignity, and is of itself a
re-enforcement of whatever natural power an individual
may possess; but the dignity of womanhood, when it
is fully understood and appreciated, needs no such
re-enforcement, nor are the peculiar needs of woman
such as the law can reach.
Whenever laws are needed for the protection
of her legal status and rights, there has been found
to be little difficulty in obtaining them by means
of the votes of men; but the deeper and more vital
needs of woman and of society are those which are
outside altogether of the pale of the law, and which
can only be reached by the moral forces lodged in
the hands of woman herself, acting in an enlarged and
general capacity.
For instance, whenever a man or woman
has been wronged in marriage the law may indeed step
in with a divorce, but does that divorce give back
to either party the dream of love, the happy home,
the prattle of children, and the sweet outlook for
future years which were destroyed by that wrong?
It is not a legal power which is needed in this case;
it is a moral power which shall prevent the wrong,
or, if committed, shall induce penitence, forgiveness,
a purer life, and the healing of the wound.
This power has been lodged by the
Creator in the hands of woman herself, and if she
has not been rightly trained to use it there is no
redress for her at the hands of the law. The law
alone can never compel men to respect the chastity
of woman. They must first recognize its value
in themselves by living up to the high level of their
duties as maidens, wives, and mothers; they must impress
men with the beauty and sacredness of purity, and
then whatever laws are necessary and available for
its protection will be easily obtained, with a certainty,
also, that they can be enforced, because the moral
sentiments of men will be enlisted in their support.
Privileges bring responsibilities,
and before women clamor for more work to do, it were
better that they should attend more thoughtfully to
the duties which lie all about them, in the home and
social circle. Until society is cleansed of the
moral foulness which infests it, which, as we have
seen, lies beyond the reach of civil law, women have
no call to go forth into wider fields, claiming to
be therein the rightful and natural purifiers.
Let them first make the home sweet and pure, and the
streams which flow therefrom will sweeten and purify
all the rest.
As between the power of the ballot
and this moral force exerted by women there can not
be an instant’s doubt as to the choice.
In natural refinement and elevation of character,
the ideal woman stands a step above the ideal man.
If she descends from this fortunate position to take
part in the coarse scramble for material power, what
chance will she have as against man’s aggressive
forces; and what can she possibly gain that she can
not win more directly, more effectually, and with
far more dignity and glory to herself by the exercise
of her own womanly prerogatives? She has, under
God, the formation and rearing of men in her own hands.
If they do not turn out in the end
to be men who respect woman, who will protect and
defend her in the exercise of every one of her God-given
rights, it is because she has failed in her duty toward
them; has not been taught to comprehend her own power
and to use it to its best ends. For women to
seek to control men by the power of suffrage is like
David essaying the armor of Saul. What woman needs
is her own sheepskin sling and her few smooth pebbles
from the bed of the brook, and then let her go forth
in the name of the Lord God of Hosts, and a victory
as sure and decisive as that of the shepherd of Israel
awaits her.
Again, in chapter 4, entitled “The
Power of the Home,” the author says, in substance:
It is, perhaps, of minor consequence that women should
have felt themselves emancipated from buttons and bread
making; but that they should have learned to look in
the least degree slightingly upon the great duties
of women as lovers of husbands, as lovers of children,
as the fountain and source of what is highest and
purest and holiest, and not less of what is homely
and comfortable and satisfying in the home, is a serious
misfortune. Women can hardly be said to have
lost, perhaps what they have so rarely in any age
generally attained, that dignity which knows how to
command, united with a sweetness which seems all the
while to be complying, the power, supple and strong,
which rescues the character of the ideal woman from
the charge of weakness, and at the same time exhibits
its utmost of grace and fascination.
But that of late years the gift has
not been cultivated, has not, in fact, thrown out
such natural off-shoots as gave grace and glory to
some earlier social epochs, must be evident, it would
seem, to any thoughtful observer.
If, instead of trying to grasp more
material power, women would pursue those studies and
investigations which tend to make them familiar with
what science teaches concerning the influence of the
mother and the home upon the child; of how completely
the Creator in giving the genesis of the human race
into the hands of woman has made her not only capable
of, but responsible for, the regeneration of the world;
if they would reflect that nature by making man the
bond slave of his passions has put the lever into
the hands of woman by which she can control him, and
if they would learn to use these powers, not as bad
women do for vile and selfish ends, but as the mothers
of the race ought, for pure, holy, and redemptive
purposes, then would the sphere of women be enlarged
to some purpose; the atmosphere of the home would
be purified and vitalized, and the work of redeeming
man from his vices would be hopefully begun.
The following thoughts are also from
the same source: Is this emancipation of woman,
if that is the proper phrase for it, a final end,
or only the means to an end? Are women to be as
the outcome of it emancipated from their world-old
sphere of marriage and motherhood, and control of
the moral and spiritual destinies of the race, or are
they to be emancipated, in order to the proper fulfillment
of these functions? It would seem that most of
the advanced women of the day would answer the first
of these questions affirmatively. Women, I think
it has been authoritatively stated, are to be emancipated
in order that they may become fully developed human
beings, something broader and stronger, something
higher and finer, more delicate, more aesthetic, more
generally rarefied and sublimated than the old-fashioned
type of womanhood, the wife and the mother.
And the result of the woman movement
seems more or less in a line thus far with this theoretic
aim. Of advanced women a less proportion are
inclined to marry than of the old-fashioned type; of
those who do marry a great proportion are restless
in marriage bonds or seek release from them, while
of those who do remain in married life many bear no
children, and few, indeed, become mothers of large
families. The woman’s vitality is concentrated
in the brain and fructifies more in intellectual than
in physical forms.
Now, women who do not marry are one
of two things; either they belong to a class which
we shrink from naming or they become old maids.
An old maid may be in herself a very
useful and commendable person and a valuable member
of society; many are all this. But she has still
this sad drawback, she can not perpetuate herself;
and since all history and observation go to prove
that the great final end of creation, whatever it
may be, can only be achieved through the perpetuity
and increasing progress of the race, it follows that
unmarried woman is not the most necessary, the indispensable
type of woman. If there were no other class of
females left upon the earth but the women who do not
bear children, then the world would be a failure,
creation would be nonplussed.
If, then, the movement for the emancipation
of woman has for its final end the making of never
so fine a quality, never so sublimated a sort of non-child-bearing
women, it is an absurdity upon the face of it.
From the standpoint of the Chimney
Corner it appears that too many even of the most gifted
and liberal-minded of the leaders in the woman’s
rights movement have not yet discovered this flaw in
their logic. They seek to individualize women,
not seeing, apparently, that individualized women,
old maids, and individualized men, old bachelors,
though they may be useful in certain minor ways, are,
after all, to speak with the relentlessness of science,
fragmentary and abortive, so far as the great scheme
of the universe is concerned, and often become, in
addition, seriously detrimental to the right progress
of society. The man and woman united in marriage
form the unit of the race; they alone rightly wield
the self-perpetuating power upon which all human progress
depends; without which the race itself must perish,
the universe become null.
Reaching this point of the argument,
it becomes evident that while the development of the
individual man or individual woman is no doubt of
great importance, since, as Margaret Fuller has justly
said, “there must be units before there can
be union,” it is chiefly so because of their
relation to each other. Their character should
be developed with a view to their future union with
each other, and not to be independent of it.
When the leaders of the woman’s movement fully
realize this, and shape their course accordingly, they
will have made a great advance both in the value of
their work and its claim upon public sympathy.
Moreover, they will have reached a point from which
it will be possible for them to investigate reform
and idealize the relations existing between men and
women.
Mr. President, it is no part of my
purpose in any manner whatever to speak disrespectfully
of the large number of intelligent ladies, sometimes
called strong-minded, who are constantly going before
the public, agitating this question of female suffrage.
While some of them may, as is frequently charged,
be courting notoriety, I have no doubt they are generally
earnestly engaged in a work which, in their opinion,
would better their condition and would do no injury
to society.
In all this, however, I believe they are mistaken.
I think the mental and physical structure
of the sexes, of itself, sufficiently demonstrates
the fact that the sterner, more laborious, and more
difficult duties of society are to be performed by
the male sex; while the more delicate duties of life,
which require less physical strength, and the proper
training of youth, with the proper discharge of domestic
duties, belong to the female sex. Nature has so
arranged it that the male sex can not attend properly
to the duties assigned by the law of nature to the
female sex, and that the female sex can not discharge
the more rigorous duties required of the male sex.
This movement is an attempt to reverse
the very laws of our being, and to drag woman into
an arena for which she is not suited, and to devolve
upon her onerous duties which the Creator never intended
that she should perform.
While the husband discharges the laborious
and fatiguing duties of important official positions,
and conducts political campaigns, and discharges the
duties connected with the ballot-box, or while he bears
arms in time of war, or discharges executive or judicial
duties, or the duties of juryman, requiring close
confinement and many times great mental fatigue; or
while the husband in a different sphere of life discharges
the laborious duties of the plantation, the workshop,
or the machine shop, it devolves upon the wife to attend
to the duties connected with home life, to care for
infant children, and to train carefully and properly
those who in the youthful period are further advanced
towards maturity.
The woman with the infant at the breast
is in no condition to plow on the farm, labor hard
in the workshop, discharge the duties of a juryman,
conduct causes as an advocate in court, preside in
important cases as a judge, command armies as a general,
or bear arms as a private. These duties, and
others of like character, belong to the male sex;
while the more important duties of home, to which I
have already referred, devolve upon the female sex.
We can neither reverse the physical nor the moral
laws of our nature, and as this movement is an attempt
to reverse these laws, and to devolve upon the female
sex important and laborious duties for which they are
not by nature physically competent, I am not prepared
to support this bill.
My opinion is that a very large majority
of the American people, yes, a large majority of the
female sex, oppose it, and that they act wisely in
doing so. I therefore protest against its passage.
Mr. Dolph. Mr. President,
I shall not detain the Senate long. I do not
feel satisfied when a measure so important to the people
of this country and to humanity is about to be submitted
to a vote of the Senate to remain wholly silent.
The pending question is upon the adoption
of a joint resolution in the usual form submitting
to the legislatures of the several States of the Union
for their ratification an additional article as an
amendment to the Federal Constitution, which is as
follows:
Article ,
Section I. The right
of citizens of the United States to vote
shall not be denied or abridged
by the United States or by any
State on account of sex.
Sec. 2. The Congress
shall have power, by appropriate legislation,
to enforce the provisions
of this article.
Fortunately for the perpetuity of
our institutions and the prosperity of the people,
the Federal Constitution contains a provision for its
own amendment. The framers of that instrument
foresaw that time and experience, the growth of the
country and the consequent expansion of the Government,
would develop the necessity for changes in it, and
they therefore wisely provided in Article V as follows:
The Congress, whenever two-thirds of
both Houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose
amendments to this Constitution, or, on the application
of the Legislatures of two-thirds of the several States,
shall call a convention for proposing amendments, which
in either case shall be valid to all intents and
purposes, as part of this Constitution, when ratified
by the Legislatures of three-fourths of the several
States, or by conventions in three-fourths thereof,
as the one or the other mode of ratification may
be proposed by the Congress.
Under this provision, at the first
session of the First Congress, ten amendments were
submitted to the Legislatures of the several States,
in due time ratified by the constitutional number of
States, and became a part of the Constitution.
Since then there have been added to the Constitution
by the same process five different articles.
To secure an amendment to the Constitution
under this article requires the concurrent action
of two-thirds of both branches of Congress and the
affirmative action of three-fourths of the States.
Of course Congress can refuse to submit a proposed
amendment to the Legislatures of the several States,
no matter how general the demand for such submission
may be, but I am inclined to believe with the senior
Senator from New Hampshire [Mr. Blair], in the
proposition submitted by him in a speech he made early
in the present session upon the pending resolution,
that the question as to whether this resolution shall
be submitted to the Legislatures of the several States
for ratification does not involve the right or policy
of the proposed amendment. I am also inclined
to believe with him that should the demand by the
people for the submission by Congress to the Legislatures
of the several States of a proposed amendment become
general it would he the duty of the Congress to submit
such amendment irrespective of the individual views
of the members of Congress, and thus give the people
through their Legislative Assemblies power to pass
upon the question as to whether or not the Constitution
should be amended. At all events, for myself,
I should not hesitate to vote to submit for ratification
by the Legislatures of the several States an amendment
to the Constitution although opposed to it if I thought
the demand for it justified such a course.
But I shall vote for the pending joint
resolution because I am in favor of the proposed amendment.
I have been for many years convinced that the demand
made by women for the right of suffrage is just, and
that of all the distinctions which have been made between
citizens in the laws which confer or regulate suffrage
the distinction of sex is the least defensible.
I am not going to discuss the question
at length at this time. The arguments for and
against woman suffrage have been often stated in this
Chamber, and are pretty fully set forth in the majority
and minority reports of the Senate committee upon
the pending joint resolution. The arguments in
its favor were fully stated by the senior Senator
from New Hampshire in his able speech upon the question
before alluded to, and now the objections to it have
been forcibly and elaborately presented by the senior
Senator from Georgia [Mr. Brown]. I could
not expect by anything I could say to change a single
vote in this body, and the public is already fully
informed upon the question, as the arguments in favor
of woman suffrage have been voiced in every hamlet
in the land with great ability. No question in
this country has been more ably discussed than this
has been by the women themselves.
I do not think a single objection
which is made to woman suffrage is tenable. No
one will contend but that women have sufficient capacity
to vote intelligently.
Sir, sacred and profane history is
full of the records of great deeds by women.
They have ruled kingdoms, and, my friend from Georgia
to the contrary notwithstanding, they have commanded
armies. They have excelled in statecraft, they
have shone in literature, and, rising superior to
their environments and breaking the shackles with which
custom and tyranny have bound them, they have stood
side by side with men in the fields of the arts and
the sciences.
If it were a fact that woman is intellectually
inferior to man, which I do not admit, still that
would be no reason why she should not be permitted
to participate in the formation and control of the
Government to which she owes allegiance. If we
are to have as a test for the exercise of the right
of suffrage a qualification based upon intelligence,
let it be applied to women and to men alike. If
it be admitted that suffrage is a right, that is the
end of controversy; there can no longer be any argument
made against woman suffrage, because, if it is her
right, then, if there were but one poor woman in all
the United States demanding the right of suffrage,
it would be tyranny to refuse the demand.
But our friends say that suffrage
is not a right; that it is a matter of grace only;
that it is a privilege which is conferred upon or
withheld from individual members of society by society
at pleasure. Society as here used means man’s
government, and the proposition assumes the fact that
men have a right to institute and control governments
for themselves and for women. I admit that in
the governments of the world, past and present, men
as a rule have assumed to be the ruling classes; that
they have instituted governments from participation
in which they have excluded women; that they have made
laws for themselves and for women, and as a rule have
themselves administered them; but that the provisions
conferring or regulating suffrage in the constitutions
and laws of governments so constituted determined
the question of the right of suffrage can not be maintained.
Let us suppose, if we can, a community
separated from all other communities, having no organized
government, owing no allegiance to any existing governments,
without any knowledge of the character of present
or past governments, so that when they come to form
a government for themselves they can do so free from
the bias or prejudice of custom or education, composed
of an equal number of men and women, having equal
property rights to be defined and to be protected
by law. When such community came to institute
a government and it would have an undoubted
right to institute a government for itself, and the
instinct of self-preservation would soon lead them
to do so will my friend from Georgia tell
me by what right, human or divine, the male portion
of that community could exclude the female portion,
although equal in number and having equal property
rights with the men, from participation in the formation
of such government and in the enactment of laws for
the government of the community? I understand
the Senator, if he should answer, would say that he
believes the Author of our existence, the Ruler of
the universe, has given different spheres to man and
woman. Admit that; and still neither in nature
nor in the revealed will of God do I find anything
to lead me to believe that the Creator did not intend
that a woman should exercise the right of suffrage.
During the consideration by this body
at the last session of the bill to admit Washington
Territory into the Union, referring to the fact that
in that Territory woman had been enfranchised, I briefly
submitted my views on this subject, which I ask the
Secretary to read, so that it may be incorporated
in my remarks.
The Secretary read as follows:
Mr. President, there is another matter
which I consider pertinent to this discussion,
and of too much importance to be left entirely unnoticed
on this occasion. It is something new in our political
history. It is full of hope for the women
of this country and of the world, and full of
promise for the future of republican institutions.
I refer to the fact that in Washington Territory the
right of suffrage has been extended to women of
proper age, and that the delegates to the constitutional
convention to be held under the provisions of
this bill, should it become a law, will, under
existing laws of the Territory, be elected by its citizens
without distinction as to sex, and the constitution
to be submitted to the people will be passed upon
in like manner.
I do not intend to discuss the question
of woman suffrage upon this occasion, and I refer
to it mainly for the purpose of directing attention
to the advanced position which the people of this
Territory have taken upon this question. I do
not believe the proposition so often asserted
that suffrage is a political privilege only, and
not a natural right. It is regulated by the
constitution and laws of a State I grant, but it needs
no argument, it appears to me, to show that a
constitution and laws adopted and enacted by a
fragment of the whole body of the people, but
binding alike on all, is a usurpation of the powers
of government.
Government is but organized society.
Whatever its form, it has its origin in the necessities
of mankind and is indispensable for the maintenance
of civilized society. It is essential to every
government that it should represent the supreme
power of the State, and be capable of subjecting
the will of its individual citizens to its authority.
Such a government can only derive its just powers
from the consent of the governed, and can be established
only under a fundamental law which is self-imposed.
Every citizen of suitable age and discretion who
is to be subject to such a government has, in
my judgment, a natural right to participate in
its formation. It is a significant fact that should
Congress pass this bill and authorize the people
of Washington Territory to frame a State constitution
and organize a State government, the fundamental
law of the State will be made by all the citizens
of the State to be subject to it, and not by one-half
of them. And we shall witness the spectacle
of a State government founded in accordance with
the principles of equality, and have a State at
last with a truly republican form of government.
The fathers of the Republic enunciated
the doctrine “that all men are created equal;
that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness.” It is
strange that any one in this enlightened age should
be found to contend that this declaration is true
only of men, and that a man is endowed by his Creator
with inalienable rights not possessed by a woman.
The lamented Lincoln immortalized the expression
that ours is a Government “of the people,
by the people, and for the people,” and yet it
is far from that. There can be no government
by the people where one-half of them are allowed
no voice in its organization and control. I regard
the struggle going on in this country and elsewhere
for the enfranchisement of women as but a continuation
of the great struggle for human liberty which
has, from the earliest dawn of authentic history,
convulsed nations, rent kingdoms, and drenched battlefields
with human blood. I look upon the victories which
have been achieved in the cause of woman’s
enfranchisement in Washington Territory and elsewhere
as the crowning victories of all which have been
won in the long-continued, still-continuing contest
between liberty and oppression, and as destined to
exert a greater influence upon the human race
than any achieved upon the battlefield in ancient
or modern times.
Mr. Dolph. Mr. President,
the movement for woman suffrage has passed the stage
of ridicule. The pending joint resolution may
not pass during this Congress, but the time is not
far distant when in every State of the Union and in
every Territory women will be admitted to an equal
voice in the government, and that will be done whether
the Federal Constitution is amended or not. The
first convention demanding suffrage for women was
held at Seneca Falls, in the State of New York, in
1848. To-day in three of the Territories of the
Union women enjoy full suffrage, in a large number
of States and Territories they are entitled to vote
at school meetings, and in all the States and Territories
there is a growing sentiment in favor of this measure
which will soon compel respectful consideration by
the law-making power.
No measure in this country involving
such radical changes in our institutions and fraught
with so great consequences to this country and to
humanity has made such progress as the movement for
woman suffrage. Denunciation will not much longer
answer for arguments by the opponents of this measure.
The portrayal of the evils to flow from woman suffrage
such as we have heard pictured to-day by the Senator
from Georgia, the loss of harmony between husband and
wife, and the consequent instability of the marriage
relation, the neglect of husband and children by wives
and mothers for the performance of their political
duties, in short the incapacitating of women for wives
and mothers and companions, will not much longer serve
to frighten the timid. Proof is better than theory.
The experiment has been tried and the predicted evils
to flow from it have not followed. On the contrary,
if we can believe the almost universal testimony, everywhere
where it has been tried it has been followed by the
most beneficial results.
In Washington Territory, since woman
was enfranchised, there have been two elections.
At the first there were 8,368 votes cast by women out
of a total vote of 34,000 and over. At the second
election, which was held in November last, out of
48,000 votes cast in the Territory, 12,000 votes were
cast by women. The opponents of female suffrage
are silenced there. The Territorial conventions
of both parties have resolved in favor of woman suffrage,
and there is not a proposition, so far as I know in
all that Territory, to repeal the law conferring suffrage
upon woman.
I desire also to inform my friend
from Georgia that since women were enfranchised in
Washington Territory nature has continued in her wonted
courses. The sun rises and sets; there is seed-time
and harvest; seasons come and go. The population
has increased with the usual regularity and rapidity.
Marriages have been quite as frequent, and divorces
have been no more so. Women have not lost their
influence for good upon society, but men have been
elevated and refined. If we are to believe the
testimony which comes from lawyers, physicians, ministers
of the gospel, merchants, mechanics, farmers, and laboring
men, the united testimony of the entire people of the
Territory, the results of woman suffrage there have
been all that could be desired by its friends.
Some of the results in that Territory have been seen
in making the polls quiet and orderly, in awaking a
new interest in educational questions and in questions
of moral reform, in securing the passage of beneficial
laws and the proper enforcement of them; and, as I
have said before, in elevating men, and that without
injury to the women.
Mr. Eustis. Will the Senator
allow me to ask him a question?
Mr. Dolph. The Senator can
ask me a question, if he chooses.
Mr. Eustis. If it be right
and proper to confer the right of suffrage on women,
I ask the Senator whether he does not think that women
ought to be required to serve on juries?
Mr. Dolph. I can answer
that very readily. It does not necessarily follow
that because a woman is permitted to vote and thus
have a voice in making the laws by which she is to
be governed and by which her property rights are to
be determined, she must perform such duty as service
upon a jury. But I will inform the Senator that
in Washington Territory she does serve upon juries,
and with great satisfaction to the judges of the courts
and to all parties who desire to see an honest and
efficient administration of law.
Mr. Eustis. I was aware
of the fact that women are required to serve on juries
in Washington Territory because they are allowed to
vote. I understand that under all State laws
those duties are considered correlative. Now,
I ask the Senator whether he thinks it is a decent
spectacle to take a mother away from her nursing infant
and lock her up all night to sit on a jury?
Mr. Dolph. I intended to
say before I reached this point of being interrogated
that I not only do not believe that there is a single
argument against woman suffrage that is tenable, and
I may be prejudiced in the matter, but that there
is not a single one that is really worthy of any serious
consideration. The Senator from Louisiana is
a lawyer, and he knows very well that under such circumstances,
a mother with a nursing infant, that fact being made
known to the court would be excused; that would be
a sufficient excuse. He knows himself, and he
has seen it done a hundred times, that for trivial
excuses compared to that men have been excused from
service on a jury.
Mr. Eustis. I will ask the
Senator whether he knows that under the laws of Washington
Territory that is a legal excuse from serving on a
jury?
Mr. Dolph. I am not prepared
to state that it is; but there is no question in the
world but that any judge, that fact being made known,
would excuse a woman from attendance upon a jury.
No special authority would be required. I will
state further that I have not learned that there has
been any serious objection on the part of any woman
summoned for jury service in that Territory to perform
that duty. I have not learned that it has worked
to the disadvantage of any family in the Territory;
but I do know that the judges of the courts have taken
especial pains to commend the women who have been called
to serve upon juries for the manner in which they
have discharged their duty.
I wish to say further that there is
no connection whatever between jury service and the
right of suffrage. The question as to who shall
perform jury service, the question as to who shall
perform military service, the question as to who shall
perform civil official duty in a government is certainly
a matter to be regulated by the community itself;
but the question of the right to participate in the
formation of a government which controls the life
and the property and the destinies of its citizens,
I contend is a question of right that goes back of
these mere regulations for the protection of property
and the punishment of offenses under the laws.
It is a matter of right which it is tyranny to refuse
to any citizen demanding it.
Now, Mr. President, I shall close
by saying: God speed the day when not only in
all the States of the Union and in all the Territories,
but everywhere, woman shall stand before the law freed
from the last shackle which has been riveted upon
her by tyranny and the last disability which has been
imposed upon her by ignorance, not only in respect
to the right of suffrage, but in every other respect
the peer and equal of her brother, man.
Mr. Vest. Mr. President, any
measure of legislation which affects popular government
based on the will of the people as expressed through
their suffrage is not only important but vitally so.
If this Government, which is based on the intelligence
of the people, shall ever be destroyed it will be
by injudicious, immature, or corrupt suffrage.
If the ship of state launched by our fathers shall
ever be destroyed, it will be by striking the rock
of universal, unprepared suffrage. Suffrage once
given can never be taken away. Legislatures and
conventions may do everything else; they never can
do that. When any particular class or portion
of the community is once invested with this privilege
it is used, accomplished, and eternal.
The Senator who last spoke on this
question refers to the successful experiment in regard
to woman-suffrage in the Territories of Wyoming and
Washington. Mr. President, it is not upon the
plains of the sparsely-settled Territories of the
West that woman suffrage can be tested. Suffrage
in the rural districts and sparsely settled regions
of this country must from the very nature of things
remain pure when corrupt everywhere else. The
danger of corrupt suffrage is in the cities, and those
masses of population to which civilization tends everywhere
in all history. Whilst the country has been pure
and patriotic, the cities have been the first cancers
to appear upon the body-politic in all ages of the
world.
Wyoming Territory! Washington
Territory! Where are their large cities?
Where are the localities in these Territories where
the strain upon popular government must come?
The Senator from New Hampshire, who is so conspicuous
in this movement, appalled the country some months
since by his ghastly array of illiteracy in the Southern
States. He proposes that $77,000,000 of the people’s
money be taken in order to strike down the great foe
to republican government, illiteracy. How was
that illiteracy brought upon this country? It
was by giving the suffrage to unprepared voters.
It is not my purpose to go back into the past and
make any partisan or sectional appeal, but it is a
fact known to every intelligent man that in one single
act the right of suffrage was given without preparation
to hundreds of thousands of voters who to-day can
scarcely read. That Senator proposes now to double,
and more than double, that illiteracy. He proposes
to give the negro women of the South this right of
suffrage, utterly unprepared as they are for it.
In a convention some two years and
a half ago in the city of Louisville an intelligent
negro from the South said the negro men could not
vote the Democratic ticket because the women would
not live with them if they did. The negro men
go out in the hotels and upon the railroad cars.
They go to the cities and by attrition they wear away
the prejudice of race; but the women remain at home,
and their emotional natures aggregate and compound
the race-prejudice, and when suffrage is given them
what must be the result?
Mr. President, it is not my purpose
to speak of the inconveniences, for they are nothing
more, of woman suffrage. I trust that as a gentleman
I respect the feelings of the ladies and their advocates.
I am not here to ridicule. My purpose only is
to use legitimate argument as to a movement which
commands respectful consideration, if for no other
reason than because it comes from women. But it
is impossible to divest ourselves of a certain degree
of sentiment when considering this question.
I pity the man who can consider any
question affecting the influence of woman with the
cold, dry logic of business. What man can, without
aversion, turn from the blessed memory of that dear
old grandmother, or the gentle words and caressing
hand of that blessed mother gone to the unknown world,
to face in its stead the idea of a female justice
of the peace or township constable? For my part
I want when I go to my home when I turn
from the arena where man contends with man for what
we call the prizes of this paltry world I
want to go back, not to be received in the masculine
embrace of some female ward politician, but to the
earnest, loving look and touch of a true woman.
I want to go back to the jurisdiction of the wife,
the mother; and instead of a lecture upon finance
or the tariff, or upon the construction of the Constitution,
I want those blessed, loving details of domestic life
and domestic love.
I have said I would not speak of the
inconveniences to arise from woman suffrage I
care not whether the mother is called upon
to decide as a juryman or jury-woman rights of property
or rights of life, whilst her baby is “mewling
and puking” in solitary confinement at home.
There are other considerations more important, and
one of them to my mind is insuperable. I speak
now respecting women as a sex. I believe that
they are better than men, but I do not believe they
are adapted to the political work of this world.
I do not believe that the Great Intelligence ever
intended them to invade the sphere of work given to
men, tearing down and destroying all the best influences
for which God has intended them.
The great evil in this country to-day
is in emotional suffrage. The great danger to-day
is in excitable suffrage. If the voters of this
country could think always coolly, and if they could
deliberate, if they could go by judgment and not by
passion, our institutions would survive forever, eternal
as the foundations of the continent itself; but massed
together, subject to the excitements of mobs and of
these terrible political contests that come upon us
from year to year under the autonomy of our Government,
what would be the result if suffrage were given to
the women of the United States?
Women are essentially emotional.
It is no disparagement to them they are so. It
is no more insulting to say that women are emotional
than to say that they are delicately constructed physically
and unfitted to become soldiers or workmen under the
sterner, harder pursuits of life.
What we want in this country is to
avoid emotional suffrage, and what we need is to put
more logic into public affairs and less feeling.
There are spheres in which feeling should be paramount.
There are kingdoms in which the heart should reign
supreme. That kingdom belongs to woman.
The realm of sentiment, the realm of love, the realm
of the gentler and the holier and kindlier attributes
that make the name of wife, mother, and sister next
to that of God himself.
I would not, and I say it deliberately,
degrade woman by giving her the right of suffrage.
I mean the word in its full signification, because
I believe that woman as she is to-day, the queen of
home and of hearts, is above the political collisions
of this world, and should always be kept above them.
Sir, if it be said to us that this
is a natural right belonging to women, I deny it.
The right of suffrage is one to be determined by expediency
and by policy, and given by the State to whom it pleases.
It is not a natural right; it is a right that comes
from the state.
It is claimed that if the suffrage
be given to women it is to protect them. Protect
them from whom? The brute that would invade their
rights would coerce the suffrage of his wife, or sister,
or mother as he would wring from her the hard earnings
of her toil to gratify his own beastly appetites and
passions.
It is said that the suffrage is to
be given to enlarge the sphere of woman’s influence.
Mr. President, it would destroy her influence.
It would take her down from that pedestal where she
is to-day, influencing as a mother the minds of her
offspring, influencing by her gentle and kindly caress
the action of her husband toward the good and pure.
But I rise not to discuss this question,
but to discharge a request. I know that when
a man attacks this claim for woman suffrage he is
sneered at and ridiculed as afraid to meet women in
the contests for political honor and supremacy.
If so, I oppose to the request of these ladies the
arguments of their own sex; but first, I ask the Secretary
to read a paper which has been sent to me with a request
that I place it before the Senate.
The Chief Clerk read as follows:
To the honorable Senate and House
of Representatives:
We, the undersigned, respectfully
remonstrate against the further extension of suffrage
to women.
H.P. Kidder.
O.W. Peabody.
R.M. Morse, jr.
Charles A. Welch.
Augustus Lowell.
Francis Parkman, LL.D.
Thomas Bailey Aldrich.
Edmund Dwight.
Charles H. Dalton.
Henry Lee.
W. Endicott, jr.
Samuel Wells.
Hon. John Lowell.
William G. Russell.
John C. Ropes.
Robert D. Smith.
George A. Gardner.
F. Haven, jr.
W. Powell Mason.
B.F. Stevens.
Charles Marsh.
Charles W. Eliot, president, Harvard University.
Prof. C.F. Dunbar.
Prof. J.P. Cook.
Prof. J. Lovering.
Prof. W.W. Goodwin.
Prof. Francis Bowen.
Prof. Wolcott Gibbs.
Prof. F.J. Child.
Prof. John Trowbridge.
Prof. G.I. Goodale.
Prof. J.B. Greenough.
Prof. H.W. Torrey.
Prof. J.H. Thayer.
Prof. E.W. Gurney.
Justin Winsor.
H.W. Paine.
Hon. W.E. Russell.
James C. Fiske.
George Putnam.
C.A. Curtis.
T. Jefferson Coolidge.
T.K. Lothrop.
Augustus P. Loring.
W.F. Draper.
George Draper.
Francis Brooks.
Rev. J.P. Bodfish, chancellor, Cathedral Holy
Cross.
Rt. Rev. B.H. Paddock, bishop of Massachusetts.
Rev. Henry M. Dexter.
Rev. H. Brooke Herford.
Rev. O.B. Frothingham.
Rev. Ellis Wendell.
Rev. Geo. F. Staunton.
Rev. A.H. Heath.
Rev. W.H. Dowden.
Rev. J.B. Seabury.
Rev. C. Woodworth.
Rev. Leonard K. Storrs.
Rev. Howard N. Brown.
Rev. Edward J. Young.
Rev. Andrew P. Peabody.
Rev. George Z. Gray.
Rev. William Lawrence.
Rev. E.H. Hall.
Rev. Nicholas Hoppin.
Rev. David G. Haskins.
Rev. L.S. Crawford.
Rev. J.I.T. Coolidge.
Rev. Henry A. Hazen.
Rev. F.H. Hedge.
Rev. H.A. Parker.
Rev. Asa Bullard.
Rev. Alexander McKenzie.
Rev. J.F. Spaulding.
Rev. S.K. Lothrop.
Rev. E. Osborne, S.S.J.E.
Rev. Leighton Parks.
Rev. H.W. Foote.
Rev. Morton Dexter.
Rev. David H. Brewer.
Rev. Judson Smith.
Rev. L.W. Shearman.
Rev. Charles F. Dole.
Rev. George M. Boynton.
Rev. D.W. Waldron.
Rev. John A. Hamilton.
Rev. Isaac P. Langworthy.
Rev. E.K. Alden.
Rev. E.E. Strong.
Rev. M.D. Bisbee.
Rev. Oliver S. Dean.
Henry Parkman.
W.H. Sayward.
Charles A. Cummings.
Hon. S.C. Cobb.
Sidney Bartlett.
John C. Gray.
Louis Brandeis.
Hon. George G. Crocker.
John Bartlett.
John Fiske.
J.T.G. Nichols, M.D.
C.E. Vaughan, M.D.
John Homans, M.D.
Chauncey Smith.
Benj. Vaughan.
Charles F. Walcott.
J.B. Warner.
Walter Dean.
S.H. Kennard.
E. Whitney.
W.P.P. Longfellow.
H.O. Houghton.
J.M. Spelman.
J.C. Dodge.
E.S. Dixwell.
L.S. Jones.
G.W.C. Noble.
Charles Theodore Russell.
Clement L. Smith.
Ezra Farnsworth.
H.H. Edes.
Hon. R.R. Bishop.
H.H. Sprague.
Charles R. Codman.
Darwin E. Ware.
Arthur E. Thayer.
C.F. Choate.
Richard H. Dana.
O.D. Forbes.
Edward L. Geddings.
William V. Hutchings.
John L. Gardner.
L.M. Sargent.
H.L. Hallett.
E.P. Brown.
W.A. Tower.
J. Edwards.
G.H. Campbell.
Samuel Carr, jr.
Edward Brooks.
J. Randolph Coolidge.
J. Eliot Cabot.
Fred. Law Olmstead.
Charles S. Sargent.
C.A. Richardson.
Charles F. Shimmin.
Edward Bangs.
J.G. Freeman.
H.H. Coolidge.
David Hunt.
Alfred D. Hurd.
Edward I. Brown.
W.G. Saltonstall.
Thomas Weston, jr.
Richard M. Hodges, M.D.
Henry J. Bigelow, M.D.
Charles D. Homans, M.D.
George H. Lyman, M.D.
John Dixwell, M.D.
R.M. Pulsifer.
Edward L. Beard.
Solomon Lincoln.
G.B. Haskell.
John Boyle O’Reilly.
Arlo Bates.
Horace P. Chandler.
George O. Shattuck.
Hon. Alex. H. Rice.
Henry Cabot Lodge.
Francis Peabody, jr.
Harcourt Amory.
F.E. Parker.
A.S. Wheeler.
Jacob C. Rogers.
S.G. Snelling.
C.H. Barker.
J.H. Walker.
Forrest E. Barker.
John D. Wasbburn.
Martin Brimmer.
Fred L. Ames.
Hon. A.P. Martin.
Mr. Dolph. If the Senator
from Missouri will permit me, those names sounded
very much like the names of men.
Mr. Vest. They are men’s
names. I did not say that the petition was signed
by ladies. I referred to the papers in my hand,
which I shall proceed to lay before the Senate.
I hold in my hand an argument against
woman suffrage by a lady very well known in the United
States, and well known to the Senators from Massachusetts,
a lady whose philanthropy, whose exertions in behalf
of the oppressed and poor and afflicted have given
her a national reputation. I refer to Mrs. Clara
T. Leonard, the wife of a distinguished lawyer, and
whose words of themselves will command the attention
of the public.
The Chief Clerk read as follows:
[Letter from Mrs. Clara T.
Leonard.]
The following letter was read
by Thornton K. Lothrop, esq., at
the hearing before the Legislative
committee on woman suffrage,
January 29, 1884:
The principal reasons assigned
for giving suffrage to women are
these:
That the right to vote is
a natural and inherent right of which
women are deprived by the
tyranny of men.
That the fact that the majority
of women do not wish for the right
or privilege to vote is not
a reason for depriving the minority of
an inborn right.
That women are taxed but not
represented, contrary to the
principles of free government.
That society would gain by the participation
of women in government, because women are purer
and more conscientious than men, and especially
that the cause of temperance would be promoted by
women’s votes.
Those women who are averse to female
suffrage hold differing opinions on all these
points, and are entitled to be heard fairly and
without unjust reproach and contempt on the part of
“suffragists,” so called.
The right to vote is not an
inherent right, but, like the right to
hold land, is conferred upon
individuals by general consent, with
certain limitations, and for
the general good of all.
It is as true to say that the earth
was made for all its inhabitants, and that human
has a right to appropriate a portion of its surface,
as to say that all persons have a right to participate
in government. Many persons can be found to hold
both these opinions. Experience has proved
that the general good is promoted by ownership
of the soil, with the resultant inducement to
its improvement.
Voting is simply a mathematical test
of strength. Uncivilized nations strive for
mastery by physical combat, thus wasting life and
resources. Enlightened societies agree to determine
the relative strength of opposing parties by actual
count. God has made women weaker than men,
incapable of taking part in battles, indisposed
to make riot and political disturbance.
The vote which, in the hand of a man,
is a “possible bayonet,” would not,
when thrown by a woman, represent any physical power
to enforce her will. If all the women in
the State voted in one way, and all the men in
the opposite one, the women, even if in the majority,
would not carry the day, because the vote would not
be an estimate of material strength and the power
to enforce the will of the majority. When
one considers the strong passions and conflicts
excited in elections, it is vain to suppose that the
really stronger would yield to the weaker party.
It is no more unjust to deprive women
of the ballot than to deprive minors, who outnumber
those above the age of majority, and who might
well claim, many of them, to be as well able to decide
political questions as their elders.
If the majority of women are either
not desirous to vote or are strongly opposed to
voting, the minority should yield in this, as they
are obliged to do in all other public matters.
In fact, they will be obliged to yield, so long
as the present state of opinion exists among women
in general, for legislators will naturally consult
the wishes of the women of their own families and
neighborhood, and be governed by them. There
can be no doubt that in this State, where women
are highly respected and have great influence,
the ballot would be readily granted to them by men,
if they desired it, or generally approved of woman
suffrage. Women are taxed, it is true; so
are minors, without the ballot; it is untrue,
to say that either class is not represented. The
thousand ties of relationship and friendship cause
the identity of interest between the sexes.
What is good in a community for men, is good also
for their wives and sisters, daughters and friends.
The laws of Massachusetts discriminate much in
favor of women, by exempting unmarried women of
small estate from taxation; by allowing women, and
not men, to acquire a settlement without paying a tax;
by compelling husbands to support their wives,
but exempting the wife, even when rich, from supporting
an indigent husband; by making men liable for
debts of wives, and not vice versa. In
the days of the American Revolution, the first
cause of complaint was, that a whole people were
taxed but not represented.
To-day there is not a single interest
of woman which is not shared and defended by men,
not a subject in which she takes an intelligent
interest in which she cannot exert an influence in
the community proportional to her character and
ability. It is because the men who govern
live not in a remote country, with separate interests,
but in the closest relations of family and neighborhood,
and bound by the tenderest ties to the other sex,
who are fully and well represented by relations,
friends, and neighbors in every locality.
That women are purer and more conscientious than
men, as a sex, is exceedingly doubtful when applied
to politics. The faults of the sexes are different,
according to their constitution and habits of life.
Men are more violent and open in their misdeeds,
but any person who knows human nature well and
has examined it in its various phases knows that each
sex is open to its peculiar temptation and sin; that
the human heart is weak and prone to evil without
distinction of sex.
It seems certain that, were women admitted
to vote and to hold political office, all the
intrigue, corruption, and selfishness displayed
by men in political life would also be found among
women. In the temperance cause we should gain
little or nothing by admitting women to vote,
for two reasons: first, that experience has
proved that the strictest laws can not be enforced
if a great number of people determine to drink
liquor; secondly, because among women voters we
should find in our cities thousands of foreign
birth who habitually drink beer and spirits daily without
intoxication, and who regard license or prohibitory
laws as an infringement of their liberty.
It has been said that municipal suffrage for women
in England has proved a political success. Even
if this is true, it offers no parallel to the condition
of things in our own cities. First, because
there is in England a property qualification required
to vote, which excludes the more ignorant and
irresponsible classes, and makes women voters few and
generally intelligent; secondly, because England
is an old, conservative country, with much emigration
and but little immigration.
Here is a constant influx of foreigners:
illiterate, without love of our country or interest
in, or knowledge of, the history of our liberties,
to whom, after a short residence, we give a full share
in our government. The result begins to be
alarming enormous taxation, purchasable
votes, demagogism, all these alarm the
more thoughtful, and we are not yet sure of the
end. It is a wise thought that the possible
bayonet or ruder weapon in the hands of our new
citizens would be even worse than the ballot, and our
safer course is to give the immigrants a stake
and interest in the government. But when
we learn that on an average one thousand immigrants
per week landed at the port of Boston in the past
calendar year, is it not well to consider carefully
how we double, and more than double, the popular
vote, with all its dangers and its ingredients
of ignorance and irresponsibility. Last of all,
it must be considered that the lives of men and
women are essentially different.
One sex lives in public, in constant
conflict with the world; the other sex must live
chiefly in private and domestic life, or the race
will be without homes and gradually die out. If
nearly one-half of the male voters of our State
forego their duty or privilege, as is the fact,
what proportion of women would exercise the suffrage?
Probably a very small one. The heaviest vote would
be in the cities, as now, and the ignorant and
unfit women would be the ready prey of the unscrupulous
demagogue. Women do not hold a position inferior
to men. In this land they have the softer side
of life the best of everything. There
are, of course, exceptions individuals whose
struggle in life is hard, whose husbands and fathers
are tyrants instead of protectors; so there are
bad wives, and men ruined and disheartened by selfish,
idle women.
The best work that a woman can do for
the purifying of politics is by her influence
over men, by the wise training of her children, by
her intelligent, unselfish counsel to husband, brother,
or friend, by a thorough knowledge and discussion
of the needs of her community. Many laws
on the statute-books of our own and other States
have been the work of women. More might be added.
It is the opinion of many of us that
woman’s power is greater without the ballot
or possibility of office-holding for gain. When
standing outside of politics she discusses great
questions upon their merit. Much has been
achieved by women in the anti-slavery cause, the
temperance cause, the improvement of public and private
charities, the reformation of criminals, all by
intelligent discussion and influence upon men.
Our legislators have been ready to listen to women
and carry out their plans when well framed.
Women can do much useful public service
upon boards of education, school committees, and
public charities, and are beginning to do such
work. It is of vital importance to the integrity
of our charitable and educational administration
that it be kept out of politics. Is it not
well that we should have one sex who have no political
ends to serve who can fill responsible positions of
public trust? Voting alone can easily be exercised
by women without rude contact, but to attain any
political power women must affiliate themselves
with men; because women will differ on public
questions, must attend primary meetings and caucuses,
will inevitably hold public office and strive
for it; in short, women must enter the political
arena. This result will be repulsive to a large
portion of the sex, and would tend to make women unfeminine
and combative, which would be a detriment to society.
It is well that men after the burden
and heat of the day should return to homes where
the quiet side of life is presented to them.
In these peaceful New England homes of ours, great
and noble men have been raised by wise and pious
mothers, who instructed them, not in politics,
but in those general principles of justice, integrity,
and unselfishness which belong to and will insure
statesmanship in the men who are true to them.
Here is the stronghold of the sex, weakest in
body, powerful for good or evil over the stronger
one, whom women sway and govern, not by the ballot
and by greater numbers but by those gentle influences
designed by the Creator to soften and subdue man’s
ruder nature.
Clara T. Leonard.
Mr. Hoar. The Senator from
Missouri has alluded to me in connection with the
name of this lady. Perhaps he will allow me to
make an additional statement to that which I furnished
him, in order that the statement about her may be
complete.
All that the Senator from Missouri
has said of the character and worth of Mrs. Leonard
is true. I do not know her personally. Her
husband is my respected personal friend, a lawyer
of high standing and character. All that the
Senator has said of her ability is proved better than
by any other testimony, by the very able and powerful
letter which has just been read. But Mrs. Leonard
herself is the strongest refutation of her own argument.
Politics, the political arena, political
influence, political action in this country consists,
I suppose, in two things: one of them the being
intrusted with the administration of public affairs,
and second, having the vote counted in determining
who shall be public servants, and what public measures
shall prevail in the commonwealth. Now, this
lady was intrusted for years with one of the most important
public functions ever exercised by any human being
in the commonwealth of Massachusetts. We have
a board, called the board of lunacy and charity, which
controls the large charities for which Massachusetts
is famous and in many of which she was the first among
civilized communities, for the care of the pauper
and the insane and the criminal woman, and the friendless
and the poor child. It is one of the most important
things, except the education of youth, which Massachusetts
does.
A little while ago a political campaign
in Massachusetts turned upon a charge which her governor
made against the people of the commonwealth in regard
to the conduct of the great hospital at Tewksbury,
where she was charged by her chief executive magistrate
with making sale of human bodies, with cruelty to
the poor and defenseless; and not only the whole country,
but especially the whole people of Massachusetts,
were stirred to the very depths of their souls by that
accusation. Mrs. Clara T. Leonard, the writer
of this letter, came forward and informed the people
that she had been one of the board who had managed
that institution for years, that she knew all about
it through and through, that the accusation was false
and a slander; and before her word and her character
the charge of that distinguished governor went down
and sunk into merited obscurity and ignominy.
Now, the question is whether the lady
who can be intrusted with the charge of one of the
most important departments of government, and whose
judgment in regard to its character or proper administration
is to be taken as gospel by the people where her reputation
extends, is not fit to be trusted to have her vote
counted when the question is who is to be the next
person who is to be trusted with that administration.
Mrs. Leonard’s mistake is not in misunderstanding
the nature either of woman or of man, which she understands
perfectly; it is in misunderstanding the nature of
politics, that is, the political arena; and this lady
has been in the political arena for the last ten years
of her life, one of the most important and potent forces
therein.
It is true, as she says, that the
wife and the mother educate the child and the man,
and when the great function of the state, as we hold
in our State and as is fast being held everywhere,
is also the education of the child and the man, how
does it degrade that wife and mother, whose important
function it is to do this thing, to utter her voice
and have her vote counted in regard to the methods
and the policies by which that education shall be
conducted?
Why, Mr. President, Mrs. Leonard says
in that letter that woman, the wife and the maiden
and the daughter, has no political ends to serve.
If political ends be to desire office for the greed
of gain, if political ends be to get an unjust power
over other men, if political ends be to get political
office by bribery or by mob violence or by voting
through the shutter of a beer-house, that is true:
but the persons who are in favor of this measure believe
that those very things that Mrs. Leonard holds up
as the proper ends in the life of women are political
ends and nothing else; that the education of the child,
that the preservation of the purity of the home, that
the care for the insane and the idiot and the blind
and the deaf and the ruined and deserted, are not
only political ends but are the chief political ends
for which this political body, the state, is created:
and those who desire the help of women in the administration
of the state desire it because of the ability which
could write such a letter as that on the wrong side,
and because the qualities of heart and brain which
God has given to understand this class of political
ends better than He has given it to the masculine
heart and brain are needed for their administration.
I have no word of disrespect for Mrs.
Leonard, but I say that, in spite of herself and her
letter, her life and her character are the most abundant
and ample refutation of the belief which she erroneously
thinks she entertains. Nobody invites these ladies
to a contest of bayonets; nobody who believes that
government is a matter of mere physical force asks
the co-operation of woman in its administration.
It is because government is a conflict of such arguments
as that letter states on the one side, because the
object of government is the object to which this lady’s
own life is devoted, that the friends of woman suffrage
and of this amendment ask that it shall be adopted.
Mr. Vest. Mr. President, my great
personal respect for the Senator from Massachusetts
has given me an interval of enforced silence, and I
have only to say that if I should print my desultory
remarks I should be compelled to omit his interruption
for fear that the amendment would be larger than the
original bill. [Laughter.]
I fail to see that anything which
has fallen from the distinguished Senator has convicted
Mrs. Clara Leonard of inconsistency or has added anything
to the argument upon his side of the question.
I have never said or intimated that there were women
who were not credible witnesses. I have never
thought or intimated that there were not women who
were competent to administer the affairs of State or
even to lead armies. There have been such women,
and I believe there will be to the end of time, as
there have been effeminate men who have been better
adapted to the distaff and the spindle than to the
sword or to statesmanship. But these are exceptions
in either sex.
If this lady have, as she unquestionably
has, the strength of intellect conceded to her by
the Senator from Massachusetts and evidenced by her
own production, her judgment of woman is worth that
of a continent of men. The best judge of any woman
is a woman. The poorest judge of any woman is
a man. Let any woman with defect or flaw go amongst
a community of men and she will be a successful impostor.
Let her go amongst a community of women and in one
instant the instinct, the atmosphere circumambient,
will tell her story.
Mrs. Leonard gives us the result of
her opinion and of her experience as to whether this
right of suffrage should be conferred upon her own
sex. The Senator from Massachusetts speaks of
her evidence in a political campaign in Massachusetts
and that her unaided and single evidence crushed down
the governor of that great State. I thank the
Senator for that statement. If Mrs. Leonard had
been an office-holder and a voter not a single township
would have believed the truth of what she uttered.
Mr. Hoar. She was an office-holder,
and the governor tried to put her out.
Mr. Vest. Ah! but what sort of
an office-holder? She held the office delegated
to her by God himself, a ministering angel to the sick,
the afflicted, and the insane. What man in his
senses would take from woman this sphere? What
man would close to her the charitable institutions
and eleemosynary establishments of the country?
That is part of her kingdom; that is part of her undisputed
sway and realm. Is that the office to which woman
suffragists of this country ask us now to admit them?
Is it to be the director of a hospital? Is it
to the presidency of a board of visitors of an eleemosynary
institution? Oh, no; they want to be Presidents,
to be Senators, and Members of the House of Representatives,
and, God save the mark, ministerial and executive
officers, sheriffs, constables, and marshals.
Of course, this lady is found in this
board of directors. Where else should a true
woman be found? Where else has she always been
found but by the fevered brow, the palsied hand, the
erring intellect, ay, God bless them, from the cradle
to the grave the guide and support of the faltering
steps of childhood and the weakening steps of old age!
Oh, no, Mr. President; this will not
do. If we are to tear down all the blessed traditions,
if we are to desolate our homes and firesides, if
we are to unsex our mothers and wives and sisters and
turn our blessed temples of domestic peace into ward
political-assembly rooms, pass this joint resolution.
But for one I thank God that I am so old-fashioned
that I would not give one memory of my grandmother
or my mother for all the arguments that could be piled,
Pelion upon Ossa, in favor of this political monstrosity.
I now propose to read from a pamphlet
sent to me by a lady whom I am not able to characterize
as a resident of any State, although I believe she
resides in the State of Maine. I do not know whether
she be wife or mother. She signs this pamphlet
as Adeline D.T. Whitney. I have read it
twice, and read it to pure and gentle and intellectual
women. I say to-day it ought to be in every household
in this broad land. It ought to be the domestic
gospel of every true, gentle, loving, virtuous woman
upon all this continent. There is not one line
or syllable in it that is not written in letters of
gold. I shall not read it, for my strength does
not suffice, nor will the patience of the Senate permit,
but from beginning to end it breathes the womanly
sentiment which has made pure and great men and gentle
and loving women.
I will venture to say, in my great
admiration and respect for this woman, whether she
be married or single, she ought to be a wife, and
ought to be a mother. Such a woman could only
have brave and wise men for sons and pure and virtuous
women for daughters. Here is her advice to her
sex. I am only sorry that every word of it could
not be read in the Senate, but I have trespassed too
long.
Mr. Cockrell. Let it be printed in your
remarks.
Mr. Vest. I shall ask that it
be printed. I will undertake, however, to read
only a few sentences, not of exceptional superiority
to the rest, because every sentence is equal to every
other. There is not one impure unintellectual
aspiration or thought throughout the whole of it.
Would to God that I knew her, that I could thank her
on behalf of the society and politics of the United
States for this production.
After all
She says to her own sex
After all, men work for women;
or, if they think they do not, it
would leave them but sorry
satisfaction to abandon them to such
existence as they could arrange
without us.
Oh, how true that is; how true!
In blessed homes, or in scattered
dissipations of show, amusement, or the worse which
these shows and amusements are but terribly akin to,
women give purpose to and direct the results of all
men’s work. If the false standards of living
first urge them, until at length the horrible intoxication
of the game itself drives them on further and deeper,
are we less responsible for the last state of those
men than for the first?
Do you say, if good women refused
these things and tried for a simpler and truer living,
there are plenty of bad ones who would take them anyhow,
and supply the motive to deeper and more unmitigated
evil? Ah, there come both answer and errand again.
Raise the fallen at least, save the growing
womanhood stop the destruction that rushes
accelerating on, before you challenge new difficulty
and danger with an indiscriminate franchise.
Are not these bad women the very “plenty”
that would out-balance you at the polls if you persist
in trying the “patch-and-plaster” remedy
of suffrage and legislation.
Recognize the fact, the law, that
your power, your high commission, is inward, vital,
formative and causal. Bring all questions of choice
or duty to this test; will it work at the heart of
things, among the realities and forces? Try your
own life by this; remember that mere external is falsehood
and death. The letter killeth. Give up all
that is only of the appearance, or even chiefly so,
in conscious delight and motive in person,
surrounding, pursuit. Let your self-presentation,
your home-making and adorning, your social effort
and interest, your occupation and use of talent, all
shape and issue for the things that are essentially
and integrally good, and that the world needs to have
prevail. Until you can do this, and induce such
doing, it is of little use to clamor for mere outward
right or to contend that it would be rightly applied.
This whole pamphlet is a magnificent
illustration of that stupendous and vital truth that
the mission and sphere of woman is in the inward life
of man; that she must be the building up and governing
power that comes from those better impulses, those
inward secrets of the heart and sentiment that govern
men to do all that is good and pure and holy and keep
them from all that is evil.
Mr. President, the emotions of women
govern. What would be the result of woman suffrage
if applied to the large cities of this country is a
matter of speculation. What women have done in
times of turbulence and excitement in large cities
in the past we know. Open that terrible page
of the French Revolution and the days of terror, when
the click of the guillotine and the rush of blood
through the streets of Paris demonstrated to what
extremities the ferocity of human nature can be driven
by political passion. Who led those blood-thirsty
mobs? Who shrieked loudest in that hurricane
of passion? Woman. Her picture upon the
pages of history to-day is indelible. In the city
of Paris in those ferocious mobs the controlling agency,
nay, not agency, but the controlling and principal
power, came from those whom God has intended to be
the soft and gentle angels of mercy throughout the
world. But I have said more than I intended.
I ask that this pamphlet be printed in my remarks.
The presiding officer.
If there be no objection, the pamphlet will be printed
in the record as requested by the Senator from
Missouri. The Chair hears no objection.
The pamphlet is as follows:
The law of
woman-life.
The external arguments on both sides
the modern woman question have been pretty thoroughly
presented and well argued. It seems needless
to repeat or recombine them; but in one relation they
have scarcely been handled with any direct purpose.
Justice and expediency have been the points insisted
on or contested; these have not gone back far
enough; they have not touched the central fact,
to set it forth in its force and finality. The
fact is original and inherent, behind and at the
root of the entire matter, with all its complication
and circumstance. We have to ask a question
to which it is the answer, and whose answer is that
of the whole doubt and dispute.
What is the law of woman-life?
What was she made woman for,
and not man?
Shall we look back to that
old third chapter of Genesis?
When mankind had taken the knowledge
and power of good and evil into their own hands
through the mere earthly wisdom of the serpent;
when the woman had had her hasty outside way and lead,
according to the story, and woe had come of it,
what was the sentence? And was it a penance,
or a setting right, or a promise, or all three?
The serpent was first dealt with.
The narrow policy, the keen cunning, the little,
immediate outlook, the expedient motive; all that
was impersonated of temporary shift and outward prudence
in mortal affairs, regardless of, or blind to,
the everlasting issues; all, in short, that represented
material and temporal interest as a rule and order and
is not man’s external administration upon
the earth largely forced to be a legislation upon
these principles and economies? was disposed
of with the few words, “I will put enmity
between thee and the woman.”
Was this punishment as reflected
upon the woman or the power of a grand
retrieval for her? Not to man, who had been led,
and who would be led again, by the woman, was
the commission of holy revenge intrusted; but
henceforth, “I will set the woman against thee.”
Against the very principle and live prompting of evil,
or of mere earthly purpose and motive. “Between
thy seed and her seed.” Your struggle
with her shall be in and for the very life of the
race. “It,” her life brought forth,
“shall bruise thy head,” thy whole
power, and plan, and insidious cunning; “and
thou shall bruise,” shalt sting, torment,
hinder, and trouble in the way and daily going,
“his heel,” his footstep. Thou, the
subtle and creeping thing of the ground, shalt
lurk after and threaten with crookedness and poison
the ways of the men-children in their earth-toiling;
the woman, the mother, shall turn upon thee for and
in them and shall beat thee down!
Unto the woman He said, “I will
greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception.”
The burden and the glory are set in one. The
pain of the world shall be in your heart; the trouble,
the contradiction of it, shall be against your
love and insight. But your pain shall be
your power; you shall be the life-bearer; you
shall hold the motive; yours shall be the desire, and
your husband’s the dominion. Therefore
shall you bring your aspiration to him, that he
may fulfill it for you. “Your desire shall
be unto him, and he shall rule.”
And unto Adam He said, “Because
thou hast hearkened unto the voice of thy wife” yes,
and because thou wilt hearken “thy
sorrow shall be in the labor of the earth; the
ground shall be cursed;” in all material
things shall be cross and trouble, not against you,
but “for your sake.” “In your
sorrow you shall eat of it all the days of your
life.” Your need and struggle shall be with
external things, and with the ruling of them.
“For your sake,” that you may learn
your mastery, inherit your true power, carry out
with ease and understanding the desire and need of
the race, which woman represents, discerns afar,
and pleads to you.
And Adam bowed before the Lord’s
judgment; we are not told that he answered anything
to that; but he turned to his wife, and in that moment
“called her name Eve, because she was the mother
of all living.” Then and there was
the division made; and to which, can we say, was
the empire given? Both were set in conditions,
hemmed in to divine and special work: man,
by the stress and sorrow of the ground; woman,
by the stress and sorrow of her maternity, and of
her spiritual conception, making her truly the “mother
of all the living.”
At the beginning of human history, or
tradition, then, we get the answer to our question:
the law of woman-life is central, interior, and
from the heart of things; the law of the man’s
life is circumferential, enfolding, shaping, bearing
on and around, outwardly; wheel within wheel is
the constitution of human power. It will
be an evil day for the world when the nave shall leave
its place and contend for that of the felloe.
Iron-rimmed for its busy revolution and outward
contact is the life and strength of man; but the
tempered steel is at the heart and within the soul
of the woman, that she may bear the silent pressure
of the axle, and quietly and invisibly originate
and support the entire onward movement. “The
spirit of the living creature is in the wheels,”
and they can move no otherwise. “When
the living creatures went, the wheels went by
them; and when the living creatures were lifted up
from the earth, the wheels were lifted up.”
That was what Ezekiel saw in his vision.
There can he no going forward without
a life and presence and impulse at the center;
and in the organization of humanity there is where
the place and power of woman have been put. For
good or for evil, for the serpent or for the redeeming
Christ, she must move, must influence, must achieve
beforehand, and at the heart; she must be the
mother of the race; she must be the mother of the
Messiah. Not woman in her own person, but
“one born of woman,” is the Saviour.
For everything that is formed of the Creator, from
the unorganized stone to the thought of righteousness
in the heart of the race, there must be a matrix;
in the creation and in the recreation of His human
child God makes woman and the soul of woman His
blessed organ and instrument. When woman clears
herself of her own perversions, her self-imposed
limitations, returns to her spiritual power and
place, and cries, “Behold the handmaid of the
Lord; be it unto me according to Thy word,” then
shall the spirit descend unto her; then shall
come the redemption.
Take this for the starting-point;
it is the key.
Within, behind, antecedent to all result
in action, are the place and office of the woman by
the law of woman-life. And all question of
her deed and duty should be brought to this test.
Is it of her own, interior, natural relation,
putting her at her true advantage, harmonious
with the key to which her life is set? I think
this suffrage question must settle itself precisely
upon this ground-principle, and that all argument
should range conclusively around it. Judging
so, we should find, I think, that not at the polls,
where the last utterance of a people’s voice
is given where the results of character,
and conscience, and intelligence are shown is
her best and rightful work: on the contrary,
that it is useless here, unless first done elsewhere.
But where little children learn to think and speak where
men love and listen, and the word is forming is
the office she has to fill, the errand she has
to do. The question is, can she do both?
Is there need that she should do both? Does
not the former and greater include the latter
and less?
Hers are indeed the primary meetings:
in her nursery, her home, and social circles;
with other women, with young men, upon whose tone
and character in her maturity her womanhood and motherhood
join their beautiful and mighty influence; above
all, among young girls the “little
women,” to whom the ensign and commission are
descending is her undisputed power.
Purify politics? Purify the sewers?
But what if, first, the springs, and reservoirs, and
conduits could be watched, guarded, filtered, and
then the using be made clean and careful all through
the homes; a better system devised and carried
out for separating, neutralizing, destroying hurtful
refuse? Then the poisonous gases might not be
creeping back upon us through our enforced economies,
our makeshifts and stop-gaps of outside legislation.
For legislation is, after all, but cut-off, curb,
and patch; an external, troublesome, partial, uncertain
application of hindrance and remedy. What physician
will work with lotion and plaster when he can
touch, and control, and heal at the very seat
of the disease?
It is the beginning of the fulfillment
that women have waked to the consciousness that
they have not as yet filled their full place in
human life and affairs. Only has not the mistake
been made of contending with and grappling results,
when causes were in their hands? Have they
not let go the mainsprings to run after and effectually
push with pins the refractory cogs upon the wheel-rims?
Woman always deserts herself when she
puts her life and motive and influence in mere
outsides. Outsides of fashion and place, outsides
of charm and apparel, outsides of work and ambition she
must learn that these are not her true showing;
she must go hack and put herself where God has
called her to be with Himself, at the silent,
holy inmost; then we shall feel, if not at once, yet
surely soon or some time, a new order beginning.
He, the Father of all, gives it to us to be the
motherhood. That is the great solving and
upraising word; not limited to mere parentage, but
the law of woman-life. For good or for evil
she mothers the world.
Not all are called to motherhood in
the literal sense, but all are called to the great,
true motherhood in some of its manifold trusts
and obligations. “Noblesse oblige;”
you can not lay it down. “More are
the children of the desolate than of her who hath
a husband.” All the little children
that are born must look to womanhood somewhere
for mothering. Do they all get it? All the
works and policies of men look back somewhere for
a true “desire” toward and by which
only they can rule. Is the desire of the woman of
the home, the mother-motive of the world and human
living kept in the integrity and beauty
for which it was intrusted to her, that it might
move the power of man to noble ends?
Do you ask the governing of
the nation? You have the making of
the nation. Would you
choose your statesmen? First make your
statesmen.
Indeed the whole cause on trial may
be summarily ended by the proving of an alibi,
an elsewhere of demand. Is woman needed at the
caucuses, conventions, polls? She is needed, at
the same time, elsewhere. Two years of time
and strength, of thought and love, from some woman,
are essential for every little human being, that he
may even begin a life. When you remember that
every man is once a little child, born of a woman,
trained or needing training at
a woman’s hands; that of the little men,
every one of whom takes and shapes his life so,
come at length the hand for the helm, the voice
for the law, and the arm to enforce law what
do you want more for a woman’s opportunity
and control?
Which would you choose as a force, an
advantage, in settling any question of public
moment, or as touching your own private interest
through the general management the right
to go upon election day and cast one vote, or
a hold beforehand upon the individual ear and
attention of each voter now qualified? The ability
to present to him your argument, to show him the real
point at issue, to convince and persuade him of
the right and lasting, instead of the weak and
briefly politic way? This initial privilege
is in the hands of woman; assuming that she can be
brought to feel and act as a unit, which appears
to be what is claimed for her in the argument
for her regeneration of the outer political word.
But already and separately, if every
intelligent, conscientious woman can but reach
one man, and influence him from the principle involved from
her interior perception of it, kept pure on purpose
from bias and temptation that assail him in the
outside mix and jostle will she not
have done her work without the casting of a ballot?
And what becomes of “taxation without representation,”
when, from Eden down, Eve can always plead with
Adam, can have the first word instead of the last if
she knows what that first word is, in herself
and thence in its power with him can beguile
him to his good instead of to his harm, as indeed
she only meant to do in that first ignorant experiment?
Would it be any less easy to qualify for and accomplish
this than to convince and outnumber in public
gathering not only bodies of men but the mass of women
that will also have to be confronted and convinced
or overborne?
Preconceived opinions, minds made up,
men not so easily beguiled to the pure good, you
say? Woman quite as apt to make mistakes out
of Paradise as in? That only returns us to
the primal need and opportunity. Get the
man to listen to you before his mind is made up before
his manhood is made up; while it is in the making.
That is just the power and place that belong to
you, and you must seize and fill. It is your
natural right; God gave it to you. “The
seed of the woman shall bruise the serpent’s
head.”
We can not do all in one day, and in
such a day of the world as this. We plant
trees for posterity where forests have been laid waste
and the beautiful work of life is to be done over again;
we can not expect to see our fruit in souls and
in the nation at less cost of faith and time.
Take care, then, of the little children: the
men children, to make men of them; the women children oh,
yes, even above all to make ready for
future mothering to snatch from the
evil that works over against pure womanliness.
Until you have done this let men fend for themselves
in rough outsides a little longer; except, perhaps,
as wise, able women whom the trying transition
time calls forth may find fit way and place for effort
and protest there is always room for that,
and noble work has been and is being done; but
do not rear a new generation of women to expect
and desire charges and responsibilities reversive
of their own life-law, through whose perfect fulfillment
alone may the future clean place be made for all
to work in.
Is there excess of female population?
Can not all expect the direct rule of a home?
Is not this exactly, perhaps, just now, for the
more universal remedial mothering that in this age
is the thing immediately needed? Let her
who has no child seek where she can help the burdened
mother of many; how she can best reach with influence,
and wisdom, and cherishing, the greatest number or
most efficiently a few of these dear,
helpless, terrible little souls, who are to make,
in a few years, a new social condition; a better
and higher, happier and safer, or a lower, worse, bitterer,
more desperately complicated and distressful one.
“Desire earnestly the best gifts,”
said Saint Paul, after enumerating the gifts of
teaching and prophecy and authority; “and I
show you,” he goes on, “a yet more excellent
way.” Charity not mere alms,
or toleration, or general benignity, out of a safe
self-provision; but caritas nearness,
and caring, and loving, the very essence
of mothering; the way to and hold of the heart
of it all, the heart of the life of humanity.
“Keep thy heart with all diligence; for
out of it are the issues of life.” That
is the first word; it charges womanhood itself, which
must be set utterly right before it can take hold
to right the world. Here are at once task
and mission and rewarding sway.
Woman has got off the track;
she must see that first, and replace
herself. We are mothering
the world still; but we are mothering
it, in a fearfully wide measure,
all wrong.
Sacrifice is the beginning of all redemption.
We must give up. We must even give up the
wish and seeming to have a hand in things, that
we may work unseen in the elements, and make them fit
and healthful; that daily bread and daily life
may be sweet again in dear, old, homely ways,
and plentiful with all truly blessed opportunities.
We are not to organize the world, or to conquer it,
or to queen it. We are just to take it again
and mother it. If woman would begin that,
search out the cradles of life and character and
take care of the whole world of fifty years hence
in taking care of them, calling upon men and the
state, when needful, to authorize her action and
furnish outward means for it I wonder
what might come, as earnest of good, even in this our
day, in which we know not our visitation?
And here again come allowance and exception
for what women can always do when this world-mothering
forces an appeal to the strength and authority
of man. Women have never been prevented from
doing their real errands in the world, even outside
the domestic boundary. They have defended
their husbands’ castles in the old chivalrous
times, when the male chivalry was away at the crusades.
They have headed armies when Heaven called them; only
Heaven never called all the women at once; but
when the king was crowned, the mission done, they
have turned back with desire to their sheltered,
gentle, unobtrusive life again. There has no
business to be a standing army of women; not even
a standing political army. Women have navigated
and brought home ships when commanders have died
or been stricken helpless upon the ocean; they
have done true, intelligent, patient work for science,
art, religion; and those have done the most who
have never stopped to contend first, whether a
woman, as such, may do it or not.
Look at what Dorothea Dix has done,
single-handed, single-mouthed, in asylums and
before legislatures. Women have sat on thrones,
and governed kingdoms well, when that was the
station in life to which God called them.
If Victoria of England has been anything, she has
been the mother of her land; she has been queen
and protecting genius of its womanhood and homes.
And when a woman does these things, as called
of God not talks of them, as to whether
she may make claim to do them she carries
a weight from the very sanctity out of which she
steps, as woman, that moves men unlike the moving
of any other power. Shall she resign the chance
of doing really great things, of meeting grand
crises, by making herself common in ward-rooms
and at street-corners, and abolishing the perfect idea
of home by no longer consecrating herself to it?
If individual woman, as has been said,
may gain and influence individual man, and so
the man-power in affairs a body of women,
purely as such, with cause, and plea, and reason,
can always have the ear and attention of bodies
of men; but to do this they must come straight
from their home sanctities, as representing them as
able to represent them otherwise than men, because
of their hearth-priestesshood; not as politicians,
bred and hardened in the public arenas.
That the family is the heart
of the state, and that the state
is but the widened family,
is the fact which the old vestal
consecration, power, and honor
set forth and kept in mind.
The voice which has of late been so
generally conceded to women in town, decisions
as regarding public schools, is an instance of the
fittingness of relegating to them certain interests
of which they should know more than men, because applying
the key-test with which we have started it
has direct relation to and springs from their
motherhood. But can one help suggesting that if
the movement had been to place women, merely and
directly, upon the committees, by votes of men
who saw that this work might be in great part best
done by them; if women had asked and offered for
the place without the jostle of the town-meeting,
or putting in that wedge for the ballot the
thing might have been as readily done, and the objection,
or political precedent, avoided.
It is not the real opportunity, when
that arises or shows itself in the line of her
life-law, that is to be refused for woman. It
is the taking from internal power to add to external
complication of machinery and to the friction
of strife. Let us just touch upon some of
the current arguments concerning these external impositions
which one set is demanding and the other entreating
against.
If voting is to be the chief power in
woman’s hands, or even a power of half the
moment that is contended for it, it will grow to be
the motive and end, the all-absorbing object, with
women that it is with men.
The gubernatorial canvass, the presidential
year, these will interrupt and clog all home business,
suspend decisions, paralyze plans, as they do
with men, or else we shall not be much, as thorough
politicians, after all. And if we talk of mending
all that, of putting politics in their right place,
and governing by pure principle instead of party
trick, and stumping and electioneering, we go
back in effect to the acknowledgment that only
in the interior work, and behind politics, can women
do better things at all; which, precisely, was
to be demonstrated.
Think, simply, of election
day for women.
Would it be so invariably easy a thing
for a home-keeper to do, at the one opportunity
of the year, or the four years, on a particular
day, her duty in this matter? It is easy to say
that it takes no more time than a hundred other
things that some do; but setting apart all the
argument that previous time and strength must
have been spent in properly qualifying, how many of
the hundred other things are done now without interruption,
postponement, hindrance, through domestic contingencies?
or are there a hundred other things done when
the home contingencies are really met by a woman?
A woman’s life is not like a man’s.
That a man’s life may be that
he may transact his out-door business; keep his
hours and appointments; may cast his vote on election
day; may represent wife and children in all wherein
the community cares for, or might injure him and
them the woman, some woman, must be
at the home post, that the home order may go on, from
which he derives that command of time, and freedom
from hindering necessities, which leave him to
his work. And so, as the old proverb says,
while man’s work is from sun to sun made
definite, a matter to which he can go forth, and
from which he can come in a woman’s
work, of keeping the place of the forthgoing and incoming,
is never done, from the very nature and ceaseless
importance of it.
Must she go to the polls, sick or well,
baby or no baby, servant or no servant, strength
or no strength, desire or no desire? If she
have cook and housemaid they are to go also, and number
her two to one, anyway; probably on election day,
which they would make a holiday, they would as
at other crises, of birth, sickness, death, house-cleaning,
which should occur in no first-class families come
down upon her with their appropriate coup d’etat,
and “leave;” making the State-stroke, in
this instance, of scoring three votes, two dropped
and one lost, for the irrepressible side.
How will it be when Norah, and Maggie,
and Katie have not only their mass and confession,
their Fourth-of-July and Christmas, their mission-weeks,
their social engagements and family plans, and
their appointments with their dress-makers, to curtail
your claims upon their bargained time and service,
but their share in the primary meetings and caucuses,
committees, and torch-light processions, and mass
meetings? For what shall prevent the excitements,
the pleasurings, the runnings hither and thither,
that men delight in from following in the train
of politics and parties with the common woman?
Perhaps it may even be discovered, to the still
further detriment of our already painfully hampered
and perplexed domestic system, that the pursuit
of fun, votes, offices, is more remunerative,
as well as gentlewomanly as Micawber
might express it than the cleansing of pots
and pans, the weekly wash, or the watching of
the roast. Perhaps in that enfranchised day
there will be no Katies and Maggies’ and the
Norahs will know their place no more. Then
the enlightened womanhood may have to begin at
the foundation and glorify the kitchen again.
And good enough for her, in the wide as well as primitive
sense of the phrase, and a grand turn in the history
that repeats itself toward the old, forgotten,
peaceful side of the cycle it may be!
But the argument does not rest upon
any such points as these. It rests upon the
inside nature of a woman’s work; upon the need
there is to begin again to-day at the heart of
things and make that right; upon the evident fact
that this can be done none too soon or earnestly,
if the community and the country are not to keep
on in the broad way to a threatened destruction; and
upon the certainty that it can never be done unless
it is done by woman, and with all of woman’s
might. Not by struggles for new and different
place, but by the better, more loving, more intelligent,
deep-seeing, and deep-feeling filling of her own
place, that none will dispute and none can take
from her. We are not where woman was in the
old brutal days that are so often quoted; and we shall
not, need not, return to that. Christianity
has disposed of that sort of argument. We
are on a vantage ground for the doing of our real,
essential work better than it has been done ever before
in the history of the world; and we are madly
leaving our work and our vantage together.
The great step made by woman was in
the generation preceding this one of restlessness the
restlessness that has come through the first feeling
of great power. It was made in the time when women
learned physiology, that they might rear and nurse
their families and help their neighborhoods understandingly;
science, that they might teach and answer little
children, and share the joy of knowledge that
was spreading swiftly in the earth; political history
and economy, that they might listen and talk to their
brothers and husbands and sons, and leaven the
life of the age as the bread in the mixing; business
figures, rules, and principles, that they might
sympathize, counsel, help, and prudentially work with
and honestly strengthen the bread-winners. The
good work was begun in the schools where girls
were first told, as George B. Emerson used to
tell us Boston girls, that we were learning everything
he could teach us, in order to be women: wives,
mothers, friends, social influencers, in the best
and largest way possible. Women grew strong
and capable under such instruction and motive.
Are their daughters and grand-daughters about to leap
the fence, leave their own realm little cared for or
doomed to be undertake the whole scheme
of outside creation, or contest it with the men?
Then God help the men! God save the Commonwealth!
We are past the point already where
homes are suffering, or liable to suffer, neglect
or injury; they are already left unmade. Shall
this go on? Between frivolities and ambitions,
between social vanities, and shows, and public
meddling’s and mixings for where
one woman is needed and doing really brave, true
work, there are a hundred rushing forth for the
mere sake of rushing is the primitive
home, the power of heaven upon earth to slip away from
among us? Let us not build outsides which
have no insides, let us not put a face upon things
which has no reality behind it. Beware lest
we make the confusion that we need the suffrage to
help us unmake; lest we tear to pieces that we
may patch again. Crazy patchwork that would
be, indeed!
Are women’s votes required because
men will not legislate away evils that they do
not heartily wish away? Is government corrupted
because men desire shield and opportunity for dishonest
speculation; authority and countenance for nefarious
combinations? The more need to go to work
at the beginning rather than to plunge into the
pitch and be defiled; more need to make haste and educate
a better generation of men, if it be so we can
not, except vi et armis, influence the
generation that is. But do you think that if
women are in earnest enough in earnest
to give up, as they seem to be to demand they
might not bring their real power to bear even
upon these evil things, in their root and inception,
and even now? Suppose women would not live
in houses, or wear jewels and gowns, that are
bought for them out of wicked millions made upon the
stock exchange?
Suppose they would stop decorating their
dwellings to an agony, crowding them hurriedly
with this and that of the last and newest, just
because it is last and new, making a show and rivalry
of what is not a true-grown beauty of a home at
all, but a mere meretriciousness; suppose they
would so set to work and change society that displays
and feastings, which use up at every separate
one a year’s comfortable support for a quiet,
modest family, should be given up as vulgarities;
that people should care for, and be ready for,
a true interchange of life and thought, and simple,
uncrowded opportunities for these; suppose women would
say, “No; I will not blaze at Newport, or
run through Europe dropping American eagles or
English sovereigns after me like the trail of
a comet, or the crumbs that Hop-’o-my-thumb let
fall from his pocket that the people at home might
track the way he had gone; because if I have money,
there is better work to be done with it; and I
will not have the money that is made by gambling manipulations
and cheats.”
Do you think this would have no influence?
More than that, and further back, and lowlier
down, suppose they should say, every one, “I
will not have the new, convenient house, the fresh
carpetings, the pretty curtains, or even the least,
most fitting freshness, until I know the means
are earned for me with honest service to the world,
and by no lucky turn of even a small speculation.”
Further back yet, suppose them to declare, “I
will not have the home at all, nor my own happiness,
unless it can be based and builded on the kind
of life-work that helps to make a real prosperity;
that really goes to the building and safe-keeping
of a whole nation of such homes.” Would
there be no power in that? Would it not be
a kind of woman-suffrage to settle the very initials
of all that ever bears upon the public question?
And to bring that sort of woman on the stage,
and to the front, is there not enough work to
do, and enough “higher education” to insist
on and secure?
After all, men work for women; or, if
they think they do not, it would leave them but
sorry satisfaction to abandon them to such existence
as they could arrange without us. In blessed homes,
or in scattered dissipations of show, amusement,
or the worse which these shows and amusements
are but terribly akin to, women give purpose to
and direct the results of all men’s work.
If the false standards of living first urge them,
until at length the horrible intoxication of the
game itself drives them on further and deeper, are
we less responsible for the last state of those men
than for the first?
Do you say, if good women refused these
things and tried for a simpler and truer living,
there are plenty of bad ones who would take them
anyhow, and supply the motive to deeper and more unmitigated
evil? Ah, there come both answer and errand again.
Raise the fallen at least save the growing
womanhood stop the destruction that
rushes accelerating on, before you challenge new difficulty
and danger with an indiscriminate franchise. Are
not these bad women the very “plenty”
that would out-balance you at the polls, if you
persist in trying the “patch-and-plaster”
remedy of suffrage and legislation?
Recognize the fact, the law, that your
power, your high commission, is inward vital formative,
and casual. Bring all questions of choice
or duty to this test, will it work at the heart
of things, among the realities and forces? Try
your own life by this; remember that mere external
is falsehood and death. The letter killeth.
Give up all that is only of the appearance or
even chiefly so, in conscious delight and motive in
person, surrounding pursuit. Let your self-presentation,
your home-making and adorning, your social effort
and interest, your occupation and use of talent,
all shape and issue for the things that are essentially
and integrally good, and that the world needs to have
prevail. Until you can do this, and induce
such doing, it is of little use to clamor for
mere outward right, or to contend that it would
be rightly applied.
Work as you will, and widely as you
can, for schools, in associations, in everything
whose end is to teach, enlighten, enlarge women,
and so the world. Help and protect the industries
of women; but keep those industries within the
guiding law of woman-life. Do not throw down
barriers that take down safeguards with them;
that make threatening breaches in the very social
structure. If women must serve in shops, demand
and care for it that it shall be in a less mixed,
a more shielded way than now. The great caravansaries
of trade are perilous by their throng, publicity,
and weariness. There used to be women’s
shops; choice places, where a woman’s care
and taste had ruled before the counters were spread;
where women could quietly purchase things that
were sure to be beautiful or of good service; there
were not the tumult and ransacking that kill both
shop-girl and shopper now.
This is one instance, and but one, of
the rescuing that ought to be attempted.
There ought at least to be distinct women’s
departments, presided over by women of good, motherly
tone and character, in the places of business
which women so frequent, and where the thoughtful
are aware of much that makes them tremble. And
surely a great many of the girls and women who choose
shop-work, because they like its excitement, ought
rather to be in homes, rendering womanly service,
and preparing to serve in homes of their own leaving
their present places to young men who might perhaps
begin so to earn the homes to offer them. Will
not this apply all the way up, into the arts and
the professions even? There must needs be
exceptional women perhaps; there are, and will be,
time and errand and place for them; but Heaven forbid
that they should all become exceptional.
Once more, work for these things that
are behind, and underlie; believing that woman’s
place is behind and within, not of repression,
but of power; and that if she do not fill this place
it will be empty; there will be no main spring.
Meanwhile she will get her rights as she rises
to them, and her defenses where she needs them;
everything that helps, defends, uplifts the woman
uplifts man and the whole fabric, and man has begun
to find it out. If he “will give the
suffrage if women want it,” as is said, why
shall he not as well give them the things that they
want suffrage for and that they are capable of
representing? Believe me, this work, and
the representation which grows out of it, can
no longer be done if we attempt the handling of political
machinery the making of platforms, the
judging of candidates, the measuring and disputation
of party plans and issues, and all the tortuous
following up of public and personal political history.
Do you say, men have their individual
work in the world, and all this beside and of
it, and that therefore we may? Exactly here comes
in again the law of the interior. Their work is
“of it” falls in the way.
They rub against it as they go along. Men meet
each other in the business thoroughfares, at the offices
and the street corners; we are in the dear depths
of home. We are with the little ones, of
whom is not this kingdom, but the kingdom of heaven,
which we, through them, may help to come. This
is just where we must abandon our work, if we
attempt the doing of theirs. And here is
where our prestige will desert us, whenever great
cause calls us to speak from out our seclusions,
and show men, from our insights and our place,
the occasion and desire that look unto their rule.
They will not listen then; they will remand us to
the ballot-box.
“Inside politics” is a good
word. That is just where woman ought to be,
as she ought to be inside everything, insisting upon
and implanting the truth and right that are to
conquer. And she can not be inside and outside
both. She can not do the mothering and the
home-making, the watching and ministry, the earning
and maintaining hold and privilege and motive
influence behind and through the acts of men and
all the world-wide execution of act beside.
Therefore, we say, do not give up the substance which
you might seize, for the shadow which you could
not hold fast if you were to seem to grasp it.
Work on at the foundations. Insist on truth
and right; put them into all your own life, taking
all the beam out of your own eye before demanding well,
we will say the mote, for generosity’s sake,
and for the holy authority of the word out
of the brother’s eyes.
Establish pure, honest, lovely things things
of good report in the nurseries, the
schools, the social circles where you reign, and
the outside world and issue will take form and heed
for themselves. The nation, of which the
family is the root, will be made, and built, and
saved accordingly. Every seed hath its own body.
The seed of the woman shall bruise the serpent-head
of evil, and shall rise triumphant to become the
ennobled, recreated commonwealth. Then shall
pour forth the double pæan that thrills through
the glorious final chorus of Schumann’s Faust men
and women answering in antiphons
“The indescribable,
Here
it is done;
The ever-womanly
Beckons
us on!”
Then shall Mary the
fulfilled, ennobled womanhood sing her
Magnificat; standing to receive
from the Lord, and to give the
living word to the nations:
“My soul
doth magnify the Lord,
And my spirit
hath rejoiced in God, my Saviour.
For He hath looked
upon the low estate of His handmaiden;
For behold, from
henceforth all generations shall call me blessed,
For He that is
mighty hath done to me great things;
And holy is His
name.
And His mercy
is unto generations and generations.”
The coming new version of
the Old Testament gives us, we are told,
among other more perfect renderings,
this one, which fitly utters
charge and promise:
“The Lord
gave the word;
Great was the
company
Of
those
That published
it.”
“The Lord
giveth the word;
And the women
that bring
Glad
tidings
Are a great host.”
ADELINE D.T. WHITNEY.
Mr. BLAIR. Mr. President, before
the vote is taken I desire to say but a word.
Early in the session I had the opportunity of addressing
the Senate upon the general merits of the question.
I said then all that I cared to say; but I wish to
remind the Senate before the vote is taken that the
question to be decided is not whether upon the whole
the suffrage should be extended to women, but whether
in the proper arena for the amendment of the Constitution
ordained by the Constitution itself one-third of the
American people shall have the opportunity to be heard
in the discussion of such a proposed amendment whether
they shall have the opportunity of the exercise of
the first right of republican government and of the
American and of any free citizen, the submission to
the popular tribunal, which has alone the power to
decide the question whether on the whole, upon a comparison
of the arguments pro and con bearing one way and the
other upon this great subject, the American people
will extend the suffrage to those who are now deprived
of it.
That is the real question for the
Senate to consider. It is not whether the Senate
would, itself, extend the suffrage to women, but whether
those men who believe that women should have the suffrage
shall be heard, so that there may be a decision and
an end made of this great subject, which has now been
under discussion more than a quarter of a century,
and to-day for the first time even in the legislative
body which is to submit the proposition to the country
for consideration has there been a prospect of reaching
a vote.
I appeal to Senators not to decide
this question upon the arguments which have been offered
here to-day for or against the merits of the proposition.
I appeal to them to decide this question upon that
other principle to which I have adverted, whether
one-third of the American people shall be permitted
to go into the arena of public discussion of the States,
among the people of the States, and before the Legislatures
of the States, and be heard upon the issue, shall
the general Constitution be so amended as to extend
this right of suffrage? If, with this opportunity,
those who believe in woman suffrage fail, they must
be content; for I agree with the Senators upon the
opposite side of the Chamber and with all who hold
that if the suffrage is to be extended at all, it
must be extended by the operation of existing law.
I believe it to be an innate right; yet an innate
right must be exercised only by the consent of the
controling forces of the State. That is all that
woman asks. That is all that any one asks who
believes in this right belonging to her sex.
As bearing simply upon the question
whether there is a demand by a respectable number
of people to be heard on this issue, I desire to read
one or two documents in my possession. I offer
in this connection, in addition to the innumerable
petitions which have been placed before the Senate
and before the other House, the petition of the Women’s
Christian Temperance Union. I take it that no
Senator will raise the question whether this organization
be or be not composed of the very elite of
the women of America. At least two hundred thousand
of the Christian women of this country are represented
in this organization. It is national in its character
and scope; it is international, and it exists in every
State and in every Territory of the Union. By
their officers, Miss Frances E. Willard, the president;
Mrs. Caroline B. Buell, corresponding secretary; Mrs.
Mary A. Woodbridge, recording secretary; Mrs. L.M.N.
Stevens, assistant recording secretary; Miss Esther
Pugh, treasurer; Mrs. Zerelda G. Wallace, superintendent
of department of franchise, and Mrs. Henrietta B.
Wall, secretary of department of franchise, they bring
this petition to the Senate. It has been indorsed
by the action of the body at large. They say:
Believing that governments can be just
only when deriving their powers from the consent
of the governed, and that in a government professing
to be a government of the people, all the people of
a mature age should have a voice, and that all
class-legislation and unjust discrimination against
the rights and privileges of any citizen is fraught
with danger to the republic, and inasmuch as the
ballot in popular governments is a most potent element
in all moral and social reforms:
We, therefore, on behalf of the hundreds
of thousands of Christian women engaged in philanthropic
effort, pray you to use your influence, and vote
for the passage of a sixteenth amendment to the
Constitution of the United States, prohibiting the
disfranchisement of any citizen on the ground of
sex.
I have also just received, in addition
to other matter before the Senate, the petition of
the Indianapolis Suffrage Association, or of that
department of the Women’s Christian Temperance
Union which has the control of the discussion and
management of the operations of the union with reference
to the suffrage. I shall not take the time of
the Senate to read it. The letter transmitting
the petition is as follows:
INDIANAPOLIS, IND., January
12, 1886.
DEAR SIR: I have sent the inclosed
petitions and arguments to every member on the
Committee on Woman Suffrage, hoping if they are
read they may have some influence in securing a favorable
report for the passage of a sixteenth amendment,
giving the ballot to women.
Will you urge upon the members
of the committee the importance of
their perusal?
Respectfully,
MRS. Z.G. WALLACE, Sup’t
Dep’t for Franchise of N.W.C.T.U.
Hon. H.W. BLAIR.
I will add in this connection a letter
lately received by myself, written by a lady who may
not be so distinguished in the annals of the country,
yet, at the same time, she has attained to such a position
in the society where she lives that she holds the
office of postmaster by the sanction of the Government,
and has held it for many years. She seems, as
other ladies have seemed, to possess the capacity to
perform the duties of this governmental office, so
far as I know, to universal satisfaction. At
all events, it is the truth that no woman, so far as
I have ever heard, holding the office of postmaster,
and no woman who has ever held the position of clerk
under the Government, or who has ever discharged in
State or in Nation any executive or administrative
function, has as yet been a defaulter, or been guilty
of any misconduct or malversation in office, or contributed
anything by her own conduct to the disgrace of the
appointing or creating official power. This woman
says:
NEW LONDON, WIS., January
18, 1887.
Hon. H.W. BLAIR, Washington,
D.C.:
DEAR SIR: Thank you for the address
you sent; also for your kindness in remembering
us poor mortals who can scarcely get a hearing
in such an august body as the Senate of these United
States, though I have reason to believe we furnished
the men to fill those seats.
There is something supremely ridiculous
in the attitude of a man who tells you women are
angelic in their nature; that it is his veneration
for the high and lofty position they occupy which hopes
to keep them forever from the dirty vortex of politics,
and then to see him glower at her because she
wishes politics were not so dirty, and believes
the mother element, by all that makes humanity to
her doubly sacred, is just what is needed for its purification.
We have become tired of hearing
and reiterating the same old
theories and are pleased that
you branched out in a new direction,
and your argument contains
so much which is new and fresh.
We do care for this inestimable boon
which one-half the people of this Republic have
seized, and are claiming that God gave it to them
and are working very zealously to help God keep it
for them. (We will remember the Joshua who
leads us out of bondage.)
I used to think the Prohibition party
would be our Moses, but that has only gone so
far as to say, “You boost us upon a high and
mighty pedestal, and when we see our way clear
to pull you after us we will venture to do so;
but you can not expect it while we run any risk
of becoming unpopular thereby.”
Liberty stands a goddess upon the very
dome of our Capitol, Liberty’s lamp shines
far out into the darkness, a beacon to the oppressed,
a dazzling ray of hope to serf and bondsmen of other
climes, yet here a sword unforbidden is piercing
the heart of the mother whose son believes God
has made us to differ so that he can go astray
and return. But, alas, he does not return.
Help us to stand upon the same political
footing with our brother; this will open both
his and our eyes and compel him to stand upon the
same moral footing with us. Only this can usher
in millenium’s dawn.
This letter is signed, by Hannah E.
Patchin, postmaster at New London, Wis.
As bearing upon the extent of this
agitation, I have many other letters of the same character
and numerous arguments by women upon this subject,
but I can not ask the attention of the Senate to them,
for what I most of all want is a vote. I desire
a record upon this question. However, I ought
to read this letter, which is dated Salina, Kans.,
December 13, 1886. The writer is Mrs. Laura M.
Johns. She is connected with the suffrage movement
in that State, and as bearing upon the extent of this
movement and as illustrative not only of the condition
of the question in Kansas, but very largely throughout
the country, perhaps, especially throughout the northern
part of the country, I read this and leave others
of like character, as they are, because we have not
the time:
I am deeply interested in the fate of
the now pending resolution proposing an amendment
to the Constitution of the United States, conferring
upon women the exercise of the suffrage. The right
is theirs now.
I see, in speaking to that resolution
on December 8 in the Senate, that you refer to
Miss Anthony’s experiences in the October campaign
in Kansas as evidence in part of the growth of interest
in this movement, and of sentiment favorable to
it, and I am writing now just to tell you about
it.
When I planned and arranged for those
eleven conventions in eleven fine cities of this
State, I thought I knew that the people of Kansas
felt a strong interest in the question of woman suffrage;
but when with Miss Anthony and others I saw immense
audiences of Kansas people receive the gospel
of equal suffrage with enthusiasm, saw them sitting
uncomfortably crowded, or standing to listen for
hours to arguments in favor of suffrage for women:
saw the organization of strong and ably officered
local, county, and district associations of the
best and “brainiest” men and women in
our first cities for the perpetuation of woman
suffrage teachings; saw people of the highest
social, professional, and business position give
time, money and influence, to this cause; saw Miss
Anthony’s life work honored and her feted and
most highly commended, I concluded that I had
before known but half of the interest and favorable
sentiment in Kansas on this question. These meetings
were very largely attended, and by all classes, and
by people of all shades of religious and political
belief. The representative people of the
labor party were there, ministers, lawyers, all
professions, and all trades.
No audiences could have been more thoroughly
representative of the people; and as we held one
(and more) convention in each Congressional district
in the State, we certainly had, from the votes
of those audiences in eleven cities, a truthful expression
of the feeling of the people of the State of Kansas
on this question. Many of the friends of
the cause here are very willing to risk our fate
to the popular vote.
In our conventions Miss Anthony
was in the habit of putting the
following questions to vote:
“Are you in favor of
equal suffrage for women?”
“Do you desire that
your Senators, INGALLS and PLUMB, and your
seven Congressmen shall vote
for the sixteenth amendment to the
Federal Constitution?”
and
“Do you desire your
Legislature to extend municipal suffrage to
women?”
In response there always came
a rousing “yes,” except when the
vote was a rising one, and
then the house rose in a solid body.
Miss Anthony’s call
for the negative vote was answered by silence.
Petitions for municipal suffrage in
Kansas are rolling up enormously. People
sign them now who refused to do so last year.
I tell you it is catching. Many people here
are disgusted with our asking for such a modicum
as municipal suffrage, and say they would rather
sign a petition asking for the submission of an amendment
to our State constitution giving us State suffrage.
We have speakers now at work all over the State,
their audiences and reception are enthusiastic,
and their most radical utterances in favor of
woman are the most kindly received and gain them the
most applause.
And further to the same effect.
I shall offer nothing more of that kind, but I have
come in possession of some data bearing upon the question
of the intellect of woman. The real objection
seems to me to he that she does not know enough to
vote; that it is the ignorant ballot that is dangerous;
but that is a subject which of course I have no time
to go into. However, I have some data collected
very recently, and at my request, by a most intelligent
gentleman of the State of Maine. Either of the
Senators from that State will bear witness as to the
high character of this gentleman, Mr. Jordan.
He sent the data to me a few days ago. They show
the relative standing of the two sexes in the high
schools in the State of Maine where they are being
educated together, and in one of the colleges of that
State:
High school No. 1. Average
rank on scale of 100. 1882: boys 88.7,
girls 91; 1883: boys 88.2, girls 91.3; 1884:
boys 88.8, girls 91.9 (of the graduating class
7 girls and 1 boy were the eight highest in rank
for the four years’ course); 1885: boys
88.6, girls 91.4 (eight highest in rank for four
years’ course, 4 boys and 4 girls); 1886:
boys 88.2, girls 91 (eight highest in rank for
four years’ course, 7 girls and I boy).
High school No. 2. Average
rank on scale of 100. 1886: boys
90, girls 98 (six highest
in rank for four years’ course,
girls).
College. Average rank
for fall term of the junior year on the scale
of 40. 1882: boys 37.75, girls 37.93;
1883: boys 38.03, girls 38.70; 1884:
boys 38.18, girls 88.59; 1885; boys 38.33, girls
38.13.
With only this last exception the
average of the girls and young ladies in the high
schools and at this institution of liberal training
is substantially higher than that of the boys.
I simply give that fact in passing, and there leave
the matter.
I desire in closing simply to call
for the reading of the joint resolution. I could
say nothing to quicken the sense of the Senate on
the importance of the question about to be taken.
It concerns one-half of our countrymen, one-half of
the citizens of the United States, but it is more
than that, Mr. President. This question is radical,
and it concerns the condition of the whole human race.
I believe that in the agitation of this question lies
the fate of republican government, and in that of
republican government lies the fate of mankind.
I ask for the reading of the joint resolution.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The joint
resolution is before the Senate as in Committee of
the Whole. It has been read. Does the Senator
desire to have it read again?
Mr. BLAIR. Has it been read this afternoon?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. It has been.
Mr. BLAIR. That is all then.
Now, I wish to have printed in the RECORD, by reason
of the printed matter that has gone into the RECORD
upon the other side, the arguments of Miss Anthony
and her associates before the Senate committee, which
is out of print as a document. These arguments
are very terse and brief. I think it only just
that woman, who is most interested, should be heard,
at least under the circumstances when she has herself
been heard on the other side through printed matter.
It will not be burdensome to the RECORD, and I ask
that this be done.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Chair hears no objection
to the suggestion.
The document will be printed in the RECORD.
The document is as follows:
ARGUMENTS BEFORE THE SELECT
COMMITTEE ON WOMAN SUFFRAGE, UNITED
STATES SENATE, MARCH 7, 1884.
By a committee of the Sixteenth Annual
Washington Convention of the National Woman Suffrage
Association, in favor of a sixteenth amendment
to the Constitution of the United States, that shall
protect the right of women citizens to vote in
the several States of the Union.
Order of proceeding.
The CHAIRMAN (Senator COCKRELL).
We have allotted the time to be
divided as the speakers may
desire among themselves. We are now
ready to hear the ladies.
Miss SUSAN B. ANTHONY. Mr. Chairman
and gentlemen of the select committee: This
is the sixteenth time that we have come before Congress
in person, and the nineteenth annually by petitions.
Ever since the war, from the winter of 1865-’66,
we have regularly sent up petitions asking for
the national protection of the citizen’s right
to vote when the citizen happens to be a woman.
We are here again for the same purpose. I
do not propose to speak now, but to introduce
the other speakers, and at the close perhaps will state
to the committee the reasons why we come to Congress.
The other speakers will give their thought from
the standpoint of their respective States.
I will first introduce to the committee Mrs. Harriet
R. Shattuck, of Boston, Mass.
REMARKS BY MRS. HARRIET R.
SHATTUCK.
Mrs. SHATTUCK. Mr. Chairman and
gentlemen: It seems as if it were almost
unnecessary for us to come here at this meeting, because
I feel that all we have to say and all we have
to claim is known to you, and we can not add anything
to what has been said in the past sixteen years.
But I should like to say one thing,
and that is, that in my work it has seemed that
if we could convince everybody of the motives of
the suffragists we would go far toward removing prejudices.
I know that those motives are very much misunderstood.
Persons think of us as ambitious women, who are
desirous for fame, and who merely come forward
to make speeches and get before the public, or else
they think that we are unfortunate beings with no homes,
or unhappy wives, who are getting our livelihood
in this sort of way. If we could convince
every man who has a vote in this Republic that
this is not the case, I believe we could go far toward
removing the prejudice against us. If we could
make them see that we are working here merely
because we know that the cause is right, and we
feel that we must work for it, that there is a power
outside of ourselves which impels us onward, which
says to us: go forward and speak to the people
and try to bring them up to a sense of their duty
and of our right. This is the belief that I have
in regard to our position on this question. It
is a matter of duty with us, and that is all.
In Massachusetts I represent a very
much larger number of women than is supposed.
It has always been said that very few women wish to
vote. Believing that this objection, although
it has nothing to do with the rights of the cause,
ought to be met, the association of which I am
president inaugurated last year a sort of canvass,
which I believe never had been attempted before,
whereby we obtained the proportion of women in
favor and opposed to suffrage in different localities
of our State. We took four localities in the
city of Boston, two in smaller cities, and two in the
country districts, and one also of school teachers
in nine schools of one town. Those school
teachers were unanimously in favor of suffrage, and
in the nine localities we found that the proportion
of women in favor was very large as against those
opposed. The total of women canvassed was
814. Those in favor were 405; those opposed,
44; indifferent, 166; refused to sign, 160; not
seen, 39. This, you see, is a very large
proportion in favor. Those indifferent, and
those who were not seen, were not included, because
we claim that nobody can yet say that they are
opposed or in favor until they declare themselves;
but the 405 in favor against the 44 opposed were
as 9 to 1. These canvasses were made by women
who were of perfect respectability and responsibility,
and they swore before a justice of the peace as
to the truth of their statements.
So we have in Massachusetts
this reliable canvass of the number of
women in favor as to those
opposed, and we find that it is 9 to 1.
These women, then, are the class whom
I represent here, and they are women who can not
come here themselves. Very few women in the country
can come here and do this work, or do the work in their
States, because they are in their homes attending
to their duties, but none the less are they believers
in this cause. We would not any more than
any man in the country ask a woman to leave her home
duties to go into this work, but a few of us are
so situated that we can do it, and we come here
and we go to the State Legislatures representing
all the women of the country in this work.
What we ask is, not that we may have
the ballot to obtain any particular thing, although
we know that better things will come about from
it, but merely because it is our right, and as a matter
of justice we claim it as human beings and as citizens,
and as moral, responsible, and spiritual beings,
whose voice ought to be heard in the Government,
and who ought to take hand with men and help the
world to become better.
Gentlemen, you have kept women just
a little step below you. It is only a short
step. You shower down favors upon us it is true,
still we remain below you, the recipients of favors
without the right to take what is our own.
We ask that this shall be changed; that you shall
take us by the hand and lift us up to the same political
level with you, where we shall have rights with you,
and stand equal with you before the law.
REMARKS BY MRS. MAY WRIGHT
SEWALL.
Miss ANTHONY. I will
now introduce to the committee Mrs. May
Wright Sewall, of Indianapolis,
who is the chairman of our
executive committee.
Mrs. SEWALL. Gentlemen of the committee:
Gentlemen, I believe, differ somewhat in their
political opinions. It will not then be surprising,
I suppose, that I should differ somewhat from my friend
in regard to the knowledge that you probably possess
upon our question. I do not believe that
you know all that we know about the women of this
country, for I believe that if you did know even
all that I know, and my knowledge is much more limited
than that of many of my sisters, long ago the sixteenth
amendment, for which we ask, would have been passed
through your influence.
I remember that when I was here two
years ago and had the honor of appearing before
the committee, who granted us, on that occasion, what
you are so kind and courteous to grant on this occasion,
an opportunity to speak before you, I told you
that I represented at least seventy thousand women
who had asked for the ballot in my State, and
I tried then to remind the members of the committee
that had seventy thousand Indiana men asked for
any measure from the Congress that then occupied
this Capitol, that measure would have secured
the most deliberate consideration from their hands,
and, in all probability, its passage by the Congress.
Of that there can be no doubt.
I do not wish to exaggerate my constituency,
but during the last two years, and since I had
the honor of addressing the committee, the work
of woman suffrage has progressed very rapidly in my
State. The number of women who have found themselves
in circumstances to work openly, and whose spirit
has been drawn into it, has largely increased,
and as the workers have multiplied the results
have increased. While we have not taken the careful
canvass that has been so wisely and judiciously
taken in Massachusetts, so that I can present
to you the exact number of women who would to-day
appeal for suffrage, I know that I can, far within
the bounds of possible truth, state that while I represented
seventy thousand women in my State two years ago,
who desired the adoption of the sixteenth amendment,
I represent to-day twice that number.
Should any one come up from Indiana,
pivotal State as it has been long called in national
elections, saying that he represented the wish
of one hundred and forty thousand Indiana men, gentlemen,
would you scorn his appeal? Would you treat
it lightly? Not at all. You know that
it would receive the most candid consideration.
You know that it would receive not merely respectful
consideration, but immediate and prompt and just
action upon your part.
I have been told since I have reached
Washington that of all women in the country Indiana
women have the least to complain of, and the least
reason for coming to the United States Capitol with
their petitions and the statement of their needs,
because we have received from our own Legislature
such amendments and amelioration of the old unjust
laws. In one sense it is true that we are the
recipients in our own State of many civil rights
and of a very large degree of civil equality.
It is true that as respects property rights, and
as respects industrial rights, the women of my
own State may perhaps be the envy of all other women
in the land, but, gentlemen, you have always told
men that the greater their rights and the more
numerous their privileges the greater their responsibilities.
That is equally true of woman, and simply because
our property rights are enlarged, because our industrial
field is enlarged, because we have more women who
are producers in the industrial world, recognized
as such, who own property in their own names,
and consequently pay taxes upon that property, and
thereby have greater financial and larger social, as
well as industrial and business interests at stake
in our own commonwealth, and in the manner in
which the administration of national affairs is
conducted because of all these privileges
we the more need the power which shall emphasize
our influence upon political action.
You know that industrial and property
rights are in the hands of the law-makers and
the executors of the laws. Therefore, because
of our advanced position in that matter, we the
more need the recognition of our political equality.
I say the recognition of our political equality,
because I believe the equality already exists.
I believe it waits simply for your recognition; that
were the Constitution now justly construed, and
the word “citizens,” as used in your
Constitution, justly applied it would include us, the
women of this country. So I ask for the recognition
of an equality that we already possess.
Further, because of what we have we
ask for more. Because of the duties that
we are commanded to do, we ask for more. My friend
has said, and it is true in some respects, that
men have always kept us just a little below them
where they could shower upon us favors, and they
have always done that generously. So they have,
but, gentlemen, has your sex been more generous
in its favors to women than women have been generous
toward your sex in their favors? Neither
one can do without the other: neither can dispense
with the service of the other; neither can dispense
with the reverence of the other, with the aid
of the other in domestic life, in social life.
The men of this nation are rapidly finding that
they can not dispense with the service of women in
business life. I know that they are also
feeling the need of what they call the moral support
of women in their public life, and in their political
life.
I always feel that it is not for women
alone that I appeal. As men have long represented
me, or assumed to do so, and as the men of my
own family always have done so justly and most chivalrously,
I feel that in my appeal for political recognition
I represent them; that I represent my husband
and my brother and the interest of the sex to
which they belong, for you, gentlemen, by lifting the
women of the nation into political equality would
simply place us where we could lift you where
you never yet have stood, upon a moral equality
with us. Gentlemen, that is true. You know
it as well as I. I do not speak to you as individuals;
I speak to you as the representatives of your
sex, as I stand here the representative of mine;
and never until we are your equals politically will
the moral standard for men be what it now is for
women, and it is none too high. Let it grow
the more elevated by our growth in spirituality,
by every aspiration which we receive from the God
whence we draw our life and whence we draw our
impulses of life. Let our standard remain
where it is and be more elevated. Yours must
come up to match it, and never will it until we are
your equals politically. So it is for men,
as well as for women, that I make my appeal.
I know that there are some gentlemen
upon this committee who, when we were here two
years ago, had something to say about the rights of
the States and of their disinclination to interfere
with the rights of the States in this matter.
I have great sympathy with the gentlemen from
the South, who, I hope, do not forget that they are
representing the women of the South in their work here
at the national capital. Already some Northern
States are making rapid strides towards the enfranchisement
of their women. The men of some of the Northern
States see that they can no longer accomplish the
purposes politically which they desire to accomplish
without the aid of the women of their respective
States. Washington is the third Territory
that has added women to its voting force, and consequently
to its political power at the national capital as
well as its own capital. Oregon will undoubtedly,
as her representative will tell you to-day, soon
add its women to its voting force. The men
who believe, that each State must be left to do
this for itself will soon find that the balance of
power between the North and South is destroyed,
unless the women of the South are brought forward
to add to the political force of the South as
the women of the North are being brought forward to
add to the political force of the North.
This should not be acted upon as a partisan
measure. We do not appeal to you as Republicans
or as Democrats. We have among us Republicans
and Democrats; we have our party affiliations.
We, of course, were reared with our brothers under
the political belief and faith of our fathers,
and probably as much influenced by that rearing
as our brothers were. We shall go to strengthen
both the political parties, neither one nor the
other the more, probably. So that it is not
as a partisan measure; it is as a just measure, which
is our due, not because of what we are, gentlemen,
but because of what you are, and because of what
we are through you, of what you shall be through
us; of what we, men and women, both are by virtue
of our heritage and our one Father, our one mother
eternal, the spirit created and progressive, that
has thus far sustained us, and that will carry
us and you forward to the action which we demand
of you to take, and to the results which we anticipate
will attend upon that action.
REMARKS BY MRS. HELEN M. GOUGAR.
Miss Anthony. I think
I will call upon the other representative
of the State of Indiana to
speak now, Mrs. Helen M. Gougar, of
Lafayette, Ind.
Mrs. Gougar. Gentlemen, we are
here on behalf of the women citizens of this Republic,
asking for political freedom. I maintain
that there is no political question paramount to that
of woman suffrage before the people of America
to-day. Political parties would fain have
us believe that tariff is the great question of
the hour. Political parties know better.
It is an insult to the intelligence of the present
hour to say that when one-half of the citizens
of this Republic are denied a direct voice in
making the laws under which they shall live, that tariff,
or that the civil rights of the negro, or any other
question that can be brought up, is equal to the
one of giving political freedom to women.
So I come to ask you, as representative men, making
laws to govern the women the same as the men of
this country (and there is not a law that you
make in the United States Congress in which woman
has not an equal interest with man), to take the word
“male” out of the constitutions of
the United States and the several States, as you
have taken the word “white” out, and give
to us women a voice in the laws under which we
live.
You ask me why I am inclined to be practical
in my view of this question. In the first
place, speaking from my own standpoint, I ask
you to let me have a voice in the laws under which
I shall live because the older empires of the
earth are sending in upon our American shores
a population drawing very largely from the asylums,
yes, from the penitentiaries, the jails, and the poor-houses
of the Old World. They are emptying those men
upon our shores, and within a few months they
are intrusted with the ballot, the law-making
power in this Republic, and they and their representatives
are seated in official and legislative positions.
I, as an American-born woman, to-day enter my protest
at being compelled to live under laws made by
this class of men very largely, and myself being
rendered utterly incapable of the protection that
can only come from the ballot. While I would not
have you take this right or privilege from those
men whom we invite to our shores, I do ask you,
in the face of this immense foreign immigration,
to enfranchise the tax-paying, intelligent, moral,
native-born women of America.
Miss Anthony. And foreign
women, too.
Mrs. Gougar. Miss Anthony suggests
an amendment, and I indorse it most heartily,
and foreign women too, because if we let a foreign
man vote I say let the foreign woman vote.
I am in favor of universal suffrage.
Gentlemen, I ask this as a matter of
justice; I ask it because it is an insult to the
intelligence of the present to draw the sex line
upon any right whatever. I know there are many
objections urged, and I am sure that you have
considered this question; but I only make the
demand from the standpoint, not of sex, but of humanity.
As a Northern woman, as a woman from
Indiana, I know that we have the intelligent,
thinking, cultured, pure, patriotic men and women
with us. We have the women who are engaged in
philanthropic enterprises. We have in our
own State the signatures of over 5,000 of the
school teachers asking for woman’s ballot.
I ask you if the United States Government does
not need the voice of those 5,000 educated school
teachers as much as it needs the voice of the 240
male criminals who are, on an average, sent out of
the penitentiary of Indiana every year, who go
to the ballot-box upon every question whatever,
and make laws under which those school teachers
must live, and under which the mothers of our State
must keep their homes and rear their children?
On behalf of the mothers of this country
I demand that their hands shall be loosened before
the ballot-box, and that they shall have the privilege
of throwing the mother heart into the laws that shall
follow their sons not only to the age of majority that
only has been made legal, but is never recognized,
and so I ask you to let the mothers carry their
influence in protecting laws around the footsteps
of those boys, even after their hair has turned gray
and they have seats in the United States Congress.
I ask you to give them the power to throw protecting
laws around those boys to the very confines of
eternity. This can be done in no indirect way;
it can not be done by the silent influence; it can
not be done by prayer. While I do not underestimate
the power of prayer, I say give me my ballot on
election day that shall send pure men, good men,
intelligent men, statesmen, instead of the modern
politician, into our legislative halls. I
would rather have that ballot on election day
than the prayers of all the disfranchised women
in the universe.
So I ask you to loosen our hands.
I ask you to let us join with you in developing
this science of human government. What is politics
after all but the science of government? We are
interested in these questions, and we are investigating
them already. We have our opinions.
Recently an able man has said that we have been
grandly developed physically and mentally, but as a
nation we are a political infant. So we are,
gentlemen; we are to-day in America politically
simply an infant. Why is it? It is because
we have not recognized God’s family plan in
government man and woman together.
He created the male and female, and gave them
dominion together. We have dominion in every
other interest in society, and why shall we not
stand shoulder to shoulder and have dominion,
in the science in government, in making the laws
under which we shall live?
We are taxed to support this Government this
immense Capitol building is built largely from
the industries of the tax-paying women of this
country and yet we are denied the slightest
voice in distributing our taxes. Our foreparents
did not object to taxation, but they did object
to taxation without representation, and we, as
thinking, industrious, active American women, object
to taxation without representation. We are
willing to contribute our share to the support
of this Government, as we always have done, but
we have a right to ask for our little yes and no in
the form of the ballot so that we shall have a
direct influence in distributing the taxes.
Gentlemen, I am amenable to the gallows
and the penitentiary, and it is no more than right
that I shall have a voice in framing the laws
under which I shall he rewarded or punished. Am
I asking too much of you as representative men
of this great Government when I ask you to let
me have a voice in making the laws under which I shall
be rewarded or punished? It is written in the
law of every State in this Union that a person
in the courts shall have a jury of his peers,
yet so long as the word “male” stands as
it does in the Constitutions of the United States
and the States no woman in any State of this Union
can have a jury of her peers, I protest in the
name of justice against going into the court-room and
being compelled to run the gauntlet of the gutter
and of the saloon yes, even of the
police court and of the jail as we are
compelled to do to select a male jury to try the
interests of women, whether relating to life,
property, or reputation. So long as the word
“male” is in our constitutions just so
long we can not have a jury of our peers in any
State in the Union.
I ask that the women shall have the
right of the ballot that they may go into our
legislative halls and there provide for the prevention
rather than the cure of crime. I ask you on behalf
of the twelve hundred children under twelve years
of age who are in the poor-houses of Indiana,
of the sixteen hundred in the poor-houses of Illinois,
and on that average in every State in the Union,
that you shall take the word “male” out
of the constitutions and allow the women of this
country to sit in legislative halls and provide
homes for and look after the little waifs of society.
There are hundreds of moral questions to-day requiring
the assistance of the moral element of womanhood to
help make the laws under which we shall live.
Gentlemen, the political party that
lives in the future must fight the moral battles
of humanity. The day of blood is passed; the
day of brain and heart is upon us; and I ask you
to let the moral constituency that resides in
woman’s nature be represented. Let me
say right here that I do not believe that there is
morality in sex, but the social customs have been
such that woman has been held to a higher standard.
May the day hasten when the social custom shall
hold man to as high a moral standard as it to-day
holds woman.
This is the condition of things.
The political party that presumes to fight the
moral battles of the future must have the women in
its ranks. We are non-partisan, as has been
well said by my friend from Indiana [Mrs. Sewall.]
We come Democrats, Republicans, and Greenbackers,
and I expect if there were a half dozen other political
parties some of us would belong to them. We ask
this beneficent action upon your part because
we believe that the intelligence and the justice
of the hour is demanding it. We do not want
a political party action. We want you to keep
this question out of the canvass. We ask
you in the name of justice and humanity alone,
and not on the part of party.
I hold in my hand a petition sent from
one district in the State of Illinois with the
request that I bear it to you. Out of three hundred
electors the names of two hundred stand in this petition
that I shall leave in your hands. In this
list stand not the wife-whippers, not the drunkards,
not the dissolute, but every minister in that
town, every editor in that town, every professional
man in that town, every banker, and every prominent
business man in that town of three hundred electors.
I believe that petitions could be rolled up in
this way in every town in the Northern and in
many of the Southern States. I leave this petition
with you for your consideration.
Upon no question whatever has such a
large number of petitions been sent as upon this
demand for woman suffrage. You have the petitions
in your hands, and I ask you in the name of justice
and humanity not to let this Congress adjourn
without action.
You ask us if we are impatient.
Yes; we are impatient. Some of us may die,
and I want our grand old standard-bearer, Susan B.
Anthony, whose name will go down to history beside
that of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and
Wendell Phillips I want that woman
to go to heaven a free angel from this Republic.
The power lies in your hands to make us all free.
May the blessing of God be upon the hearts of
every one of you, gentlemen; may the scales of
prejudice fall from your eyes, and may you, representing
the Senate of the United States, have the grand
honor of telegraphing to us, to the millions of
waiting women from one end of this country to
the other, that the sixteenth amendment has been submitted
to the ratification of the several legislatures of
our States striking the word “male”
out of the constitutions; and that this shall
be, as we promise it to be, a government of the people,
for the people, and by the people.
REMARKS BY MRS. ABIGAIL SCOTT
DUNIWAY.
Miss Anthony. I now, gentlemen
of the committee, introduce to you Mrs. Abigail
Scott Duniway, from the extreme Northwest; and before
she speaks I wish to say that she has been the
one canvasser in the great State of Oregon and
Washington Territory, and that it is to Mrs. Duniway
that the women of Washington Territory are more indebted
than to all other influences for their enfranchisement.
Mrs. Duniway. Gentlemen of the
committee, do you think it possible that an agitation
like this can go on and on forever without a victory?
Do you not see that the golden moment has come for
this grand committee to achieve immortality upon
the grandest idea that has ever stirred the heart-beats
of American citizens, and will you not in the
magnanimity of noble purposes rise to meet the situation
and, accede to our demand, which in your hearts you
must know is just?
I do not come before you, gentlemen,
with the expectation to instruct you in regard
to the laws of our country. The women around
us are law-abiding women. They are the mothers,
many of them, of true and noble men, the wives,
many of them, of grand, free husbands, who are
listening, watching, waiting eagerly for successful
tidings of this great experiment.
There never was a grander theory of
government than that of these United States.
Never were grander principles enunciated upon any
platform, never so grand before and never can be
grander again, than the declaration that “all
men,” including of course all women, since
women are amenable to the laws, “are created
equal; that they are endowed by their Creator
with certain inalienable rights that to
secure these rights governments are instituted
among men, deriving their just powers from the consent
of the governed.”
Gentlemen, are we allowed the opportunity
of consent? These women who are here from
Maine to Oregon, from the Straits of Fuca to the reefs
of Florida, who in their representative capacity have
come up here so often, augmented in their numbers
year by year, looking with eyes of hope and hearts
of faith, but oftentimes with hopes deferred,
upon the final solution of this great problem, which
it is so much in your hands to hasten in its solution these
women are in earnest. My State is far away
beyond the confines of the Rocky Mountains, away
over beside the singing Pacific sea, but the spirit
of liberty is among us there, and the public heart
has been stirred. The hearts of our men have
been moved to listen to our demands, and in Washington
Territory, as one speaker has informed you, women
to-day are endowed with full and free enfranchisement,
and the rejoicing throughout that Territory is
universal.
In Oregon men have also listened to
our demand, and the Legislature has in two successive
sessions agreed upon a proposition to amend our
State constitution, a proposition which will be
submitted for ratification to our voters at the coming
June election. It is simply a proposition
declaring that the right of suffrage shall not
hereafter be prohibited in the State of Oregon
on account of sex. Your action in the Senate of
the United States will greatly determine the action
of the voters of Oregon on our, or rather on their,
election day, for we stand before the public in
the anomaly of petitioners upon a great question in
which we, in its final decision, are allowed no
voice, and we can only stand with expectant hearts
and almost bated breath awaiting the action of
men who are to make this decision.
We have great hope for our victory,
because the men of the broad, free West are grand,
and chivalrous, and free. They have gone across
the mighty continent with free steps; they have raised
the standard of a new Pacific empire; they have
imbibed the spirit of liberty with their very
breath, and they have listened to us far in advance
of many of the men of the older States who have not
had their opportunity among the grand free wilds
of nature for expansion.
So all of our leaders are with us to-day.
You may go to either member of the Senate of the
United States from Oregon, and while I can not
speak so positively for the senior member, as he came
over here some years ago before the public were
so well educated as now, I can and do proudly
vouch for the late Senator-elect DOLPH, who now
has a seat upon the floor of the Senate, who is heart
and soul and hand and purse in sympathy with this
great movement for the enfranchisement of the
women of Oregon. I would also be unjust to
our worthy representative in the lower house, Hon.
M.C. George, did I not proudly speak his
name in this great connection. Men of this
class are with us, and without regard to party affiliations
we know that they are upon our side. Our governor,
our associate supreme judge for the district of
the Pacific, all of these men, are leading in
the grand free way that characterizes the men of the
West in assisting in this work. But we have alas,
that I should be compelled to say it a
great many men who pay no heed whatever to this
question. Men will be entitled to a voice in this
decision who are not, like members of Congress,
the picked men of the nation or the State, but
men, many of whom can not read, who will have
an opportunity to decide this question as far as their
ballots can go. These are they to whom the
enlightened, educated motherhood of the State
of Oregon must look largely for the decision.
This brings me to the grand point of
our coming to Congress. Some of you say to
us, “Why not leave this matter for settlement
in the different States?” When we leave
it for settlement in the different States we leave
it just as I have told you, because of the constitutional
provisions of our organic law we can not do otherwise;
but if the question were to be settled by the Legislature
of Oregon alone it would be settled now; and I, as
a representative of that State only, would have
no need of coming here; it would be settled just
as it has been settled in Washington Territory;
but when we come here to Congress it is the great
nation asking you to take such legislative action in
submitting an amendment to the Constitution of
the United States as shall recognize the equality
of these women who are here; these women who have
come here from all parts of the country, whose constituents
are looking on while we are here before you. As
we reflect that our feeblest words uttered before
this committee will go to the confines of this
nation and be cabled across the great Atlantic
and around the globe, we realize that more and more
prominently our cause is growing into public favor,
and the time is just upon us when some decision
must be made.
Gentlemen of the committee, will you
not recognize the importance of the movement?
Who among you will be our standard-bearer? Who
among you will achieve immortality by standing
up in these halls in which we are forbidden to
speak, and in the magnanimity of your own free
wills and noble hearts champion the woman’s cause
and make us before the law, as we of right ought
now to be, free and independent?
REMARKS BY MRS. CAROLINE GILKEY
ROGERS.
Miss ANTHONY. I now call
upon Mrs. Caroline Gilkey Rogers, of
Lansingburg, N.Y., to address
the committee.
Mrs. ROGERS. Mr. Chairman
and gentlemen of the committee, in our
efforts to secure the right
of citizenship we appeal only to your
sense of justice and love
of fair dealing.
We ask for the ballot because it is
the symbol of equality. There is no other
recognized symbol of equality in this country.
We ask for the ballot that we may be equal to
man before the law. We urge a twofold right our
right to the Republic, the Republic’s right
to us. We believe the interests of the country
are identical with the interests of all its citizens,
including women, and that the Government can no
longer afford to shut women out from the affairs of
the State and nation, and wise men are beginning to
know that they are needed in the Government; that
they are needed where our laws are made as well
as where they are violated.
Many admit the justice of
our claim, but will say, Is it safe? Is
it expedient? It is always
safe to do right; is always expedient
to be just. Justice can
never bring evil in its train.
The question is asked how and what would
the women do in the State and nation? We
do not pledge ourselves to anything. I claim that
we can not have a better government than that of
the people. The present Government is of
only a part of the people. We have not yet
entered upon the system of higher arbitration, because
the Government is of man only. If we had
been marching along with you all this time I trust
we should have reached a higher plane of civilization.
We believe that all the virtue
of the world can take care of
all the evil, and all the
intelligence can take care of all the
ignorance. Let us have
all the virtue confront all the vice.
There is no need to do battle in this
matter. In all kindness and gentleness we
urge our claims. There is no need to declare war
upon men, for the best of men in this country are
with us heart and soul.
It is a common remark that unless some
new element is infused into our political life
our nation is doomed to destruction. What more
fitting element than the noble type of American
womanhood, who have taught our Presidents, Senators,
and Congressmen the rudiments of all they know.
Think of all the foreigners and all
our own native-born ignorant men who can not write
their own names or read the Declaration of Independence
making laws for such women as Elizabeth Cady Stanton
and Susan B. Anthony. Think of jurors drawn
from these ranks to watch and try young girls
for crimes often committed against them when the
male criminal goes free. Think of a single one
of these votes on election day outweighing all
the women in the country. Is it not humiliating
for me to sit, a political cipher, and see the colored
man in my employ, to whom I have taught the alphabet,
go out on election day and say by his vote what
shall be done with my tax money. How would
you like it?
When we think of the wives trampled
on by husbands whom the law has taught them to
regard as inferior beings, and of the mothers whose
children are torn from their arms by the direct behest
of the law at the bidding of a dead or living
father, when we think of these things, our hearts
ache with pity and indignation.
If mothers could only realize how the
laws which they have no voice in making and no
power to change affect them at every point, how
they enter every door, whether palace or hovel, touch,
limit, and bind, every article and inmate from
the smallest child up, no woman, however shrinking
and delicate, can escape it, they would get beyond
the meaningless cry, “I have all the rights I
want.” Do these women know that in
most States in the Union the shameful fact that
no woman has any legal rights to her own child, except
it is born out of wedlock! In these States
there is not a line of positive law to protect
the mother; the father is the legal protector
and guardian of the children.
Under the laws of most of
the States to-day a husband may by his
last will bequeath his child
away from its mother, so that she
might, if the guardian chose,
never see it again.
The husband may have been a very bad
man, and in a moment of anger made the will.
The guardian he has appointed may turn out a malicious
man, and take pleasure in tormenting the mother, or
he may bring up the children in a way that the
mother thinks ruinous to them, and she has no
redress in law. Why do not all the fortunate
mothers in the land cry out against such a law?
Why do not all women say, “Inasmuch as the
law has done this wrong unto the least of these
my sisters it has done it unto me.” It is
true that men are almost always better than their
laws, but while a bad law remains on the statute-books
it gives to an unscrupulous man a right to be
as bad as the law.
It is often said to us when all the
women ask for the ballot it will be granted.
Did all the married women petition the Legislatures
of their States to secure to them the right to hold
in their own name the property that belonged to
them? To secure to the poor forsaken wife
the right to her earnings?
All the women did not ask for these
rights, but all accepted them with joy and gladness
when they were obtained, and so it will be with
the franchise. But woman’s right to self-government
does not depend upon the numbers that demand it,
but upon precisely the same principles that man
claims it for himself.
Where did man get the authority that
he now claims to govern one-half of humanity,
from what power the right to place woman, his
helpmeet in life, in an inferior position? Came
it from nature? Nature made woman his superior
when she made her his mother his equal
when she fitted her to hold the sacred position of
wife. Did women meet in council and voluntarily
give up all their claim to be their own law-makers?
The power of the strong over
the weak makes man the master. Yes,
then, and then only, does
he gain the authority.
It is all very well to say “convert
the women.” While we most heartily
wish they could all feel as we do, yet when it comes
to the decision of this great question they are
mere ciphers, for if this question is settled
by the States it will be left to the voters, not
to the women to decide. Or if suffrage comes to
women through a sixteenth amendment of the national
Constitution, it will be decided by Legislatures
elected by men. In neither case will women
have an opportunity of passing; upon the question.
So reason tells us we must devote our best efforts
to converting those to whom we must look for the
removal of our disabilities, which now prevent
our exercising the right of suffrage.
The arguments in favor of the enfranchisement
of women are truths strong and unanswerable, and
as old as the free institutions of our Government.
The principle of “taxation without representation
is tyranny” applies to women as well as men,
and is as true to-day as it was a hundred years
ago.
Our demand for the ballot
is the great onward step of the century,
and not, as some claim, the
idiosyncracies of a few unbalanced
minds.
Every argument that has been urged against
this question of woman’s suffrage has been
urged against every reform. Yet the reforms
have fought their way onward and become a part of the
glorious history of humanity.
So it will be with suffrage. “You
can stop the crowing of the cock, but you can
not stop the dawn of the morning.” And now,
gentlemen, you are responsible, not for the laws
you find on the statute books, but for those you
leave there.
REMARKS BY MRS. MARY SEYMOUR
HOWELL.
Miss ANTHONY. I now introduce
to the committee Mrs. Mary Seymour
Howell, the president of the
Albany, N.Y., State society.
Mrs. HOWELL. Mr. Chairman and gentlemen
of the committee: Miss Anthony gives me five
minutes. I shall have to talk very rapidly.
I ask you for the ballot because of the very first
principle that is often repeated to you, that
“taxation without representation is tyranny.”
I come from the city of Albany, where many of my sisters
are taxed for millions of dollars. There are
three or four women in the city of Albany who
are worth their millions, and yet they have no
voice in the laws that govern and control them.
One of our great State senators has said that
you can not argue five minutes against woman suffrage
without repudiating every principle that this
great Republic is founded upon.
I ask you also for the ballot for the
large class of women who are not taxed. They
need it more than the women who are taxed, I have
found in every work that I have conducted that
because I am a woman I am not paid for that work
as a man is paid for similar work.
You have heard, and perhaps some of
you are thinking I hope not that
women should be at home. I wish to say to you
that there are millions of women in the United
States who have no homes. There are millions
of women who are trying to earn their bread and hold
their purity sacred. For that class of women I
appeal to you. In the city of Albany there
are hundreds of women in our factories making
the shirts that you can buy for $1.50 and $2, and all
those women are paid for making the shirts is
4 cents apiece. There are in the State of
New York 18,000 teachers. When I was a teacher
and taught with gentlemen in our academies, I received
about one-fourth of the pay because I happened
to be a woman. I consider it an insult that
forever burns in my soul, that I am to be handed a
mere pittance in comparison with what man receives
for same quality of work. When I was sent
out by our superintendent of public instruction
to hold conventions of teachers, as I have often
done in our State of New York, and when I did one-third
more work than the men teachers so sent out, but
because I was a woman and had not the ballot,
I was only paid about half as much as the man;
and saying that once to our superintendent of public
instruction in Albany, he said, “Mrs. Howell,
just as soon as you get the ballot and have a
political influence in the work you will have
the same pay as a man.”
We ask for the ballot for that great
army of fallen women who walk our streets and
who break up our homes and ruin our husbands and our
dear boys. We ask it for those women. The
ballot will lift them up. Hundreds and thousands
of women give up their purity for the sake of
starving children and families. There is many
a woman who goes to a life of degradation and
pollution shedding burning tears over her 4-cent
shirts.
We ask for the ballot for the good of
the race, Huxley says, “admitting for the
sake of argument that woman is the weaker, mentally
and physically, for that reason she should have the
ballot and should have every help that the world
can give her.” When you debar from
your councils and legislative halls the purity,
the spirituality, and the love of woman then those
legislative halls and those councils are apt to
become coarse and brutal, God gave us to you to
help you in this little journey to a better land,
and by our love and our intellect to help to make our
country pure and noble, and if you would have statesmen
you must have states we men to bear them.
I ask you also for the ballot that I
may decide what I am. I stand before you,
but I do not know to-day whether I am legally a “person”
according to the law. It has been decided in some
States that we are not “persons.”
In the State of New York, in one village, it was
decided that women are not inhabitants. So I
should like to know whether I am a person, whether
I am an inhabitant, and above all I ask you for
the ballot that I may become a citizen of this
great Republic.
Gentlemen, you see before you this great
convention of women from the Atlantic slopes to
the Pacific Ocean, from the North to the South.
We are in dead earnest. A reform never goes backward.
This is a question that is before the American
nation. Will you do your duty and give us
our liberty, or will you leave it for braver hearts
to do what must be done? For, like our forefathers,
we will ask until we have gained it.
Ever the world goes round
and round; Ever the truth comes
uppermost; and ever is justice
done.
REMARKS BY MRS. LILLIE DEVEREUX
BLAKE.
Miss ANTHONY. I now have the pleasure
of introducing to the committee Mrs. Lillie Devereux
Blake, of New York. New York is a great State,
and therefore it has three representatives here to-day.
Mrs. BLAKE. Mr. Chairman and gentlemen
of the committee: A recent writer in an English
magazine, in speaking of the great advantage which
to-day flows to the laboring classes of that nation
from having received the right of suffrage, made
the statement that disfranchised classes are oppressed,
not because there is any desire whatever to do
injustice to them, but because they are forgotten.
We have year after year and session after session of
our legislatures and of our Congresses proved the
correctness of this statement. While we have
nothing to complain of in the courtesy which we
receive in private life, still when we see masses
of men assembled together for political action, whether
it be of the nation or of the State, we find that
the women are totally forgotten.
In the limited time that is mine I cannot
go into any lengthy exposition upon this point.
I will simply call your attention to the total
forgetfulness of the Congress of the United States
to the debt owed to the women of this nation during
the war. You have passed a pension bill upon
which there has been much comment throughout the
nation, and yet, when an old army nurse applies for
a pension, a woman who is broken down by her devotion
to the nation in hospitals and upon the battle-field,
she is met at the door of the Pension Bureau by
this statement, “the Government has made
no appropriation for the services of women in the war.”
One of these women is an old nurse whom some of
you may remember, Mother Bickerdyke, who went
out onto many a battle-field when she was in the
prime of life, twenty years ago, and at the risk of
her life lifted men, who were wounded, in her
arms, and carried them to a place of safety.
She is an old woman now, and where is she? What
reward the nation bestowed to her faithful services?
The nation has a pension for every man who has
served this nation, even down to the boy recruit
who was out but three months; but Mother Bickerdyke,
though her health has never been good since her service
then, is earning her living at the wash-tub, a monument
to the ingratitude of a Republic as great as was
that when Belisarius begged in the streets of
Rome.
I bring up this illustration alone out
of innumerable others that are possible, to try
to impress upon your minds that we are forgotten.
It is not from any unkindness on your part. Who
would think for one moment, looking upon the kindly
faces of this committee, that any man on it would
do an injustice to women, especially if she were
old and feeble? But because we have no right
to vote, as I said, our interests are overlooked and
forgotten.
It is often said that we have too many
voters; that the aggregate of vice and ignorance
among us should not be increased by giving women
the right of suffrage. I wish to remind you of
the fact that in the enormous immigration that
pours to our shores every year, numbering somewhere
in the neighborhood of half a million, there come,
twice as many men as women. The figures for the
last year were two hundred and twenty-three thousand
men, and one hundred and thirteen thousand women.
What does this mean? It means a
steady influx of this foreign element; it means
a constant preponderance of the masculine over the
feminine; and it means also, of course, a preponderance
of the voting power of the foreigner as compared
to the native born. To those who fear that
our American institutions are threatened by this
gigantic inroad of foreigners I commend the reflection
that the best safeguard against any such preponderance
of foreign nations or of foreign influence is
to put the ballot in the hands of the American-born
women, And of all other women also, so that if
the foreign-born man overbalances us in numbers we
shall be always in a preponderance on the side
of the liberty which is secured by our institutions.
It is because, as many of my predecessors
have said, of the different elements represented
by the two sexes, that we are asking for this
liberty. When I was recently in the capitol of
my own State of New York, I was reminded there
of the difference of temperament between the sexes
by seeing how children act when coming to the
doors of the capitol, which have been constructed so
that they are very hard to open. Whether that
is because they want to keep us women out or not
I am not able to say; but for some reason the
doors are so constructed that it is nearly impossible
to open them. I saw a number of little girls
coming in through those doors every
child held the door for those who were to follow.
A number of little boys followed just after, and every
boy rushed through and let the door shut in the
face of the one who was coming behind him.
That is a good illustration of the different qualities
of the sexes. Those boys were not unkind, they
simply represented that onward push which is one
of the grandest characteristics of your sex; and
the little girls, on the other hand, represented
that gentleness and thoughtfulness of others which
is eminently a characteristic of women.
This woman element is needed in every
branch of the Government. Look at the wholesale
destruction of the forests throughout our nation,
which has gone on until it brings direct destruction
to the land on the lines of the great rivers of
the West, and threatens us even in New York with
destroying at once the beauty and usefulness of
our far-famed Hudson. If women were in the Government
do you not think they would protect the economic interests
of the nation? They are the born and trained economists
of the world, and when you call them to your assistance
you will find an element that has not heretofore
been felt with the weight which it deserves.
As we walk through the Capitol we are
struck with the significance of the symbolism
on every side; we view the adornments in the beautiful
room, and we find here everywhere emblematically woman’s
figure. Here is woman representing even war,
and there are women representing grace and loveliness
and the fullness of the harvest; and, above all,
they are extending their protecting arms over the
little children. Gentlemen, I leave you under
this symbolism, hoping that you will see in it
the type of a coming day when we shall have women
and men united together in the national councils in
this great building.
REMARKS BY DR. CLEMENCE S.
LOZIER.
Miss ANTHONY. I meant to have said,
as I introduced Mrs. Blake, that sitting on the
sofa is Dr. Clemence S. Lozier, who declines to
speak, but I want her to stand up, because she represents
New York city.
Dr. LOZIER. I thank you, I am very
happy to be here, but I am not a fluent speaker.
I feel in my heart that I know what justice means;
that I know what mercy means, and in all my rounds
of duty in my profession I am happy to extend
not only food but shelter to many poor ones.
The need of the ballot for working-girls and those
who pay no taxes is not understood. The Saviour
said, seeing the poor widow cast her two mites,
which make a farthing, into the public treasury,
“This poor widow hath cast more in than all they
which have cast into the treasury.”
I see this among the poor working-girls of the
city of New York; sick, in a little garret bedroom,
perhaps, and although needing medical care and needing
food, they will say to me, “above all things
else, if I could only pay the rent.”
The rent of their little rooms goes into the coffers
of their landlords and pays taxes. The poor women
of the city of New York and everywhere are the
grandest upholders of this Government. I
believe they pay indirectly more taxes than the monopoly
kings of our country. It is for them that I want
the ballot.
REMARKS BY MRS. ELIZABETH
BOYNTON HARBERT.
Miss ANTHONY. I now introduce to
the committee Mrs. Elizabeth Boynton Harbert,
of Illinois, and before Mrs. Harbert speaks I
wish to say that for the last six years she has edited
a department of the Chicago Inter-Ocean called
the “Women’s Kingdom.”
Mrs. HARBERT. Mr. Chairman and
honorable gentlemen of the committee, after the
eloquent rhetoric to which you have listened I
merely come in these five minutes with a plain statement
of facts. Some friends have said, “Here
is the same company of women that year after year
besiege you with their petitions.” We are
here to-day in a representative capacity.
From the great State of Illinois I come, representing
200,000 men and women of that State who have recorded
their written petitions for woman’s ballot,
90,000 of these being citizens under the law male
voters; those 90,000 having signed petitions for
the right of women to vote on the temperance question;
90,000 women also signed those petitions; 50,000
men and women signed the petitions for the school vote,
and nearly 60,000 more have signed petitions that
the right of suffrage might be accorded to woman.
This growth of public sentiment has
been occasioned by the needs of the children and
the working-women of that great State. I come
here to ask you to make a niche in the statesmanship
and legislation of the nation for the domestic
interests of the people. You recognize that
the masculine thought is more often turned to
the material and political interests of the nation.
I claim that the mother thought, the woman element
needed, is to supplement the concurrent statesmanship
of American men on political and industrial affairs
with the domestic legislation of the nation.
There are good men and women who believe
that women should use their influence merely through
their social sphere. I believe both of the
great parties are represented by us. You remember
that a few weeks ago when there came across the
country the news of the decision of the Supreme
Court as regards the negro race the politicians
sprang to the platform, and our editors hastened to
their sanctums, to proclaim to the people that that
did not interfere with the civil rights of the
negro; that only their social rights were affected,
and that the civil rights of man, those rights
worth dying for, were not affected. Gentlemen,
we who are trying to help the men in our municipal
governments, who are trying to save the children
from our poor-houses, begin to realize that whatever
is good and essential for the liberty of the black
man is good for the white woman and for all women.
We are here to claim that whatever liberty has
done for you it should be allowed to do for us.
Take a single glance through the past; recognize the
position of American manhood before the world to-day,
and whatever liberty has done for you, liberty
will surely do for the mothers of the race.
MRS. SARAH E. WALL.
Miss ANTHONY. Gentlemen of the
committee, here is another woman I wish to show
you, Sarah E. Wall, of Worcester, Mass., who, for the
last twenty-five years, has resisted the tax gatherer
when he came around. I want you to look at
her. She looks very harmless, but she will
not pay a dollar of tax. She says when the Commonwealth
of Massachusetts will give her the right of representation
she will pay her taxes. I do not know exactly
how it is now, but the assessor has left her name
off the tax-list, and passed her by rather than
have a lawsuit with her.
REMARKS BY MISS SUSAN B. ANTHONY.
Miss ANTHONY. I wish I could state
the avocations and professions of the various
women who have spoken in our convention during the
last three days. I do not wish to speak disparagingly
in regard to the men in Congress, but I doubt
if a man on the floor of either House could have
made a better speech than some of those which have
been made by women during this convention. Twenty-six
States and Territories are represented with live
women, traveling all the way from Kansas, Arkansas,
Oregon, and Washington Territory. It does
seem to me that after all these years of coming up
to this Capitol an impression should be made upon
the minds of legislators that we are never to
be silenced until we gain the demand. We have
never had in the whole thirty years of our agitation
so many States represented in any convention as
we had this year.
This fact shows the growth of public
sentiment. Mrs. Duniway is here all the way
from Oregon, and you say, when Mrs. Duniway is doing
so well up there, and is so hopeful of carrying the
State of Oregon, why do not you all rest satisfied
with that plan of gaining the suffrage? My
answer is that I do not wish to see the women
of the thirty-eight States of this Union compelled
to leave their homes and canvass each State, school
district by school district. It is asking
too much of a moneyless class of people, disfranchised
by the constitution of every State in the Union.
The joint earnings of the marriage copartnership
in all the States belong legally to the husband.
If the wife goes outside the home to work, the
law in most of the States permits her to own and control
the money thus earned. We have not a single State
in the Union where the wife’s earnings inside
the marriage copartnership are owned by her.
Therefore, to ask the vast majority of women who are
thus situated, without an independent dollar of their
own, to make a canvass of the States is asking
to much.
Mrs. GOUGAR. Why did
they not ask the negro to do that?
Miss ANTHONY. Of course the negro
was not asked to go begging the white man from
school district to school district to get his ballot.
If it was known that we could be driven to the ballot-box:
like a flock of sheep, and all vote for one party,
there would be a bid made for us; but that is
not done, because we can not promise you any such
thing; because we stand before you and honestly
tell you that the women of this nation are educated
equally with the men, and that they, too, have
political opinions. There is not a woman
on our platform, there is scarcely a woman in
this city of Washington, whether the wife of a Senator
or a Congressman I do not believe you
can find a score of women in the whole nation who
have not opinions on the pending Presidential election.
We all have opinions; we all have parties. Some
of us like one party and one candidate and some
another.
Therefore we can not promise you that
women will vote as a unit when they are enfranchised.
Suppose the Democrats shall put a woman suffrage
plank in their platform in their Presidential convention,
and nominate an open and avowed friend of woman suffrage
to stand upon that platform; we can not pledge you
that all the women of this nation will work for
the success of that party, nor can I pledge you
that they will all vote for the Republican party
if it should be the one to take the lead in their
enfranchisement. Our women will not toe a
mark anywhere; they will think and act for themselves,
and when they are enfranchised they will divide
upon all political questions, as do intelligent, educated
men.
I have tried the experiment of canvassing
four States prior to Oregon, and in each State
with the best canvass that it was possible for
us to make we obtained a vote of one-third. One
man out of every three men voted for the enfranchisement
of the women of their households, while two voted
against it. But we are proud to say that
our splendid minority is always composed of the very
best men of the State, and I think Senator PALMER
will agree with me that the forty thousand men
of Michigan who voted for the enfranchisement
of the women of his State were really the picked men
in intelligence, in culture, in morals, in standing,
and in every direction.
It is too much to say that the majority
of the voters in any State are superior, educated,
and capable, or that they investigate every question
thoroughly, and cast the ballot thereon intelligently.
We all know that the majority of the voters of any
State are not of that stamp. The vast masses
of the people, the laboring classes, have all
they can do in their struggle to get food and
shelter for their families. They have very little
time or opportunity to study great questions of
constitutional law.
Because of this impossibility for women
to canvass the States over and over to educate
the rank and file of the voters we come to you
to ask you to make it possible for the Legislatures
of the thirty-eight States to settle the question,
where we shall have a few representative men assembled
before whom we can make our appeals and arguments.
This method of settling the question
by the Legislatures is just as much in the line
of States’ rights as is that of the popular
vote. The one question before you is, will
you insist that a majority of the individual voters
of every State must be converted before its women
shall have the right to vote, or will you allow
the matter to be settled by the representative men
in the Legislatures of the several States?
You need not fear that we shall get suffrage too
quickly if Congress shall submit the proposition,
for even then we shall have a hard time in going from
Legislature to Legislature to secure the two-thirds
votes of three-fourths of the States necessary
to ratify the amendment. It may take twenty
years after Congress has taken the initiative step
to make action by the State Legislatures possible.
I pray you, gentlemen, that you will
make your report to the Senate speedily.
I know you are ready to make a favorable one.
Some of our speakers may not have known this as
well as I. I ask you to make a report and to bring
it to a discussion and a vote on the floor of
the Senate.
You ask me if we want to press this
question to a vote provided there is not a majority
to carry it. I say yes, because we want the
reflex influence of the discussion and of the opinions
of Senators to go back into the States to help
us to educate the people of the States.
Senator LAPHAM. It would
require a two-thirds vote in both,
the House and the Senate to
submit the amendment to the State
Legislatures for ratification.
Miss ANTHONY. I know that it requires
a two-thirds vote of both Houses. But still,
I repeat, even if you can not get the two-thirds
vote, we ask you to report the bill and bring it to
a discussion and a vote at the earliest day possible.
We feel that this question should be brought before
Congress at every session. We ask this little
attention from Congressmen whose salaries are paid
from the taxes; women do their share for the support
of this great Government, We think we are entitled
to two or three days of each session of Congress
in both the Senate and House. Therefore I ask
of you to help us to a discussion in the Senate this
session. There is no reason why the Senate,
composed of seventy-six of the most intelligent
and liberty-loving men of the nation, shall not pass
the resolution by a two-thirds vote, I really believe
it will do so if the friends on this committee
and on the floor of the Senate will champion the
measure as earnestly as if it were to benefit
themselves instead of their mothers and sisters.
Gentlemen, I thank you for
this hearing granted, and I hope the
telegraph wires will soon
tell us that your report is presented,
and that a discussion is inaugurated
on the floor of the Senate.
ARGUMENTS OF THE WOMAN-SUFFRAGE
DELEGATES BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON
THE JUDICIARY OF THE UNITED
STATES SENATE, JANUARY 23, 1880.
THE COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY,
UNITED STATES SENATE, Friday,
January 23, 1880.
The committee assembled at
half-past 10 o’clock a.m.
Present: Mr. Thurman,
chairman; Mr. McDonald, Mr. Bayard, Mr.
Davis, of Illinois; Mr. Edmunds.
Also Mrs. Zerelda G. Wallace, of Indiana;
Mrs. Elizabeth L. Saxon, of Louisiana; Mrs. Mary
A. Stewart, of Delaware; Mrs. Lucinda B. Chandler,
of Pennsylvania; Mrs. Julia Smith Parker, of Glastonbury,
Conn.; Mrs. Nancy R. Allen, of Iowa; Miss Susan B.
Anthony, of New York; Mrs. Sara A. Spencer, of the
city of Washington, and others, delegates to the
twelfth Washington convention of the National
Woman-Suffrage Association, held January 2l and
22, 1880.
The CHAIRMAN. Several members of
the committee are unable to be here. Mr.
Lamar is detained at his home in Mississippi by sickness;
Mr. Carpenter is confined to his room by sickness;
Mr. Conkling has been unwell; I do not know how
he is this morning; and Mr. Garland is chairman
of the Committee on Territories, which has a meeting
this morning that he could not omit to attend.
I do not think we are likely to have any more
members of the committee than are here now, and
we will hear you, ladies.
REMARKS BY MRS. ZERELDA G.
WALLACE, OF INDIANA.
Mrs. WALLACE. Mr. Chairman and
gentlemen of the committee, it is scarcely necessary
to recite that there is not an effect without a cause.
Therefore it would be well for the statesmen of this
nation to ask themselves the question, what has
brought the women from all parts of this nation
to the capital at this time: the wives and
mothers, and sisters; the home-loving, law-abiding
women? What has been the strong motive that
has taken us away from the quiet and comfort of
our own homes and brought us before you to-day?
As an answer partly to that question, I will read
an extract from a speech made by one of Indiana’s
statesmen, and probably if I tell you his name
his sentiments may have some weight with you.
He found out by experience and gave us the benefit
of his experience, and it is what we are rapidly
learning:
“You can go to meetings; you can
vote resolutions; you can attend great demonstrations
on the street; but, after all, the only occasion
where the American citizen expresses his acts, his
opinion, and his power is at the ballot-box; and
that little ballot that he drops in there is the
written sentiment of the times, and it is the
power that he has as a citizen of this great Republic.”
That is the reason why we are here;
that is the reason why we want to vote. We
are no seditious women, clamoring for any peculiar
rights, but we are patient women. It is not
the woman question that brings us before you to-day;
it is the human question that underlies this movement
among the women of this nation; it is for God,
and home, and native land. We love and appreciate
our country; we value the institutions of our
country. We realize that we owe great obligations
to the men of this nation for what they have done.
We realize that to their strength we owe the subjugation
of all the material forces of the universe which give
us comfort and luxury in our homes. We realize
that to their brains we owe the machinery that
gives us leisure for intellectual culture and
achievement. We realize that it is to their education
we owe the opening of our colleges and the establishment
of our public schools, which give us these great
and glorious privileges.
This movement is the legitimate result
of this development, of this enlightenment, and
of the suffering that woman has undergone in the
ages past. We find ourselves hedged in at every
effort we make as mothers for the amelioration
of society, as philanthropists, as Christians.
A short time ago I went before the Legislature
of Indiana with a petition signed by 25,000 women,
the best women in the State. I appeal to
the memory of Judge McDonald to substantiate the truth
of what I say. Judge McDonald knows that I
am a home-loving, law-abiding, tax-paying woman
of Indiana, and have been for 50 years. When
I went before our Legislature and found that 100 of
the vilest men in our State, merely by the possession
of the ballot, had more influence with the law-makers
of our land than the wives and mothers of the
nation, it was a revelation that was perfectly
startling.
You must admit that in popular government
the ballot is the most potent means of all moral
and social reforms. As members of society,
as those who are deeply interested in the promotion
of good morals, of virtue, and of the proper protection
of men from the consequences of their own vices,
and of the protection of women, too, we are deeply
interested in all the social problems with which
you have grappled so long unsuccessfully. We do
not intend to depreciate your efforts, but you
have attempted to do an impossible thing.
You have attempted to represent the whole by one-half;
and we come to you to day for a recognition of the
fact that humanity is not a unit; that it is a
unity; and because we are one-half that go to
make up that grand unity we come before you to-day
and ask you to recognize our rights as citizens of
this Republic.
We know that many of us lay ourselves
liable to contumely and ridicule. We have
to meet sneers; but we are determined that in the
defense of right we will ignore everything but what
we feel to be our duty.
We do not come here as agitators, or
aimless, dissatisfied, unhappy women by any means;
but we come as human beings, recognizing our responsibility
to God for the advantages that have come to us
in the development of the ages. We wish to discharge
that responsibility faithfully, effectually, and
conscientiously, and we can not do it under our
form of government, hedged in as we are by the
lack of a power which is such a mighty engine in our
form of government for every means of work.
I say to you, then, we come as one-half
of the great whole. There is an essential
difference in the sexes. Mr. Parkman labored very
hard to prove what no one would deny that
there is an essential difference in the sexes,
and it is because of that very differentiation,
the union of which in home, the recognition of which
in society, brings the greatest happiness, the recognition
of which in the church brings the greatest power
and influence for good, and the recognition of
which in the Government would enable us finally,
as near as it is possible for humanity, to perfect
our form of government. Probably we can never
have a perfect form of government, but the nearer
we approximate to the divine the nearer will we
attain to perfection; and the divine government recognizes
neither caste, class, sex, nor nationality.
The nearer we approach to that divine ideal the
nearer we will come to realizing our hopes of
finally securing at least the most perfect form of
human government that it is possible for us to
secure.
I do not wish to trespass upon your
time, but I have felt that this movement is not
understood by a great majority of people. They
think that we are unhappy, that we are dissatisfied,
that we are restive. That is not the case.
When we look over the statistics of our State
and find that 60 per cent. of all the crime is
the result of drunkenness; when we find that 60 per
cent. of the orphan children that fill our pauper
homes are the children of drunken parents; when
we find that after a certain age the daughters
of those fathers who were made paupers and drunkards
by the approbation and sanction and under the
seal of the Government, go to supply our houses
of prostitution, and when we find that the sons
of these fathers go to fill up our jails and our penitentiaries,
and that the sober, law-abiding men, the pains-taking,
economical, and many of them widowed wives of this
nation have to pay taxes and bear the expenses
incurred by such legislation, do you wonder, gentlemen,
that we at least want to try our hand and see
what we can do?
We may not be able to bring about that
Utopian form of government which we all desire,
but we can at least make an effort. Under our
form of government the ballot is our right; it
is just and proper. When you debate about
the expediency of any matter you have no right
to say that it is inexpedient to do right. Do
right and leave the result to God. You will
have to decide between one of two things:
either you have no claim under our form of Constitution
for the privileges which you enjoy, or you will have
to say that we are neither citizens nor persons.
Realizing this fact, and the deep interest
that we take in the successful issue of this experiment
that humanity is making for self-government, and
realizing the fact that the ballot never can be
given to us under more favorable circumstances, and
believing that here on this continent is to be
wrought out the great problem of man’s ability
to govern himself and when I say man I use
the word in the generic sense that
humanity here is to work out the great problems
of self-government and development, and recognizing,
as I said a few minutes ago, that we are one-half of
the great whole, we feel that we ought to be heard
when we come before you and make the plea that
we make to-day.
REMARKS BY MRS. JULIA SMITH
PARKER, OF GLASTONBURY, CONN.
Mrs. PARKER. Gentlemen: You
may be surprised, and not so much surprised as
I am, to see a woman of over four-score years of age
appear before you at this time. She came into
the world and reached years of maturity and discretion
before any person in this room was born.
She now comes before you to plead that she can vote
and have all the privileges that men have.
She has suffered so much individually that she
thought when she was young she had no right to
speak before the men; but still she had courage to
get an education equal to that of any man at the
college, and she had to suffer a great deal on
that account. She went to New Haven to school,
and it was noised that she had studied the languages.
It was such an astonishing thing for girls at
that time to have the advantages of education
that I had absolutely to go to cotillon parties
to let people see that I had common sense. [Laughter.]
She has suffered; she had to pay money.
She has had to pay $200 a year in taxes without
the least privilege of knowing what becomes of
it. She does not know but that it goes to support
grog-shops. She knows nothing about it.
She has had to suffer her cows to be sold at the
sign-post six times. She suffered her meadow land
to be sold, worth $2,000, for a tax of less than
$50. If she could vote as the men do she
would not have suffered this insult; and so much
would not have been said against her as has been said
if men did not have the whole power. I was
told that they had the power to take any thing
that I owned if I would not exert myself to pay
the money. I felt that fought to have some little
voice in determining what should be done with
what I paid. I felt that I ought to own my
own property; that it ought not to be in these men’s
hands; and I now come to plead that I may have the
same privileges before the law that men have.
I have seen what a difference there is, when I
have had my cows sold, by having a voter to take
my part.
I have come from an obscure town (I
can not say that it is obscure exactly) on the
banks of the Connecticut, where I was born. I
was brought up on a farm. I never had an idea
that it could be possible that I should ever come
all the way to Washington to speak before those
who had not come into existence when I was born.
Now, I plead that there may be a sixteenth amendment,
and that women may be allowed the privilege of
owning their own property. That is what I
have taken pains to accomplish. I have suffered
so much myself that I felt it might have some effect
to plead before this honorable committee.
I thank you, gentlemen, for hearing me so kindly.
REMARKS BY MRS. ELIZABETH
L. SAXON, OF LOUISIANA,
Mrs. SAXON. Gentleman, I almost
feel that after Mrs. Wallace’s plea there
is scarcely a necessity for me to say anything; she
echoed my own feelings so entirely. I come
from the extreme South, she from the West.
In this delegation, and in the convention which has
just been held in this city, women have come together
who never met before. People have asked me
why I came.
I care nothing for suffrage so far as
to stand beside men, or rush to the polls, or
take any privilege outside of my home, only, as Mrs.
Wallace says, for humanity. Years ago, when a
little child, I lost my mother, and I was brought
up by a man. If I have not a man’s
brain I had at least a man’s instruction.
He taught me that to work in the cause of reform
for women was just as great as to work in the
cause of reform for men. But in every effort I
made in the cause of reform I was combated in
one direction or another. I never took part
with the suffragists. I never realized the importance
of their cause until we were beaten back on every aide
in the work of reform. If we attempted to
put women in charge of prisons, believing that
wherever woman sins and suffers women should be
there to teach, help, and guide, every place was in
the hands of men. If we made an effort to
get women on the school boards we were combated
and could do nothing. Everyplace seemed to be
changed, when there were good men in those places,
by changes of politics; and the mothers of the
land, having had to prostrate themselves as beggars,
if not in fact, really in sentiment and feeling,
have become at last almost desperate.
In the State of Texas I had a niece
living whose father was an inmate of a lunatic
asylum. She exerted as wide an influence in the
State of Texas as any woman there. I allude to
Miss Mollie Moore, who was the ward of Mr. Gushing.
I give this illustration as a reason why Southern
women are taking part in this movement, Mr. Wallace
had charge of that lunatic asylum for years. He
was a good, honorable, able man. Every one
was endeared to him; every one appreciated him;
the State appreciated him as superintendent of
this asylum.
When a political change was made and
Governor Robinson came in, Dr. Wallace was ousted
for political purposes. It almost broke the hearts
of some of the women who had sons, daughters, or husbands
there. They determined at once to try to seek
some redress and have him reinstated. It
was impossible. He was out, and what could we
do? I do not know that we could reach a case like
that; but such cases have stirred the women of
the whole land, for the reason that when they
try to do good, or want to help in the cause of
humanity, they are combated so bitterly and persistently.
I leave it to older and abler
women, who have labored in this
cause so long, to prove whether
it is or is not constitutional to
give the ballot to women.
A gentleman said to me a few days ago,
“These women want to marry.”
I am married; I am a mother; and in our home the sons
and brothers are all standing like a wall of steel
at my back. I have cast aside every prejudice
of the past. They lie like rotted hulks behind
me.
After the fever of 1878, when our constitutional
convention was going to convene, broke the agony
and grief of my own heart, for one of my children
died, and took part in the suffrage movement in Louisiana,
with the wife of Chief-Justice Merrick, Mrs. Sarah
A. Dorsey, and Mrs. Harriet Keatinge, of New York,
the niece of Mr. Lozier. These three ladies
aided me faithfully and ably. When they found
we would be received, I went before the convention.
I went to Lieutenant-Governor Wiltz, and asked
him if he would present or consider a petition
which I wished to bring before the convention.
He read the petition. One clause of our State
law is that no woman can sign a will. We
will have that question decided before the meeting
of the next Legislature. Some ladies donated property
to an asylum. They wrote the will and signed
it themselves, and it was null and void, because
the signers were women. They not knowing
the law, believed that they were human beings, and
signed it. That clause, perhaps, will be
wiped out. Many gentlemen signed the petition
on that account. I took the paper around myself.
Governor Wiltz, then lieutenant-governor, told
me he would present the petition. He was
elected president of the convention. I presented
my first petition, signed by the best names in the
city of New Orleans and in the State.
I had the names of seven of the most
prominent physicians there, leading with the name
of Dr. Logan, and many men, seeing the name of
Dr. Samuel Logan, also signed it. I went to all
the different physicians and ministers. Three
prominent ministers signed it for moral purposes
alone. When Mrs. Horsey was on her dying bed the
last time she ever signed her name was to a letter
to go before that convention. No one believed
she would die. Mrs. Merrick and myself went
before the convention. I was invited before the
committee on the judiciary. I made an impression
favorable enough there to be invited before the
convention with these ladies. I addressed
the convention. We made the petition then that
we make here; that we, the mothers of the land,
are barred on every side in the cause of reform.
I have strived hard in the work of reform for
women. I pledged my father on his dying bed that
I would never cease that work until woman stood
with man equal before the law, so far as my efforts
could accomplish it. Finding myself baffled in
that work, I could only take the course which we have
adopted, and urge the proposition of the sixteenth
amendment.
I beg of you, gentlemen, to consider
this question apart from the manner in which it
was formerly considered. We, as the women of
the nation, as the mothers, as the wives, have
a right to be heard, it seems to me, before the
nation. We represent precisely the position
of the colonies when they plead, and, in the words
of Patrick Henry, they were “spurned with
contempt from the foot of the throne.”
We have been jeered and laughed at and ridiculed; but
this question has passed out of the region of ridicule.
The moral force inheres in
woman and in man alike, and unless we
use all the moral power of
the Government we certainly can not
exist as a Government.
We talk of centralization, we talk of
division; we have the seeds of decay in our Government,
and unless right soon we use the moral force and
bring it forward in all its strength and bearing, we
certainly cannot exist as a happy nation.
We do not exist as a happy nation now. This
clamor for woman’s suffrage, for woman’s
rights, for equal representation, is extending
all over the land.
I plead because my work has been combatted
in the cause of reform everywhere that I have
tried to accomplish anything. The children that
fill the houses of prostitution are not of foreign
blood and race. They come from sweet American
homes, and for every woman that went down some
mother’s heart broke. I plead by the power
of the ballot to be allowed to help reform women
and benefit mankind.
REMARKS OF MRS. MARY A. STEWART,
OF DELAWARE.
Mrs. STEWART. I come from a small
State, but one that is represented in this Congress,
I consider, by some of the ablest men in the land.
Our State, though small, has heretofore possessed
and to-day possesses brains. Our sons have
no more right to brains than our daughters, yet
we are tied down by every chain that could bind
the Georgian slave before the war. Aye, we are
worse slaves, because the Georgian slave could
go to the sale block and there be sold. The
woman of Delaware must submit to her chains, as there
is no sale for her; she is of no account.
Woman from all time has occupied the
highest positions in the world. She is just
as competent to-day as she was hundreds of years
ago. We are taxed without representation; there
is no mistake about that. The colonies screamed
that to England; Parliament screamed back, “Be
still; long live the king, and we will help you.”
Did the colonies submit? They did not. Will
the women of this country submit? They will
not. Mark me, we are the sisters of those
fighting Revolutionary men; we are the daughters of
the fathers who sang back to England that they would
not submit. Then, if the same blood courses
in our veins that courses in yours, dare you expect
us to submit?
The white men of this country have thrown
out upon us, the women, a race inferior, you must
admit, to your daughters, and yet that race has
the ballot, and why? He has a right to it; he
earned and paid for it with his blood. Whose
blood paid for yours? Not your blood; it
was the blood of your forefathers; and were they not
our forefathers? Does a man earn a hundred
thousand dollars and lie down and die, saying,
“It is all my boys’?” Not a bit of
it. He dies saying, “Let my children,
be they cripples, be they idiots, be they boys,
or be they girls, inherit all my property alike.”
Then let us inherit the sweet boon of the ballot
alike.
When our fathers were driving the great
ship of state we were willing to ride as deck
or cabin passengers, just as we felt disposed;
we had nothing to say; but to-day the boys are about
to run the ship aground, and it is high time that
the mothers should be asking, “What do you
mean to do?” It is high time that the mothers
should be demanding what they should long since have
had.
In our own little State the laws have
been very much modified in regard to women.
My father was the first man to blot out the old English
law allowing the eldest son the right of inheritance
to the real estate. He took the first step,
and like all those who take first steps in improvement
and reform he received a mountain of curses from
the oldest male heirs; but it did not matter to him.
Since 1868 I have, by my own individual
efforts, by the use of hard-earned money, gone
to our Legislature time after time and have had
this law and that law passed for the benefit of the
women; and the same little ship of state has sailed
on. To-day our men are just as well satisfied
with the laws of our State for the benefit of
women in force as they were years ago. In our
State a woman has a right to make a will.
In our State she can hold bonds and mortgages
as her own. In our State she has a right to her
own property. She can not sell it, though,
if it is real estate, simply because the moment
she marries her husband has a life-time right.
The woman does not grumble at that; but still when
he dies owning real estate, she gets only the
rental value of one-third, which is called the
widow’s dower. Now I think the man ought
to have the rental value of one-third of the woman’s
maiden property or real estate, and it ought to
be called the widower’s dower. It would
be just as fair for one as for the other. All
that I want is equality.
The women of our State, as I said before,
are taxed without representation. The tax-gatherer
comes every year and demands taxes. For twenty
years have I paid tax under protest, and if I live
twenty years longer I shall pay it under protest every
time. The tax-gatherer came to my place not
long since. “Well,” said I, “good
morning, sir.” Said he, “Good morning.”
He smiled and said, “I have come bothering
you.” Said I, “I know your face well.
You have come to get a right nice little woman’s
tongue-lashing.” Said he, “I
suppose so, but if you will just pay your tax I will
leave.” I paid the tax, “But,”
said I, “remember I pay it under protest,
and if I ever pay another tax I intend to have the
protest written and make the tax-gatherer sign
it before I pay the tax, and if he will not sign
that protest then I shall not pay the tax, and
there will be a fight at once.” Said he,
“Why do you keep all the time protesting
against paying this small tax?” Said I, “Why
do you pay your tax?” “Well,” said
he, “I would not pay it if I did not vote.”
Said I, “That is the very reason why I do not
want to pay it. I can not vote and I do not
want to pay it.” Now the women have
no right when election day comes around. Who stay
at home from the election? The women and the
black and white men who have been to the whipping-post.
Nice company to put your wives and daughters in.
It is said that the women do not want
to vote. Here is an array of women.
Every woman sitting here wants to vote, and must we
be debarred the privilege of voting because some
luxurious woman, rolling around in her carriage
and pair in her little downy nest that some good,
benevolent man has provided for her, does not want
to vote?
There was a society that existed up
in the State of New York called the Covenanters
that never voted. A man who belonged to that
sect or society, a man whiter-haired than any of you,
said to me, “I never voted. I never
intended to vote, I never felt that I could conscientiously
support a Government that had its Constitution
blotted and blackened with the word ‘slave,’
and I never did vote until after the abolition
of slavery.” Now, were all you men
disfranchised because that class or sect up in New
York would not vote? Did you all pay your
taxes and stay at home and refrain from voting
because the Covenanters did not vote? Not a
bit of it. You went to the election and told them
to stay at home if they wanted to, but that you,
as citizens, were going to take care of yourselves.
That was right. We, as citizens, want to take
care of ourselves.
One more thought and I will be through.
The fourteenth and fifteenth amendments give the
right of suffrage to women, so far as I know,
although you learned men perhaps see a little differently.
I see through the glass dimly; you may see through
it after it is polished up. The fourteenth
and fifteenth amendments, in my opinion, and in
the opinion of a great many smart men in the country,
and smart women, too, give the right to women to vote
without, any “ifs” or “ands”
about it, and the United States protects us in
it; but there are a few who construe the law to suit
themselves, and say that those amendments do not mean
that, because the Congress that passed the fourteenth
and fifteenth amendments did not mean to do that.
Well, the Congress that passed them were mean
enough for anything if they did not mean to do that.
Let the wise Congress of to-day take the eighth chapter
and the fourth verse of the Psalms, which says,
“What is man, that Thou art mindful of him?”
and amend it by adding, “What is woman, that
they never thought of her?”
REMARKS BY MRS. LUCINDA B.
CHANDLER, OF PENNSYLVANIA.
Mrs. CHANDLER. Gentlemen, it will
be conceded that the progress of civilization,
all that lifts humanity above a groveling, sensual,
depraved state, is marked by the position, intelligence,
and culture of women. Perhaps you think that
American women have no rightful claim to present;
but American women and mothers do claim that they
should have the power to protect their children, not
only at the hearthstone, but to supervise their
education. It is neither presuming nor unwomanly
for the mothers and women of the land to claim
that they are competent and best fitted, and that
it rightfully belongs to them to take part in the
management and control of the schools, and the
instruction, both intellectual and moral, of their
children, and that in penal, eleemosynary, or reformatory
institutions women should have positions as inspectors
of prisons, physicians, directors, and superintendents.
I have here a brief report from an association
which sent me as a delegate to the National Woman
Suffrage Convention, in which it is stated that
women in Pennsylvania can be elected as directors on
school boards or superintendents of schools, but
can not help to elect those officers. It
must very readily occur to your minds that when
women take such interest in the schools as mothers
must needs take they must feel many a wish to
control the election of the officers, superintendents,
and managers of the schools. The ladies here
from New York city could, if they had time, give you
much testimony in regard to the management of schools
in New York city, and the need there of woman’s
love and woman’s power in the schools and
on the school boards. I am also authorized by
the association which sent me here to report that
the woman-suffragists and some other woman organizations
of the city of Philadelphia, have condemned in
resolution the action of the governor a year ago,
I think, in vetoing a bill which passed largely
both houses of the Legislature to appoint women inspectors
of prisons. On such questions woman feels
the need of the ballot.
The mothers of this land, having breathed
the air of freedom and received the benefits of
education, have come to see the necessity of better
conditions to fulfill their divinely appointed and
universally recognized office. The mothers
of this land claim that they have a right to assist
in making the laws which control the social relations.
We are under the laws inherited from barbarism.
They are not the conditions suited to the best
exercise of the office of woman, and the women
desire the ballot to purge society of the vices
that are sure to disintegrate the home, the State,
the nation.
I shall not occupy your time further
this morning. I only present briefly the
mother’s claim, as it is so universally conceded.
We now have in our schools a very large majority
of women teachers, and it seems to me no one can
but recognize the fact that mothers, through their
experience in the family, mothers who are at all competent
and fit to fulfill their position as mothers in the
family, are best fitted to understand the needs
and at least should have an equal voice in directing
the management of the schools, and also the management
of penal and reformatory institutions.
I was in hopes that Mrs. Wallace would
give you the testimony she gave us in the convention
of the wonderful, amazing good that was accomplished
in a reformatory institution where an incorrigible
woman was taken from the men’s prison and
became not only very tractable, but very helpful
in an institution under the influence and management
of women. That reformatory institution is managed
wholly by women. There is not a man, Mrs.
Wallace says, in the building, except the engineer
who controls the fire department. Under a
management wholly by women, the institution is a very
great success. We feel sure that in many ways
the influence and power that the mothers bring
would tend to convert many conditions that are
now tending to destruction through vices, would tend
to elevate us morally, purify us, bring us still
higher in the standard of humanity, and make us
what we ought to be, a holy as well as a happy
nation.
REMARKS BY MRS. SARA A. SPENCER,
OF WASHINGTON.
Mrs. SPENCER. Miss Susan B. Anthony
was chosen to present the constitutional argument
in our case before the committee. Unless there
is more important business for the individual members
of the committee than the protection of one-half
of our population, I trust that the limit fixed
for our hearing will be extended.
The CHAIRMAN. Miss Anthony
is entitled to an hour.
Mrs. SPENCER. Good.
Miss Anthony is from the United States; the
whole United States claim
her.
Mrs. ALLEN. I have made
arrangements with Miss Anthony to say all
that I feel it necessary for
me to say at this time.
Mrs. SPENCER. I have
been so informed.
REMARKS BY MRS. NANCY B. ALLEN,
OF IOWA.
Mrs. ALLEN. Mr. Chairman and gentlemen
of the Judiciary Committee: I am not a State
representative, but I am a representative of a large
class of women, citizens of Iowa, who are heavy tax-payers.
That is a subject which we are very seriously contemplating
at this time. There is now a petition being
circulated throughout our State, to be presented
to the legislature, praying that women be exempted
from taxation until they have some voice in the management
of local affairs of the State. You may ask, “Do
not your husbands protect you? Are not all
the men protecting you?” We answer that
our husbands are grand, noble men, who are willing
to do all they can for us, but there are many
who have no husbands, and who own a great deal
of property in the State of Iowa. Particularly
in great moral reforms the women there feel the need
of the ballot. By presenting long petitions
to the Legislature they have succeeded in having
better temperance laws enacted, but the men have
failed to elect officials who will enforce those laws.
Consequently they have become as dead letters upon
the statute-books.
I would refer again to taxes. I
have a list showing that in my city three women
pay more taxes than all the city officials included.
Those women are good temperance women. Our city
council is composed almost entirely of saloon
men and those who visit saloons and brewery men.
There are some good men, but the good men being
in the minority, the voices of these women are but
little regarded. All these officials are
paid, and we have to help support them. All
that we ask is an equality of rights. As Sumner
said, “Equality of rights is the first of
rights.” If we can only be equal with
man under the law it is all that we ask. We do
not propose to relinquish our domestic circles;
in fact, they are too dear to us for that; they
are dear to us as life itself, but we do ask that
we may be permitted to be represented. Equality
of taxation without representation is tyranny.
REMARKS BY MISS SUSAN B. ANTHONY,
OF NEW YORK.
Miss ANTHONY: Mr. Chairman and
gentlemen: Mrs. Spencer said that I would
make an argument. I do not propose to do so, because
I take it for granted that the members of this
committee understand that we have all the argument
on our side, and such an argument would be simply
a series of platitudes and maxims of government.
The theory of this Government from the beginning
has been perfect equality to all the people.
That is shown by every one of the fundamental
principles, which I need not stop to repeat. Such
being the theory, the application would be, of
course, that all persons not having forfeited
their right to representation in the Government
should be possessed of it at the age of twenty-one.
But instead of adopting a practice in conformity
with the theory of our Government, we began first
by saying that all men of property were the people
of the nation upon whom the Constitution conferred
equality of rights. The next step was that
all white men were the people to whom should be
practically applied the fundamental theories.
There we halt to-day and stand at a deadlock, so far
as the application of our theory may go.
We women have been standing before the American
republic for thirty years, asking the men to take
yet one step further and extend the practical application
of the theory of equality of rights to all the
people to the other half of the people the
women. That is all that I stand here to-day
to attempt to demand.
Of course, I take it for granted that
the committee are in sympathy at least with the
reports of the Judiciary Committees presented
both in the Senate and the House. I remember that
after the adoption of the fourteenth and fifteenth
amendments Senator EDMUNDS reported on the petition
of the ten thousand foreign-born citizens of Rhode
Island who were denied equality of rights in Rhode
Island simply because of their foreign birth; and in
that report held that the amendments were enacted
and attached to the Constitution simply for men
of color, and therefore that their provisions
could not be so construed as to bring within their
purview the men of foreign birth in Rhode Island.
Then the House Committee on the Judiciary, with
Judge Bingham, of Ohio, at its head, made a similar
report upon our petitions, holding that because
those amendments were made essentially with the black
men in view, therefore their provisions could
not be extended to the women citizens of this
country or to any class except men citizens of
color.
I voted in the State of New York in
1872 under the construction of those amendments,
which we felt to be the true one, that all persons
born in the United States, or any State thereof, and
under the jurisdiction of the United States, were
citizens, and entitled to equality of rights,
and that no State could deprive them of their
equality of rights. I found three young men, inspectors
of election, who were simple enough to read the
Constitution and understand it in accordance with
what was the letter and what should have been
its spirit. Then, as you will remember, I was
prosecuted by the officers of the Federal court,
And the cause was carried through the different
courts in the State of New York, in the northern
district, and at last I was brought to trial at Canandaigua.
When Mr. Justice Hunt was brought from
the supreme bench to sit upon that trial, he wrested
my case from the hands of the jury altogether,
after having listened three days to testimony, and
brought in a verdict himself of guilty, denying
to my counsel even the poor privilege of having
the jury polled. Through all that trial when
I, as a citizen of the United States, as a citizen
of the State of New York and city of Rochester,
as a person who had done something at least that
might have entitled her to a voice in speaking
for herself and for her class, in all that trial I
not only was denied my right to testify as to
whether I voted or not, but there was not one
single woman’s voice to be heard nor to be considered,
except as witnesses, save when it came to the judge
asking, “Has the prisoner any thing to say
why sentence shall not be pronounced?” Neither
as judge, nor as attorney, nor as jury was I allowed
any person who could be legitimately called my peer
to speak for me.
Then, as you will remember, Mr. Justice
Hunt not only pronounced the verdict of guilty,
but a sentence of $100 fine and costs of prosecution.
I said to him, “May it please your honor, I do
not propose to pay it;” and I never have
paid it, and I never shall. I asked your
honorable bodies of Congress the next year in
1874 to pass a resolution to remit
that fine. Both Houses refused it; the committees
reported against it; though through Benjamin F. Butler,
in the House, and a member of your committee, and
Matthew H. Carpenter, in the Senate, there were
plenty of precedents brought forward to show that
in the cases of multitudes of men fines had been
remitted. I state this merely to show the need
of woman to speak for herself, to be as judge,
to be as juror.
Mr. Justice Hunt in his opinion stated
that suffrage was a fundamental right, and therefore
a right that belonged to the State. It seemed
to me that was just as much of a retroversion of
the theory of what is right in our Government as there
could possibly be. Then, after the decision
in my case came that of Mrs. Minor, of Missouri.
She prosecuted the officers there for denying her
the right to vote. She carried her case up to
your Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court answered
her the same way; that the amendments were made
for black men; that their provisions could not
protect women; that the Constitution of the United
States has no voters of its own.
Mrs. SPENCER. And you
remember Judge Cartier’s decision in my
case.
Miss ANTHONY. Mr. Cartier
said that women are citizens and may be
qualified, &c., but that it
requires some sort of legislation to
give them the right to vote.
The Congress of the United States notwithstanding,
and the Supreme Court of the United States notwithstanding,
with all deference and respect, I differ with
them all, and know that I am right and that they
are wrong. The Constitution of the United States
as it is protects me. If I could get a practical
application of the Constitution it would protect
me and all women in the enjoyment of perfect equality
of rights everywhere under the shadow of the American
flag.
I do not come to you to petition for
special legislation, or for any more amendments
to the Constitution, because I think they are unnecessary,
but because you say there is not in the Constitution
enough to protect me. Therefore I ask that
you, true to your own theory and assertion, should
go forward to make more constitution.
Let me remind you that in the case of
all other classes of citizens under the shadow
of our flag you have been true to the theory that
taxation and representation are inseparable. Indians
not taxed are not counted in the basis of representation,
and are not allowed to vote; but the minute that
your Indians are counted in the basis of representation
and are allowed to vote they are taxed; never
before. In my State of New York, and in nearly
all the States, the members of the State militia,
hundreds and thousands of men, are exempted from
taxation on property; in my State to the value
of $800, and in most of the States to a value in
that neighborhood. While such a member of the
militia lives, receives his salary, and is able
to earn money, he is exempted; but when he dies
the assessor puts his widow’s name down upon
the assessor’s list, and the tax-collector
never fails to call upon the widow and make her
pay the full tax upon her property. In most of
the States clergymen are exempted. In my State
of New York they are exempted on property to the
value of $1,500. As long as the clergyman
lives and receives his fat salary, or his lean one,
as the case may be, he is exempted on that amount
of property; but when the breath leaves the body
of the clergyman, and the widow is left without
any income, or without any means of support, the State
comes in and taxes the widow.
So it is with regard to all black men.
In the State of New York up to the day of the
passage of the fifteenth amendment, black men who
were willing to remain without reporting themselves
worth as much as $250, and thereby to remain without
exercising the right to vote, never had their
names put on the assessor’s list; they were
passed by, while, if the poorest colored woman owned
50 feet of real estate, a little cabin anywhere,
that colored woman’s name was always on
the assessor’s list, and she was compelled to
pay her tax. While Frederick Douglas lived
in my State he was never allowed to vote until
he could show himself worth the requisite $250;
and when he did vote in New York, he voted not because
he was a man, not because he was a citizen of
the United States, nor yet because he was a citizen
of the State, but simply because he was worth
the requisite amount of money. In Connecticut
both black men and black women were exempted from
taxation prior to the adoption of the fifteenth
amendment.
The law was amended in 1848, by which
black men were thus exempted, and black women
followed the same rule in that State. That,
I believe, is the only State where black women were
exempted from taxation under the law. When
the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments were attached
to the Constitution they carried to the black
man of Connecticut the boon of the ballot as well as
the burden of taxation, whereas they carried to
the black woman of Connecticut the burden of taxation,
but no ballot by which to protect her property.
I know a colored woman in New Haven, Conn., worth
$50,000, and she never paid a penny of taxation until
the ratification of the fifteenth amendment.
From that day on she is compelled to pay a heavy
tax on that amount of property.
Mrs. SPENCER. Is it because
she is a citizen? Please explain.
Miss ANTHONY. Because
she is black.
Mrs. SPENCER. Is it because
the fourteenth and fifteenth
amendments made women citizens?
Miss ANTHONY. Certainly;
because it declared the black people
citizens.
Gentlemen, you have before
you various propositions of amendment
to the Federal Constitution.
One is for the election of President
by the vote of the people
direct. Of course women are not people.
Senator EDMUNDS. Angels.
Miss ANTHONY. Yes; angels
up in heaven or else devils down there.
Senator EDMUNDS. I have
never known any of that kind.
Miss ANTHONY. I wish you, gentlemen,
would look down there and see the myriads that
are there. We want to help them and lift them
up. That is exactly the trouble with you,
gentlemen; you are forever looking at your own
wives, your own mothers, your own sisters, and your
own daughters, and they are well cared for and protected;
but only look down to the struggling masses of
women who have no one to protect them, neither
husband, father, brother, son, with no mortal
in all the land to protect them. If you would
look down there the question would be solved;
but the difficulty is that you think only of those
who are doing well. We are not speaking for ourselves,
but for those who can not speak for themselves.
We are speaking for the doomed as much as you,
Senator EDMUNDS, used to speak for the doomed
on the plantations of the South.
Amendments have been proposed to put
God in the Constitution and to keep God out of
the Constitution. All sorts of propositions to
amend the Constitution have been made; but I ask
that you allow no other amendment to be called
the sixteenth but that which shall put into the
hands of one-half of the entire people of the nation
the right to express their opinions as to how the
Constitution shall be amended henceforth.
Women have the right to say whether we shall have
God in the Constitution as well as men. Women
have a right to say whether we shall have a national
law or an amendment to the Constitution prohibiting
the importation or manufacture of alcoholic liquors.
We have a right to have our opinions counted on every
possible question concerning the public welfare.
You ask us why we do not get this right
to vote first in the school districts, and on
school questions, or the questions of liquor license.
It has been shown very clearly why we need something
more than that. You have good enough laws to-day
in every State in this Union for the suppression
of what are termed the social vices; for the suppression
of the grog-shops, the gambling houses, the brothels,
the obscene shows. There is plenty of legislation
in every State in this Union for their suppression
if it could be executed. Why is the Government,
why are the States and the cities, unable to execute
those laws? Simply because there is a large
balance of power in every city that does not want those
laws executed. Consequently both parties must
alike cater to that balance of political power.
The party that puts a plank in its platform that
the laws against the grog-shops and all the other
sinks of iniquity must be executed, is the party
that will not get this balance of power to vote
for it, and, consequently, the party that can
not get into power.
What we ask of you is that you will
make of the women of the cities a balance of political
power, so that when a mayor, a member of the common
council, a supervisory justice of the peace, a
district attorney, a judge on the bench even, shall
go before the people of that city as a candidate
for the suffrages of the people he shall
not only be compelled to look to the men who frequent
the grog-shops, the brothels, and the gambling houses,
who will vote for him if he is not in favor of
executing the law, but that he shall have to look
to the mothers, the sisters, the wives, the daughters
of those deluded men to see what they will do if
he does not execute the law.
We want to make of ourselves a balance
of political power. What we need is the power
to execute the laws. We have got laws enough.
Let me give you one little fact in regard to my
own city of Rochester. You all know how that
wonderful whip called the temperance crusade roused
the whisky ring. It caused the whisky force
to concentrate itself more strongly at the ballot-box
than ever before, so that when the report of the
elections in the spring of 1874 went over the
country the result was that the whisky ring was
triumphant, and that the whisky ticket was elected
more largely than ever before. Senator Thurman
will remember how it was in his own State of Ohio.
Everybody knows that if my friends, Mrs. ex-Governor
Wallace, Mrs. Allen, and all the women of the
great West could have gone to the ballot-box at those
municipal elections and voted for candidates, no
such result would have occurred; while you refused
by the laws of the State to the women the right
to have their opinions counted, every rumseller, every
drunkard, every pauper even from the poor-house, and
every criminal outside of the State’s prison
came out on election day to express his opinion
and have it counted.
The next result of that political event
was that the ring demanded new legislation to
protect the whisky traffic everywhere. In my
city the women did not crusade the streets, but
they said they would help the men to execute the
law. They held meetings, sent out committees,
and had testimony secured against every man who had
violated the law, and when the board of excise held
its meeting those women assembled, three or four
hundred, in the church one morning, and marched
in a solid body to the common council chamber
where the board of excise was sitting. As one
rum-seller after another brought in his petition
for a renewal of license who had violated the
law, those women presented the testimony against
him. The law of the State of New York is that
no man shall have a renewal who has violated the
law. But in not one case did that board refuse
to grant a renewal of license because of the testimony
which those women presented, and at the close of the
sitting it was found that twelve hundred more licenses
had been granted than ever before in the history
of the State. Then the defeated women said
they would have those men punished according to
law.
Again they retained an attorney and
appointed committees to investigate all over the
city. They got the proper officer to prosecute
every rum-seller. I was at their meeting.
One woman reported that the officer in every city
refused to prosecute the liquor dealer who had
violated the law. Why? Because if he should
do so he would lose the votes of all the employes
of certain shops on that street, if another he
would lose the votes of the railroad employes,
and if another he would lose the German vote, if another
the Irish vote, and so on. I said to those
women what I say to you, and what I know to be
true to-day, that if the women of the city of
Rochester had held the power of the ballot in their
hands they would have been a great political balance
of power.
The last report was from District Attorney
Raines. The women complained of a certain
lager-beer-garden keeper. Said the district
attorney, “Ladies, you are right, this man is
violating the law, everybody knows it, but if
I should prosecute him I would lose the entire
German vote.” Said I, “Ladies, do
you not see that if the women of the city of Rochester
had the right to vote District Attorney Raines
would have been compelled to have stopped and
counted, weighed and measured. He would have said,
’If I prosecute that lager-beer German I
shall lose the 5,000 German votes of this city,
but if I fail to prosecute him and execute the laws
I shall lose the votes of 20,000 women.’”
Do you not see, gentlemen, that so long
as you put this power of the ballot in the hands
of every possible man, rich, poor, drunk, sober,
educated, ignorant, outside of the State’s prison,
to make and unmake, not only every law and law-maker,
but every office holder who has to do with the
executing of the law, and take the power from
the hands of the women of the nation, the mothers,
you put the long arm of the lever, as we call
it in mechanics, in the hands of the whisky power
and make it utterly impossible for regulation
of sobriety to be maintained in our community?
The first step towards social regulation and good
society in towns, cities, and villages is the
ballot in the hands of the mothers of those places.
I appeal to you especially in this matter, I do not
know what you think about the proper sphere of
women.
It matters little what any of us think
about it. We shall each and every individual
find our own proper sphere if we are left to act
in freedom; but my opinion is that when the whole arena
of politics and government is thrown open to women
they will endeavor to do very much as they do
in their homes; that the men will look after the
greenback theory or the hard-money theory, that you
will look after free-trade or tariff, and the
women will do the home housekeeping of the government,
which is to take care of the moral government
and the social regulation of our home department.
It seems to me that we have the power
of government outside to shape and control circumstances,
but that the inside power, the government housekeeping,
is powerless, and is compelled to accept whatever
conditions or circumstances shall be granted.
Therefore I do not ask for liquor suffrage
alone, nor for school suffrage alone, because
that would amount to nothing. We must be able
to have a voice in the election not only of every law-maker,
but of every one who has to do either with the
making or the executing of the laws.
Then you ask why we do not get suffrage
by the popular-vote method, State by State?
I answer, because there is no reason why I, for
instance, should desire the women of one State of this
nation to vote any more than the women of another
State. I have no more interest as regards
the women of New York than I as regards the women
of Indiana, Iowa, or any of the States represented
by the women who have come up here. The reason
why I do not wish to get this right by what you
call the popular-vote method, the State vote,
is because I believe there is a United States
citizenship. I believe that this is a nation,
and to be a citizen of this nation should be a
guaranty to every citizen of the right to a voice
in the Government, and should give to me my right
to express my opinion. You deny to me my liberty,
my freedom, if you say that I shall have no voice
whatever in making, shaping, or controlling the
conditions of society in which I live. I
differ from Judge Hunt, and I hope I am respectful
when I say that I think he made a very funny mistake
when he said that fundamental rights belong to
the States and only surface rights to the National
Government. I hope you will agree with me that
the fundamental right of citizenship, the right
to voice in the Government, is a national right.
The National Government may concede
to the States the right to decide by a majority
as to what banks they shall have, what laws they
shall enact with regard to insurance, with regard to
property, and any other question; but I insist
upon it that the National Government should not
leave it a question with the States that a majority
in any State may disfranchise the minority under any
circumstances whatsoever. The franchise to you
men is not secure. You hold it to-day, to
be sure, by the common consent of white men, but
if at any time, on your principle of government, the
majority of any of the States should choose to amend
the State constitution so as to disfranchise this
or that portion of the white men by making this
or that condition, by all the decisions of the
Supreme Court and by the legislation thus far there
is nothing to hinder them.
Therefore the women demand a sixteenth
amendment to bring to women the right to vote,
or if you please to confer upon women their right
to vote, to protect them in it, and to secure men in
their right, because you are not secure.
I would let the States act upon almost
every other question by majorities, except the
power to say whether my opinion shall be counted.
I insist upon it that no State shall decide that question.
Then the popular-vote method is an impracticable
thing. We tried to get negro suffrage by
the popular vote, as you will remember. Senator
Thurman will remember that in Ohio the Republicans
submitted the question in 1867, and with all the
prestige of the national Republican party and
of the State party, when every influence that
could be brought by the power and the patronage of
the party in power was brought to bear, yet negro
suffrage ran behind the regular Republican ticket
40,000.
It was tried in Kansas, it was tried
in New York, and everywhere that it was submitted
the question was voted down overwhelmingly. Just
so we tried to get women suffrage by the popular-vote
method in Kansas in 1867, in Michigan in 1874,
in Colorado in 1877, and in each case the result
was precisely the same, the ratio of the vote
standing one-third for women suffrage and two-thirds
against women suffrage. If we were to canvass
State after State we should get no better vote
than that. Why? Because the question of the
enfranchisement of women is a question of government,
a question of philosophy, of understanding, of
great fundamental principle, and the masses of
the hard-working people of this nation, men and women,
do not think upon principles. They can only think
on the one eternal struggle wherewithal to be
fed, to be clothed, and to be sheltered.
Therefore I ask you not to compel us to have this
question settled by what you term the popular-vote
method.
Let me illustrate by Colorado, the most
recent State, in the election of 1877. I
am happy to say to you that I have canvassed three
States for this question. If Senator Chandler
were alive, or if Senator Ferry were in this room,
they would remember that I followed in their train
in Michigan, with larger audiences than either
of those Senators throughout the whole canvass.
I want to say, too, that although those Senators
may have believed in woman suffrage, they did
not say much about it. They did not help us much.
The Greenback movement was quite popular in Michigan
at that time. The Republicans and Greenbackers
made a most humble bow to the grangers, but woman
suffrage did not get much help. In Colorado,
at the close of the canvass, 6,666 men voted “Yes.”
Now I am going to describe the men who voted “Yes.”
They were native-born white men, temperance men,
cultivated, broad, generous, just men, men who
think. On the other hand, 16,007 voted “No.”
Now I am going to describe that class
of voters. In the southern part of that State
there are Mexicans, who speak the Spanish language.
They put their wheat in circles on the ground with
the heads out, and drive a mule around to thrash
it. The vast population of Colorado is made
up of that class of people. I was sent out
to speak in a voting precinct having 200 voters; 150
of those voters were Mexican greasers, 40 of them
foreign-born citizens, and just 10 of them were
born in this country; and I was supposed to be
competent to convert those men to let me have as much
right in this Government as they had, when, unfortunately,
the great majority of them could not understand
a word that I said. Fifty or sixty Mexican
greasers stood against the wall with their hats
down over their faces. The Germans put seats in
a lager-beer saloon, and would not attend unless
I made a speech there; so I had a small audience.
MRS. ARCHIBALD. There is one circumstance
that I should like to relate. In the county
of Las Animas, a county where there is a large
population of Mexicans, and where they always have
a large majority over the native population, they
do not know our language at all. Consequently
a number of tickets must be printed for those people
in Spanish. The gentleman in our little town of
Trinidad who had the charge of the printing of
those tickets, being adverse to us, had every
ticket printed against woman suffrage. The samples
that were sent to us from Denver were “for”
or “against,” but the tickets that
were printed only had the word “against”
on them, so that our friends had to scratch their
tickets, and all those Mexican people who could
not understand this trick and did not know the
facts of the case, voted against woman suffrage; so
that we lost a great many votes. This was
man’s generosity.
MISS ANTHONY. Special legislation
for the benefit of woman! I will admit you
that on the floor of the constitutional convention
was a representative Mexican, intelligent, cultivated,
chairman of the committee on suffrage, who signed
the petition, and was the first to speak in favor
of woman suffrage. Then they have in Denver about
four hundred negroes. Governor Routt said to me,
“The four hundred Denver negroes are going
to vote solid for woman suffrage.”
I said, “I do not know much about the Denver
negroes, but I know certainly what all negroes
were educated in, and slavery never educated master
or negro into a comprehension, of the great principles
of human freedom of our nation; it is not possible,
and I do not believe they are going to vote for us.”
Just ten of those Denver negroes voted for woman
suffrage. Then, in all the mines of Colorado
the vast majority of the wage laborers, as you
know, are foreigners.
There may be intelligent foreigners
in this country, and I know there are, who are
in favor of the enfranchisement of woman, but that
one does not happen to be Carl Schurz, I am ashamed
to say. And I want to say to you of Carl
Schurz, that side by side with that man on the
battlefield of Germany was Madame Anneke, as noble
a woman as ever trod the American soil. She
rode by the side of her husband, who was an officer,
on the battlefield; she slept in battlefield tents,
and she fled from Germany to this country, for her
life and property, side by side with Carl Schurz.
Now, what is it for Carl Schurz, stepping up to
the very door of the Presidency and looking back
to Madame Anneke, who fought for liberty as well
as he, to say, “You be subject in this Republic;
I will be sovereign.” If it is an insult
for Carl Schurz to say that to a foreign-born
woman, what is it for him to say it to Mrs. Ex-Governor
Wallace, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott to
the native-born, educated, tax-paying women of
this Republic? I can forgive an ignorant
foreigner; I can forgive an ignorant negro; but
I can not forgive Carl Schurz.
Right in the file of the foreigners
opposed to woman suffrage, educated under monarchical
governments that do not comprehend our principles,
whom I have seen traveling through the prairies of
Iowa or the prairies of Minnesota, are the Bohemians,
Swedes, Norwegians, Germans, Irishmen, Mennonites;
I have seen them riding on those magnificent loads
of wheat with those magnificent Saxon horses,
shining like glass on a sunny morning, every one of
them going to vote “no” against woman
suffrage. You can not convert them; it is
impossible. Now and then there is a whisky manufacturer,
drunkard, inebriate, libertine, and what we call a
fast man, and a colored man, broad and generous enough
to be willing to let women vote, to let his mother
have her opinion counted as to whether there shall
be license or no license, but the rank and file
of all classes, who wish to enjoy full license in
what are termed the petty vices of men are pitted solid
against the enfranchisement of women.
Then, in addition to all these, there
are, as you know, a few religious bigots left
in the world who really believe that somehow or
other if women are allowed to vote St. Paul would feel
badly about it. I do not know but that some
of the gentlemen present belong to that class.
[Laughter.] So, when you put those best men of
the nation, having religion about everything except
on this one question, whose prejudices control
them, with all this vast mass of ignorant, uneducated,
degraded population in this country, you make
an overwhelming and insurmountable majority against
the enfranchisement of women.
It is because of this fact that I ask
you not to remand us back to the States, but to
submit to the States the proposition of a sixteenth
amendment. The popular-vote method is not only
of itself an impossibility, but it is too humiliating
a process to compel the women of this nation to
submit to any longer.
I am going to give you an illustration,
not because I have any disrespect for the person,
because on many other questions he was really
a good deal better than a good many other men who had
not so bad a name in this nation. When, under
the old regime, John Morrissey, of my State,
the king of gamblers, was a Representative on
the floor of Congress, it was humiliating enough for
Lucretia Mott, for Elizabeth Cady Stanton, for
all of us to come down here to Washington and
beg at the feet of John Morrissey that he would let
intelligent, native-born women vote, and let us have
as much right in this Government and in the government
of the city of New York as he had. When John
Morrissey was a member of the New York State Legislature
it would have been humiliating enough for us to go
to the New York State Legislature and pray of John
Morrissey to vote to ratify the sixteenth amendment,
giving to us a right to vote; but if instead of
a sixteenth amendment you tell us to go back to
the popular-vote method, the old-time method, and go
down into John Morrissey’s seventh Congressional
district in the city of New York, and there, in
the sloughs and slums of that great Sodom, in
the grog-shops, the gambling-houses, and the brothels,
beg at the feet of each individual fisticuff of
his constituency to give the noble, educated,
native-born, tax-paying women of the State of
New York as much right as he has, that would be too
bitter a pill for a native-born woman to swallow
any longer.
I beg you, gentlemen, to save us from
the mortification and the humiliation of appealing
to the rabble. We already have on our side
the vast majority of the better educated the
best classes of men. You will remember that
Senator Christiancy, of Michigan, two years ago,
said on the floor of the Senate that of the 40,000
men who voted for woman suffrage in Michigan it
was said that there was not a drunkard, not a
libertine, not a gambler, not a depraved, low
man among them. Is not that something that tells
for us, and for our right? It is the fact,
in every State of the Union, that we have the
intelligent lawyers and the most liberal ministers
of all the sects, not excepting the Roman Catholics.
A Roman Catholic priest preached a sermon the
other day, in which he said, “God grant
that there were a thousand Susan B. Anthonys in this
city to vote and work for temperance.” When
a Catholic priest says that there is a great moral
necessity pressing down upon this nation demanding
the enfranchisement of women. I ask you that you
shall not drive us back to beg our rights at the
feet of the most ignorant and depraved men of
the nation, but that you, the representative men
of the nation, will hold the question in the hollow
of your hands. We ask you to lift this question
out of the hands of the rabble.
You who are here upon the floor of Congress
in both Houses are the picked men of the nation.
You may say what you please about John Morrissey,
the gambler, &c.; he was head and shoulders above the
rank and file of his constituency. The world
may gabble ever so much about members of Congress
being corrupt and being bought and sold; they
are as a rule head and shoulders among the great majority
who compose their State governments. There is
no doubt about it. Therefore I ask of you,
as representative men, as men who think, as men
who study, as men who philosophize, as men who know,
that you will not drive us back to the States any more,
but that you will carry out this method of procedure
which has been practiced from the beginning of
the Government; that is, that you will put a prohibitory
amendment in the Constitution and submit the proposition
to the several State legislatures. The amendment
which has been presented before you reads:
ARTICLE
XVI.
SECTION 1. The right of suffrage
in the United States shall be based on citizenship,
and the right of citizens of the United States
to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United
States, or by any State, on account of sex, or for
any reason not equally applicable to all citizens
of the United States.
SEC.
2. Congress shall have power to enforce this article
by
appropriate
legislation.
In this way we would get the right of
suffrage just as much by what you call the consent
of the States, or the States’ rights method,
as by any other method. The only point is that
it is a decision by the representative men of
the States instead of by the rank and file of
the ignorant men of the States. If you would
submit this proposition for a sixteenth amendment,
by a two-thirds vote of the two Houses to the
several legislatures, and the several legislatures
ratify it, that would be just as much by the consent
of the States as if Tom, Dick, and Harry voted “yes”
or “no.” Is it not, Senator?
I want to talk to Democrats as well as Republicans,
to show that it is a State’s rights method.
SENATOR EDMUNDS. Does
anybody propose any other, in case it is
done at all by the nation?
MISS ANTHONY. Not by the nation,
but they are continually driving us back to get
it from, the States, State by State. That is the
point I want to make. We do not want you to
drive us back to the States. We want you
men to take the question out of the hands of the
rabble of the State.
THE CHAIRMAN. May I interrupt
you?
MISS ANTHONY. Yes, sir;
I wish you would.
THE CHAIRMAN. You have
reflected on this subject a great deal. You
think there is a majority,
as I understand, even in the State of
New York, against women suffrage?
MISS ANTHONY. Yes, sir;
overwhelmingly.
THE CHAIRMAN. How, then,
would you get Legislatures elected to
ratify such a constitutional
amendment?
MISS ANTHONY. That brings
me exactly to the point.
THE CHAIRMAN. That is
the point I wish to hear you upon.
MISS ANTHONY. Because the members
of the State Legislatures are intelligent men
and can vote and enact laws embodying great principles
of the government without in any wise endangering their
positions with their constituencies. A constituency
composed of ignorant men would vote solid against
us because they have never thought on the question.
Every man or woman who believes in the enfranchisement
of women is educated out of every idea that he or
she was born into. We were all born into the
idea that the proper sphere of women is subjection,
and it takes education and thought and culture
to lift us out of it. Therefore when men go to
the ballot-box they till vote “no,”
unless they have actual argument on it. I
will illustrate. We have six Legislatures in the
nation, for instance, that have extended the right
to vote on school questions to the women, and
not a single member of the State Legislature has
ever lost his office or forfeited the respect or confidence
of his constituents as a representative because he
voted to give women the right to vote on school
questions. It is a question that the unthinking
masses never have thought upon. They do not
care about it one way or the other, only they have
an instinctive feeling that because women never
did vote therefore it is wrong that they ever
should vote.
MRS. SPENCER. Do make
the point that the Congress of the United
States leads the Legislatures
of the States and educates them.
MISS ANTHONY. When you, representative
men, carry this matter to Legislatures, State
by State, they will ratify it. My point is that
you can safely do this. Senator Thurman, of Ohio,
would not lose a single vote in Ohio in voting
in favor of the enfranchisement of women.
Senator EDMUNDS would not lose a single Republican
vote in the State of Vermont if he puts himself on
our side, which, I think, he will do. It
is not a political question. We are no political
power that can make or break either party to-day.
Consequently each man is left independent to express
his own moral and intellectual convictions on
the matter without endangering himself politically.
SENATOR EDMUNDS. I think, Miss
Anthony, you ought to put it on rather higher,
I will not say stronger, ground. If you can convince
us that it is right we would not stop to see how it
affected us politically.
MISS ANTHONY. I was coming to that,
I was going to say to all of you men in office
here to-day that if you can not go forward and
carry out either your Democratic or your Republican
or your Greenback theories, for instance, on the
finance, there is no great political power that
is going to take you away from these halls and
prevent you from doing all those other things which
you want to do, and you can act out your own moral
and intellectual convictions on this without let
or hindrance.
SENATOR EDMUNDS. Without
any danger to the public interests, you
mean.
MISS ANTHONY. Without
any danger to the public interests. I did
not mean to make a bad insinuation.
Senator.
I want to give you another reason why
we appeal to you. In these three States where
the question has been submitted and voted down we
can not get another Legislature to resubmit it, because
they say the people have expressed their opinion
and decided no, and therefore nobody with any
political sense would resubmit the question.
It is therefore impossible in any one of those States.
We have tried hard in Kansas for ten years to get
the question resubmitted; the vote of that State
seems to be taken as a finality. We ask you
to lift the sixteenth amendment out of the arena
of the public mass into the arena of thinking legislative
brains, the brains of the nation, under the law
and the Constitution. Not only do we ask
it for that purpose, but when you will have by
a two-thirds vote submitted the proposition to the
several Legislatures, you have put the pin down
and it never can go back. No subsequent Congress
can revoke that submission of the proposition;
there will be so much gained; it can not slide back.
Then we will go to New York or to Pennsylvania
and urge upon the Legislatures the ratification
of that amendment. They may refuse; they
may vote it down the first time. Then we will
go to the next Legislature, and the next Legislature,
and plead and plead, from year to year, if it
takes ten years. It is an open question to every
Legislature until we can get one that will ratify it,
and when that Legislature has once voted and ratified
it no subsequent legislation can revoke their
ratification.
Thus, you perceive, Senators, that every
step we would gain by this sixteenth amendment
process is fast and not to be done over again.
That is why I appeal to you especially. As I have
shown you in the respective States, if we fail
to educate the people of a whole State and
in Michigan it was only six months, and in Colorado
less than six months the State Legislatures
say that is the end of it. I appeal to you,
therefore, to adopt the course that we suggest.
Gentlemen of the committee, if there
is a question that you want to ask me before I
make my final appeal, I should like to have you put
it now; any question as to constitutional law or your
right to go forward. Of course you do not
deny to us that this amendment will be right in
the line of all the amendments heretofore. The
eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth
amendments are all in line prohibiting the States
from doing something which they heretofore thought
they had a right to do. Now we ask you to prohibit
the States from denying to women their rights.
I want to show you in closing that of
the great acts of justice done during the war
and since the war the first one was a great military
necessity. We never got one inch of headway in
putting down the rebellion until the purpose of
this great nation was declared that slavery should
he abolished. Then, as if by magic, we went
forward and put down the rebellion. At the close
of the rebellion the nation stood again at a perfect
deadlock. The Republican party was trembling
in the balance, because it feared that it could
not hold its position, until it should have secured
by legislation to the Government what it had gained
at the point of the sword, and when the nation
declared its purpose to enfranchise the negro
it was a political necessity. I do not want to
take too much vainglory out of the heads of Republicans,
but nevertheless it is a great national fact that
neither of those great acts of beneficence to
the negro race was done because of any high, overshadowing
moral conviction on the part of any considerable
minority even of the people of this nation, but simply
because of a military necessity slavery was abolished,
and simply because of a political necessity black
men were enfranchised.
The blackest Republican State you had
voted down negro suffrage, and that was Kansas
in 1867; Michigan voted it down in 1867; Ohio voted
it down in 1867. Iowa was the only State that
ever voted negro suffrage by a majority of the
citizens to which the question was submitted,
and they had not more than seventy-five negroes in
the whole State; so it was not a very practical question.
Therefore, it may be fairly said, I think, that
it was a military necessity that compelled one
of those acts of justice, and a political necessity
that compelled the other.
It seems to me that from the first word
uttered by our dear friend, Mrs. ex-Governor Wallace,
of Indiana, all the way down, we have been presenting
to you the fact that there is a great moral necessity
pressing upon this nation to-day, that you shall go
forward and attach a sixteenth amendment to the Federal
Constitution which shall put in the hands of the
women of this nation the power to help make, shape,
and control the social conditions of society everywhere.
I appeal to you from that standpoint that you
shall submit this proposition.
There is one other point to which I
want to call your attention. The Senate Judiciary
Committee, Senator EDMUNDS chairman, reported that
the United States could do nothing to protect women
in the right to vote under the amendments.
Now I want to give you a few points where the
United States interferes to take away the right to
vote from women where the State has given it to them.
In Wyoming, for instance, by a Democratic legislature,
the women were enfranchised. They were not
only allowed to vote but to sit upon juries, the
same as men. Those of you who read the reports
giving; the results of that action have not forgotten
that the first result of women sitting upon juries
was that wherever there was a violation of the
whisky law they brought in verdicts accordingly for
the execution of the law; and you will remember, too,
that the first man who ever had a verdict of guilty
for murder in the first degree in that Territory
was tried by a jury made up largely of women.
Always up to that day every jury had brought in a verdict
of shot in self-defense, although the person shot
down may have been entirely unarmed. Then,
in cities like Cheyenne and Laramie, persons entered
complaints against keepers of houses of ill-fame.
Women were on the jury, and the result
was in every case that before the juries could
bring in a bill of indictment the women had taken
the train and left the town. Why do you hear no
more of women sitting on juries in that Territory?
Simply because the United States marshal, who
is appointed by the President to go to Wyoming,
refuses to put the names of women into the box from
which the jury is drawn. There the United
States Government interferes to take the right
away.
A DELEGATE. I should like to state
that Governor Hoyt, of Wyoming, who was the governor
who signed the act giving to women this right,
informed me that the right had been restored, and that
his sister, who resides there, recently served
on a jury.
MISS ANTHONY. I am glad to hear
it. It is two years since I was there, but
I was told that that was the case. In Utah the
women were given the right to vote, but a year
and a half ago their Legislative Assembly found
that although they had the right to vote the Territorial
law provided that only male voters should hold
office. The Legislative Assembly of Utah passed
a bill providing that women should be eligible
to all the offices of the Territory. The
school offices, superintendents of schools, were the
offices in particular to which the women wanted to
be elected. Governor Emory, appointed by
the President of the United States, vetoed that
bill. Thus the full operations of enfranchisement
conferred by two of the Territories has been stopped
by Federal interference.
You ask why I come here instead of going
to the State Legislatures. You say that whenever
the Legislatures extend the right of suffrage
to us by the constitutions of their States we can
get it. Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Minnesota,
Colorado, Kansas, Oregon, all these States, have
had the school suffrage extended by legislative
enactment. If the question had been submitted
to the rank and file of the people of Boston, with
66,000 men paying nothing but the poll-tax, they
would have undoubtedly voted against letting women
have the right to vote for members of the school
board; but their intelligent representatives on
the floor of the Legislature voted in favor of the
extension of the school suffrage to the women.
The first result in Boston has been the election
of quite a number of women to the school board.
In Minnesota, in the little town of Rochester,
the school board declared its purpose to cut the
women teachers’ wages down. It did
not propose to touch the principal, who was a man,
but they proposed to cut all the women down from
$50 to $35. One woman put her bonnet on and
went over the entire town and said, “We have
got a right to vote for this school board, and
let us do so.” They all turned out
and voted, and not a single $35 man was re-elected,
but all those who were in favor of paying $50.
It seems to be a sort of charity to
let a woman teach school. You say here that
if a woman has a father, mother, or brother, or
anybody to support her, she can not have a place in
the Departments. In the city of Rochester
they cannot let a married woman teach school because
she has got a husband, and it is supposed he ought
to support her. The women are working in the
Departments, as everywhere else, for half price,
and the only pretext, you tell us, for keeping
women there is because the Government can economize
by employing women for less money. The other
day when I saw a newspaper item stating that the Government
proposed to compensate Miss Josephine Meeker for
all her bravery, heroism, and terrible sufferings
by giving her a place in the Interior Department,
it made my blood boil to the ends of my fingers
and toes. To give that girl a chance to work in
the Department; to do just as much work as a man,
and pay her half as much, was a charity.
That was a beneficence on the part of this grand
Government to her. We want the ballot for bread.
When we do equal work we want equal wages.
MRS. SAXON. California,
in her recent convention, prohibits the
Legislature hereafter from
enacting any law for woman’s suffrage,
does it not?
MISS ANTHONY. I do not
know. I have not seen the new constitution.
MRS. SAXON. It does.
The convention inserted a provision in the
constitution that the Legislature
could not act upon the subject
at all.
MISS ANTHONY. Everywhere that we
have gone, Senators, to ask our right at the hands
of any legislative or political body, we have been
the subjects of ridicule. For instance, I went
before the great national Democratic convention
in New York, in 1868, as a delegate from the New
York Woman Suffrage Association, to ask that great
party, now that it wanted to come to the front again,
to put a genuine Jeffersonian plank in its platform,
pledging the ballot to all citizens, women as
well as men, should it come into power. You
may remember how Mr. Seymour ordered my petition to
be read, after looking at it in the most scrutinizing
manner, when it was referred to the committee
on resolutions, where it has slept the sleep of
death from that day to this. But before the close
of the convention a body of ignorant workingmen
sent in a petition clamoring for greenbacks, and
you remember that the Democratic party bought
those men by putting a solid greenback plank in the
platform.
Everybody supposed they would nominate
Pendleton, or some other man of pronounced views,
but instead of doing that they nominated Horatio
Seymour, who stood on the fence, politically speaking.
My friends, Mrs. Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and women
who have brains and education, women who are tax-payers,
went there and petitioned for the practical application
of the fundamental principles of our Government
to one-half of the people. Those most ignorant
workingmen, the vast mass of them foreigners, went
there, and petitioned that that great political
party should favor greenbacks. Why did they
treat those workingmen with respect, and put a
greenback plank in their platform, and only table us,
and ignore us? Simply because the workingmen
represented the power of the ballot. They
could make or unmake the great Democratic party at
that election. The women were powerless.
We could be ridiculed and ignored with impunity,
and so we were laughed at, and put on the table.
Then the Republicans went to Chicago,
and they did just the same thing. They said
the Government bonds must be paid in precisely the
currency specified by the Congressional enactment,
and Talleyrand himself could not have devised
how not to say anything better than the Republicans
did at Chicago on that question. Then they
nominated a man who had not any financial opinions
whatever, and who was not known, except for his
military record, and they went into the campaign.
Both those parties had this petition from us.
I met a woman in Grand Rapids, Mich.,
a short time ago. She came to me one morning
and told me about the obscene shows licensed in
that city, and said that she thought of memorializing
the Legislature. I said, “Do; you can
not do anything else; you are helpless, but you
can petition. Of course they will laugh at you.”
Notwithstanding, I drew up a petition and she circulated
it. Twelve hundred of the best citizens signed
that petition, and the lady carried it to the
Legislature, just as Mrs. Wallace took her petition
in the Indiana Legislature. They read it, laughed
at it, and laid it on the table; and at the close
of the session, by a unanimous vote, they retired
in a solid body to witness the obscene show themselves.
After witnessing it, they not only allowed the
license to continue for that year, but they have licensed
it every year from that day to this, against all the
protests of the petitioners. [Laughter.]
SENATOR EDMUNDS. Do not
think we are wanting in respect to you and
the ladies here because you
say something that makes us laugh.
MISS ANTHONY. You are
not laughing at me; you are treating me
respectfully, because you
are hearing my argument; you are not
asleep, not one of you, and
I am delighted.
Now, I am going to tell you one other
fact. Seven thousand of the best citizens
of Illinois petitioned the Legislature of 1877 to
give them the poor privilege of voting on the license
question. A gentleman presented their petition;
the ladies were in the lobbies around the room.
A gentleman made a motion that the president of the
State association of the Christian Temperance Union
be allowed to address the Legislature regarding
the petition of the memorialists, when a gentleman
sprang to his feet, and said it was well enough
for the honorable gentleman to present the petition,
and have it received and laid on the table, but
“for a gentleman to rise in his seat and
propose that the valuable time of the honorable
gentlemen of the Illinois Legislature should be consumed
in discussing the nonsense of those women is going
a little too far. I move that the sergeant-at-arms
be ordered to clear the hall of the house of representatives
of the mob;” referring to those Christian
women. Now, they had had the lobbyists of the
whisky ring in that Legislature for years and
years, not only around it at respectful distances,
but inside the bar, and nobody ever made a motion
to clear the halls of the whisky mob there. It
only takes Christian women to make a mob.
MRS. SAXON. We were treated extremely
respectfully in Louisiana. It showed plainly
the temper of the convention when the present governor
admitted that woman suffrage was a fact bound to come.
They gave us the privilege of having women on the
school boards, but then the officers are appointed
by men who are politicians.
MISS ANTHONY. I want to read a
few words that come from good authority, for black
men at least. I find here a little extract that
I copied years ago from the Anti-Slavery Standard of
1870. As you know, Wendell Phillips was the
editor of that paper at that time:
“A man with the ballot
in his hand is the master of the situation.
He defines all his other rights;
what is not already given him he
takes.”
That is exactly what we want,
Senators. The rights you have not
already given us; we want
to get in such a position that we can
take them.
“The ballot makes every class
sovereign over its own fate. Corruption may
steal from a man his independence; capital may starve,
and intrigue fetter him, at times; but against all
these, his vote, intelligently and honestly cast,
is, in the long run, his full protection.
If, in the struggle, his fort surrenders, it is
only because it is betrayed from within. No power
ever permanently wronged a voting class without
its own consent.”
Senators, I want to ask of you that
you will, by the law and parliamentary rules of
your committee, allow us to agitate this question
by publishing this report and the report which you
shall make upon our petitions, as I hope you will
make a report. If your committee is so pressed
with business that it can not possibly consider
and report upon this question, I wish some of you would
make a motion on the floor of the Senate that a
special committee be appointed to take the whole
question of the enfranchisement of women into
consideration, and that that committee shall have
nothing else to do. This off-year of politics,
when there is nothing to do but to try how not
to do it (politically, I mean, I am not speaking
personally), is the best time you can have to consider
the question of woman suffrage, and I ask you to use
your influence with the Senate to have it specially
attended to this year. Do not make us come
here thirty years longer. It is twelve years
since the first time I came before a Senate committee.
I said then to Charles Sumner, if I could make
the honorable Senator from Massachusetts believe
that I feel the degradation and the humiliation
of disfranchisement precisely as he would if his fellows
had adjudged him incompetent from any cause whatever
from having his opinion counted at the ballot-box
we should have our right to vote in the twinkling
of an eye.
REMARKS BY MRS. SARA A. SPENCER,
OF WASHINGTON.
Mrs. SPENCER. Congress printed
10,000 copies of its proceedings concerning the
memorial services of a dead man, Professor Henry.
It cost me three months of hard work to have 3,000
copies of our arguments last year before the Committee
on Privileges and Elections printed for 10,000,000
living women. I ask that the committee will
have printed 10,000 copies of this report.
The CHAIRMAN. The committee have
no power to order the printing. That can
only be done by the order of the Senate. A resolution
can be offered to that effect in the Senate.
I have only to say, ladies, that you will admit
that we have listened to you with great attention,
and I can certainly say with very great interest.
What you have said will be duly and earnestly considered
by the committee.
Mrs. WALLACE. I wish to make just
one remark in reference to what Senator Thurman
said as to the popular vote being against woman suffrage.
The popular vote is against it, but not the popular
voice. Owing to the temperance agitation in
the last six years the growth of the suffrage
sentiment among the wives and mothers of this
nation has largely increased.
Mrs. SPENCER. In behalf
of the women of the United States, permit
me to thank the Senate Judiciary
Committee for their respectful,
courteous, and close attention.
Mr. HOAR. Mr. President, I do
not propose to make a speech at this late hour of
the day; it would be cruel to the Senate; and I had
not expected that this measure would be here this
afternoon. I was absent on a public duty and
came in just at the close of the speech of my honorable
friend from Missouri [Mr. VEST]. I wish, however,
to say one word in regard to what seemed to be the
burden of his speech.
He says that the women who ask this
change in our political organization are not simply
seeking to be put upon school boards and upon boards
of health and charity and upon all the large number
of duties of a political nature for which he must
confess they are fit, but he says they will want to
be President of the United States, and want to be
Senators, and want to be marshals and sheriffs, and
that seems to him supremely ridiculous. Now I
do not understand that that is the proposition.
What they want to do and to be is to be eligible to
such public duty as a majority of their fellow-citizens
may think they are fitted for. The majority of
public duties in this country do not require robust,
physical health, or exposure to what is base or unhealthy;
and when those duties are imposed upon anybody they
will be imposed only upon such persons as are fit
for them. But they want that if the majority
of the American people think a woman like Queen Victoria,
or Queen Elizabeth, or Queen Isabella of Spain, or
Maria Theresa of Hungary (the four most brilliant
sovereigns of any sex in modern history with only
two or three exceptions), the fittest person to be
President of the United States, they may be permitted
to exercise their choice accordingly.
Old men are eligible to office, old
men are allowed to vote, but we do not send old men
to war, or make constables or watchmen or overseers
of State prisons of old men; and it is utterly idle
to suppose that the fitness to vote or the fitness
to hold office has anything to do with the physical
strength or with the particular mental qualities in
regard to which the sexes differ from each other.
Mr. President, my honorable friend
spoke of the French revolution and the horrors in
which the women of Paris took part, and from that he
would argue that American wives and mothers and sisters
are not fit for the calm and temperate management
of our American republican life. His argument
would require him by the same logic to agree that
republicanism itself is not fit for human society.
The argument is the argument against popular government
whether by man or woman, and the Senator only applies
to this new phase of the claim of equal rights what
his predecessors would argue against the rights we
now have applied to us.
But the Senator thought it was unspeakably
absurd that a woman with her sentiment and emotional
nature and liability to be moved by passion and feeling
should hold the office of Senator. Why, Mr. President,
the Senator’s own speech is a refutation of its
own argument. Everybody knows that my honorable
friend from Missouri is one of the most brilliant
men in this country. He is a logician, he is
an orator, he is a man of large experience, he is a
lawyer entrusted with large interests; yet when he
was called upon to put forth this great effort of
his this afternoon and to argue this question which
he thinks so clear, what did he do? He furnished
the gush and the emotion and the eloquence, but when
he came to any argument he had to call upon two women,
Mrs. Leonard and Mrs. Whitney to supply all that.
[Laughter.] If Mrs. Leonard and Mrs. Whitney have to
make the argument in the Senate of the United States
for the brilliant and distinguished Senator from Missouri
it does not seem to me so absolutely ridiculous that
they should have or that women like them should have
seats here to make arguments of their own. [Manifestations
of applause in the galleries.]
The joint resolution was reported
to the Senate without amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. If no
amendment be proposed the question is, shall the joint
resolution be engrossed for a third reading?
Mr. COCKRELL. Let us have the yeas and nays.
Mr. BLAIR. Why not take the yeas and nays on
the passage?
Mr. COCKRELL. Very well.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The call is withdrawn.
The joint resolution was ordered to
be engrossed for a third reading, and was read the
third time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Shall the joint resolution
pass?
Mr. COCKRELL. I call for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Upon this
question the yeas and nays will necessarily be taken.
The Secretary proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. CHACE (when his name was called).
I am paired with the Senator from North Carolina [Mr.
RANSOM]. If he were present I should vote “yea.”
Mr. DAWES (when his name was called).
I am paired with the Senator from Texas [Mr. MAXEY].
I regret that I am not able to vote on this question.
I should vote “yea” if he were here.
Mr. COKE. My colleague [Mr. MAXEY],
if present, would vote “nay.”
Mr. GRAY (when Mr. GORMAN’S
name was called). I am requested by the Senator
from Maryland [Mr. GORMAN] to say that he is paired
with the Senator from Maine [Mr. FRYE].
Mr. STANFORD (when his name was called).
I am paired with the Senator from West Virginia [Mr.
CAMDEN]. If he were present I should vote “yea.”
The roll-call was concluded.
Mr. HARRIS. I have a general
pair with the Senator from Vermont [Mr. EDMUNDS],
who is necessarily absent from the Chamber, but I see
his colleague voted “nay,” and as I am
opposed to the resolution I will record my vote “nay.”
Mr. KENNA. I am paired on all
questions with the Senator from New York [Mr. MILLER].
Mr. JONES, of Arkansas. I have
a general pair with the Senator from Indiana [Mr.
HARRISON]. If he were present I should vote “nay”
on this question.
Mr. BROWN. I was requested by
the Senator from South Carolina [Mr. BUTLER] to announce
his pair with the Senator from Pennsylvania [Mr. CAMERON],
and to say that if the Senator from South Carolina
were present he would vote “nay.”
I do not know how the Senator from Pennsylvania would
vote.
Mr. CULLOM. I was requested by
the Senator from Maine [Mr. FRYE] to announce his
pair with the Senator from Maryland [Mr. GORMAN].
The result was announced yeas
16, nays 34; as follows:
YEAS 16.
Blair,
Bowen,
Cheney,
Conger,
Cullom,
Dolph,
Farwell,
Hoar,
Manderson,
Mitchell of Oreg.,
Mitchell of Pa.,
Palmer,
Platt,
Sherman,
Teller,
Wilson of Iowa.
NAYS 34.
Beck,
Berry,
Blackburn,
Brown,
Call,
Cockrell,
Coke,
Colquitt,
Eustis,
Evarts,
George,
Gray,
Hampton,
Harris,
Hawley,
Ingalls,
Jones of Nevada,
McMillan,
McPherson,
Mahone,
Morgan,
Morrill,
Payne,
Pugh,
Saulsbury,
Sawyer,
Sewell,
Spooner,
Vance,
Vest,
Walthall,
Whitthorne,
Williams,
Wilson of Md.
ABSENT 26
Aldrich,
Allison,
Butler,
Camden,
Cameron,
Chace,
Dawes,
Edmunds,
Fair,
Frye,
Gibson,
Gorman,
Hale,
Harrison,
Jones of Arkansas,
Jones of Florida,
Kenna,
Maxey,
Miller,
Plumb,
Ransom,
Riddleberger,
Sabin,
Stanford,
Van Wyck,
Voorhees.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Two-thirds have not voted
for the resolution.
It is not passed.
Mr. PLUMB subsequently said:
I wish to state that I was unexpectedly called out
of the Senate just before the vote was taken on the
constitutional amendment, and to also state that if
I had been here I should have voted for it.