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[About.com] Women and Unions: Late 19th Century Labor Organizing by and for Women

Some highlights of American women’s labor organizing in the late 19th century:

  • In 1863, a committee in New York City, organized by the editor of the New York Sun, began to help women collect wages due them that had not been paid. This organization continued for fifty years.
  • Also in 1863, women in Troy, New York, organized the Collar Laundry Union. These women worked in laundries making and laundering the detachable collars stylish on men’s shirts. They went on strike, and as a result won an increase in wages. In 1866, their strike fund was used to aid the Iron Molders Union, building a lasting relationship with that men’s union. The leader of the laundryworkers’ union, Kate Mullaney, went on to become assistant secretary of the National Labor Union. The Collar Laundry Union dissolved July 31, 1869, in the the middle of another strike, faced with the threat of paper collars and the likely loss of their jobs.
  • The National Labor Union was organized in 1866; while not exclusively focusing on women’s issues, it did take a stand for the rights of working women…

And, today we are proud to have a woman, Doris Crouse Mays, as the President of the Virginia State AFL-CIO

You can read the rest of this article on the About.com website.

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[WaPo] Women’s groups target sexism in campaigns

The list includes the radio talk show host who called a female senator a “prostitute” for cutting a deal to benefit her state, the male challenger who referred to his female rival “attractive” and “probably a good mother,” and the TV host who noted that the candidate’s wife looked like an angry woman.

Those comments and others have been collected by a group of advocates for women running for office who are monitoring what they consider a “highly toxic” media environment that makes it difficult for female candidates.

You can read the rest of this article by Krissah Thompson at The Washington Post.

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[WaPo] Virginia Politics Blog – McAuliffe lends the Farm Team a hand raising money

Anita Kumar Terry McAuliffe, former Democratic National Committee chairman, is hosting a fundraiser for the Farm Team, a group created to help women seek public office, as he looks to stay active in state politics in Virginia in advance of the 2013 elections.

McAuliffe and his wife, Dorothy, will host a Sept. 26 reception for the Farm Team — one of the main fundraisers for the group this year — at their McLean home. His wife has been involved with the organization before, but it’s McAuliffe’s first time hosting an event.

McAuliffe’s spokesman Levar Stoney said his boss heard about the event and wanted to help. See the invite.

The Women of Courage and Truth reception will feature the unveiling of a portrait of 16-year-old Barbara Johns, who was at the forefront of the movement to end school segregation in the 1950s.

McAuliffe, who lost his party’s nomination for governor last year, is widely expected to make another run for governor in 2013.

As we told you last week, Sen. Don McEachin is also considering running for governor. Others who are interested or being recruited: House Minority Leader Ward Armstrong, U.S. Rep. Gerry Connolly, Sen. Chap Petersen of Fairfax County and former Del. Shannon Valentine, who lost her Lynchburg-area seat in November

The original article by Anita Kumar appeared in the September 1, 2010, edition of the Washington Post Virginia Politics Blog.

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Happy Women’s Equality Day!

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Celebrate the 90th Anniversary of Suffrage with the Sewall-Belmont House & Museum

August 26, 2010

On August 26, 1920, the 19th Amendment Guaranteed Women Right to Vote

 

Alice Paul unfurls the Ratification Banner at NWP headquarters.

Alice Paul unfurls the Ratification Banner at NWP headquarters.

On August 18, 1920, one man, Harry Burn, changed his vote in the Tennessee state legislature from a “Nay” vote to an “Aye” vote and Tennessee became the 36th and final state needed to ratify the 19th Amendment enfranchising women. While it was one man’s vote at the urging of his mother: “don’t forget to be a good boy and help Mrs. Catt put the “rat” in ratification,”  that officially secured the 19th amendment, it took years of hard work, dedication and sacrifice from a cadre of women to make the right to vote a reality. As we celebrate the 90th Anniversary of woman suffrage, we thank the men who ratified the amendment, but more importantly we pay a special tribute to the thousands of women who gave everything they had for the right to vote.

 

The fight for suffrage became an organized and public struggle in the U.S. following the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848. Prominent leaders such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, Sojourner Truth, Lucretia Mott, and Susan B. Anthony began campaigning for the right to vote at state and federal levels. Years of hard work led to woman suffrage in only a few states, and new leaders such as Carrie Chapman Catt, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, and Harriet Stanton Blatch arose as the original leaders began to pass away.  

 

In 1912 a 27 year old woman named Alice Paul journeyed to Washington to take over the Congressional campaign of the National American Women’s Suffrage Association. She was supposedly to perform the symbolic duty of requesting that Congress introduce the 19th amendment each year, and operated on a budget of $10. By March of 1913, an elaborate march on Washington, DC, was held and suffrage started to become a national issue. Months more of campaigning led to enfranchisement in a few more states, but after several deputations to the President, regular lobbying pressure on Congress, and efforts to defeat the Democrats – the party in power – in the 1914 and 1916 elections, Alice Paul, Lucy Burns, and other leaders of the National Woman’s Party (NWP) were disappointed with the lack of progress made on suffrage. In 1917, the NWP took the bold step of picketing the White House for the first time in the history of the nation. When the U.S. entered World War I, the pickets held banners demanding to know why the president would fight for democracy abroad while denying it at home. The pickets were ignored at first, then arrested and released, then arrested and sentenced. Sentencing of the pickets led to outrage and charges of political imprisonment. Dissatisfied with their government, the prisoners went on hunger strikes and were force fed, to the growing shock of a nation fighting a war abroad and looking for peace and democracy at home.

 

Agitation of Congress and the White House by more than 100 women prisoners and even more pickets along with the national press focus on the issue of suffrage finally worked in favor of women, and the 19th Amendment was sent to the states to ratify. Tennessee did become the 36th state to ratify the Amendment which was officially added to the Constitution of the United States on August 26, 1920, but the state legislature is not the hero in this story, nor is Harry Burn. The heroes of suffrage are the generations of women and girls who gave their lives, their fortunes, their time, and their hearts to the cause. On this 90th Anniversary, remember the many women who made woman suffrage a reality for American women today.

 

 

Just in time for Women’s Equality Day! Suffrage Supplies at CafePress!

I Heart Alice Tote at CafePress

I Heart Alice Paul Tote, CafePress

 

Votes for Women Apron from CafePress

Votes for Women Apron, CafePress

Nina Allender Mug at CafePress

Nina Allender Mug, CafePress

 

The Sewall-Belmont House & Museum is excited to announce three new apparel and gift lines available at our CafePress website starting today. Visit our website or click on the images above to start shopping! Proceeds will benefit the preservation and education efforts at the Museum.

 

Show your love for suffrage today!

 

Real Simple Magazine Mention

See our press mention on page 14 in Real Simple Magazine

90 years ago, women in America finally won the right to vote…

 

Celebrate the 90th anniversary of suffrage with us by honoring an influential woman in your life!

We are collecting donations and photos to show the trajectory of inspiring women through history. The online exhibit goes live today, but we are collecting photos through December!

Click here for details.

 

Cirque du Soleil's OvoSpecial Gift for Friends of the Museum 

Cirque du Soleil’s latest touring production OVO is hitting Washington D.C. starting Thursday, September 9th, 2010, and friends of the Sewall-Belmont House & Museum can receive 15% off select performances!

OVO will perform for a limited engagement under the trademark blue-and-yellow Grand Chapiteau (Big Top) at The Plateau at National Harbor.

 

Click here for this offer!

 

 

Jeannette Rankin

Jeannette Rankin, First Woman in Congress

 

In honor of the 90th Anniversary of women’s suffrage, the Sewall-Belmont House & Museum is proud to announce the opening of our new online exhibit honoring inspiring women in the lives of many.

View the exhibit today!

 

 Save the Date! September 22nd: Alice Award Luncheon

 

We are proud to announce that the 2010 Alice Award will be presented to the Honorable Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House, recognizing her as the first female Speaker of the House and the highest ranking female politician.  
Nancy Pelosi 

 
September 22, 2010
101 Constitution Ave NW

 

For more information about the 2010 Alice Award luncheon, please click here.

 

 

Donate Now

 

Members receive free or reduced admission for programs throughout the year and other benefits.

 

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Want to join the conversation and stay up-to-date on all the programs, events, exhibits, and news about the Sewall-Belmont House & Museum?

 

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About Sewall-Belmont House & Museum

The Sewall-Belmont House & Museum on Capitol Hill explores the evolving role of women and their contributions to society through the continuing, and often untold, story of women’s pursuit for equality. The museum is the headquarters of the historic National Woman’s Party and was the Washington home of its founder and Equal Rights Amendment author Alice Paul. Visit our website to learn more.

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August 26, 1920: The Day the Suffrage Battle Was Won

Finally, the long battle for the vote for women was won when a young legislator voted as his mother urged him to vote.

Votes for women were first seriously proposed in the United States in July, 1848, at the Seneca Falls Woman’s Rights Convention organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott. One woman who attended that convention was Charlotte Woodward. She was nineteen at the time. In 1920, when women finally won the vote throughout the nation, Charlotte Woodward was the only participant in the 1848 Convention who was still alive to be able to cast a vote, though she was apparently too ill to actually cast a ballot.

You can read more of this article on About.com.

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