Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

100 years of women’s suffrage Anniversar­y commemorat­ions highlight racial divide

- SUSAN HAIGH AND SUMAN NAISHADHAM Suman Naishadham reported from Atlanta.

HARTFORD, Conn. — As the U.S. marks the 100th anniversar­y of women’s suffrage, many event organizers, mindful that the 19th Amendment originally benefited mostly white women, have been careful to present it as a commemorat­ion, not a celebratio­n.

The amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on was ratified on Aug. 18, 1920, but many women of color were prevented from casting ballots for decades afterward because of poll taxes, literacy tests, overt racism, intimidati­on, and laws that prevented the grandchild­ren of slaves from voting. Much of that didn’t change until the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

From exhibits inside the Arizona Capitol Museum to a gathering on the North Carolina Statehouse lawn, many commemorat­ions, including those that moved online because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, have highlighte­d a more nuanced history of the American women’s suffrage movement alongside the traditiona­l tributes to wellknown suffragist­s such as Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

The 100th anniversar­y has arrived during a year of nationwide protests against racial inequality that have forced the United States to once again reckon with its uncomforta­ble history.

“Like many movements, the stories are complicate­d and I think it’s important, as we have an opportunit­y to reflect and to celebrate, that we also are honest about how we didn’t meet all of our aspiration­s,” said Rhode Island Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea, a Democrat born and raised in Puerto Rico who has helped to organize her state’s suffrage commemorat­ion efforts. “It’s important to have these conversati­ons so we can do a better job of going forward.”

The Connecticu­t Historical Society last month unveiled an online exhibit titled “The Work Must Be Done: Women of Color and the Right to Vote.” It highlights Black women from Connecticu­t who fought for suffrage rights as well as other issues, such as anti-discrimina­tion, anti-lynching, labor reforms and access to education.

“We have really been wanting to make sure we talk about the complicate­d history of these issues in our country,” said Arizona Assistant Secretary of State Allie Bones, whose office came up with a program after working with about 60 community groups across the state, many of which were “very focused on not calling it a celebratio­n, but … a commemorat­ion.”

The complicate­d nature of the suffrage movement came full circle last week when Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden chose California U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris as his running mate, making her the first Black woman on a major party ticket.

In an appearance with Biden, Harris said she was “mindful of all the heroic and ambitious women before me whose sacrifice, determinat­ion and resilience makes my presence here today even possible.”

While their names are not as wellknown as the white suffragist­s, Black women played both prominent and smaller roles in the movement. Sojourner Truth, an emancipate­d slave, who died in 1883, is considered one of the first known Black suffragist­s. She traveled throughout the U.S. speaking at women’s rights convention­s and suffrage events, including at the Akron, Ohio, women’s convention in 1851 where she was credited with giving a powerful speech that’s been remembered as “Ain’t I a Woman?” Some historians, however, have questioned the wording.

Through the years, there were many prominent Black abolitioni­sts and suffragist­s who worked in their own women’s clubs and suffrage organizati­ons and sometimes side-by-side with white suffragist­s, often working for both voting rights and civil rights.

The young founding members of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority participat­ed in the 1913 suffrage march in Washington in their first public act. The Howard University students took great personal risk and were not being welcomed by some white suffragist­s who ultimately insisted the Black women march at the end of the procession, said Cheryl A. Hickmon, national first vice president of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

“They felt that it was their obligation, if you will, even though it was unsafe to march with the other women and show their dissension and feelings,” said Hickmon, whose organizati­on has been working with organizers of the Turning Point Suffragist Memorial that’s being constructe­d in southern Fairfax County, Virginia, and includes an overview of the entire movement, including Black suffragist­s.

The 100th anniversar­y marks an opportunit­y to “honestly examine” the relationsh­ip between white and Black women in the women’s rights movement, said Johnetta Betch Cole, a former college president and anthropolo­gist who is currently the national chair of the National Conference of Negro Women, an organizati­on that was founded in 1935 to advocate for women’s rights.

“There is more acknowledg­ement of the complexiti­es of the strains, of the racism in the suffrage movement than ever, ever before,” Betch Cole said. “Unfortunat­ely, one can be virtuous in one form of oppression and then turn around and victimize others on another basis.”

In June, protesters in Iowa demanded that Iowa State University remove the name of suffragist and alumna Carrie Chapman Catt from a building because of white supremacis­t and anti-immigrant statements attributed to her.

Doris Kelley, a former Democratic Iowa House representa­tive who chairs the state’s 19th Amendment Centennial Commemorat­ion, said it’s important to remember the historical context that suffragist­s navigated while acknowledg­ing the movement’s complexiti­es. The logo of Iowa’s centennial commemorat­ion “Hard Won, Not Done,” Kelley said, is a nod to that unfinished history.

In North Carolina, Janice Jones Schroeder, a member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, said she was impressed organizers of the state’s suffrage anniversar­y activities thought to include her in a commemorat­ion event last September on the lawn of the Statehouse.

“At that time, American Indians were not even considered citizens of the United States,” she said. While the Snyder Act of 1924 admitted Native Americans born in the U.S. to full U.S. citizenshi­p, it was left up to the states to decide who had the right to vote, and it took more than 40 years for all 50 states to agree to grant them voting rights.

Schroeder said there are still challenges today for tribal members who want to vote, including voter ID laws, long distances to register to vote on some reservatio­ns, lack of access to mail and socioecono­mic disparitie­s.

Women of color in African American, Latino and other communitie­s face similar barriers, making the anniversar­y of the 19th Amendment and the ensuing decades-long fight all the more relevant a century later in a highstakes election year.

“I look at politics now,” said Schroeder, “and I think, ‘Do we still have a voice?’”

 ?? (Harris & Ewing/Library of Congress) ?? In this circa 1913 photo, demonstrat­ors march in a women’s suffrage parade near the Capitol building in Washington. A horse and cart pulls a sign which reads, “We demand an amendment to the constituti­on of the United States enfranchis­ing the women of this country.”
(Harris & Ewing/Library of Congress) In this circa 1913 photo, demonstrat­ors march in a women’s suffrage parade near the Capitol building in Washington. A horse and cart pulls a sign which reads, “We demand an amendment to the constituti­on of the United States enfranchis­ing the women of this country.”
 ?? (File photo/AP/Martha Waggoner) ?? Visitors look at items marking the 100th anniversar­y of the passage of the 19th Amendment in September 2019 at the State Capitol in Raleigh, N.C. The exhibit was titled, “She Changed the World: NC Women Breaking Barriers.”
(File photo/AP/Martha Waggoner) Visitors look at items marking the 100th anniversar­y of the passage of the 19th Amendment in September 2019 at the State Capitol in Raleigh, N.C. The exhibit was titled, “She Changed the World: NC Women Breaking Barriers.”
 ?? (File photo/AP/Bob Christie) ?? Visitors to the Arizona Capitol Museum look at a display honoring the state’s early suffrage movement on March 11 in Phoenix. The display includes a mannequin dressed in period consume depicting Frances Willard Munds, who led a successful 1912 ballot initiative that gave women the right to vote.
(File photo/AP/Bob Christie) Visitors to the Arizona Capitol Museum look at a display honoring the state’s early suffrage movement on March 11 in Phoenix. The display includes a mannequin dressed in period consume depicting Frances Willard Munds, who led a successful 1912 ballot initiative that gave women the right to vote.

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