Chattanooga Times Free Press

In ‘The Woman’s Hour,’ Elaine Weiss dissects battle for women’s right to vote

- BY LYDA PHILLIPS CHAPTER16.ORG

The long march toward voting rights for women began as early as the 1820s, but it wasn’t formalized as a political goal until 1848 when Elizabeth Cady Stanton read her “Declaratio­n of Sentiments” at the Seneca Falls Convention in Seneca Falls, New York. In “The Woman’s Hour: The Great Fight To Win the Vote” (Viking, 404 pages, $28), Elaine Weiss chronicles the history of that battle beginning with its early days, when Stanton and Susan B. Anthony joined forces, continuing through the 19th Amendment’s introducti­on in 1878 and its passage in 1918, and finally to a 1920 showdown over ratificati­on in Tennessee.

The amendment reads: 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. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriat­e legislatio­n.

By August 1920, 35 states had ratified the amendment. Tennessee was poised to put the amendment over the top — giving women the right to vote in every state, in every election from dogcatcher to president — or stop the suffrage movement in its tracks. After three tied votes, the decision teetered on the shoulders of Harry Burn, a young man who wore the red rose of opposition in his lapel but who carried a pro-suffrage letter from his mother in his coat pocket.

Weiss tells much of this story through the machinatio­ns of three powerful women who converged with their attendant forces on the Hermitage Hotel in Nashville: Carrie Catt, the steely-eyed head of the National American Woman Suffrage Associatio­n; Sue Shelton White, a firebrand leader in the newer, more radical National Women’s Party; and Josephine Pearson, a passionate “Anti” from Monteagle, Tennessee.

Catt “was a firm believer in evolution, in both biological and social realms; her faith in it kept her optimistic, confident of progress,” writes Weiss. “For Carrie Catt, woman suffrage was not simply a political goal; it was nothing less than the next logical step in the moral evolution of humankind.”

Sue White, a native Tennessean, had begun her career with Catt’s army of suffragett­es but had become impatient with its slow-but-steady strategy. White threw her lot in with the more confrontat­ional National Women’s Party and proudly wore a “prison pin” on her blouse, a recognitio­n that she had been arrested and jailed for the cause. Weiss explores the gradual schism that developed between the Catt wing of the movement and more radical women like White.

The anti-suffrage Pearson, by contrast, was a passionate defender of “the spirit of the woman of the Old South” and viewed suffragett­es as “modern Eve [asking] for the forbidden fruit that may give out its deadly poison in the possible disruption of home.” Weiss subjects the “Antis” to the same scrutiny she trained on the pro-suffrage movement, from Pearson in Nashville to such prominent national figures as Ida Tarbell, the muckraking journalist. “Men and women are widely apart in functions and possibilit­ies,” Tarbell wrote. “They cannot be made equal by exterior devices like trousers, ballots, the study of Greek.”

The Antis offered displays of blatant racism, flying the Confederat­e battle flag at their rallies and warning of dire consequenc­es to “Anglo-Saxon values” if “Negro women” were allowed to vote.

“This well-researched and well-documented history reveals how pro-suffragist­s sometimes compromise­d racial equality to win white women’s enfranchis­ement, and that, although the 19th Amendment was ratified, there exists to this day an ongoing battle to effect universal, unrestrict­ed suffrage,” Library Journal writes of “The Woman’s Hour.”

This timely exploratio­n of the history of American gender politics reverberat­es during the current debate over female equality in all aspects of life and reminds us of how long and complex that struggle has been.

For more local book coverage, visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

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