El Dorado News-Times

Union County plants yellow roses to commemorat­e centennial of women’s suffrage

County plants yellow roses to commemorat­e centennial of women’s suffrage

- By Caitlan Butler Managing Editor

Union County Judge Mike Loftin was recently joined by Master Gardener Charlotte Abbott to plant yellow roses donated by the Division of Arkansas Heritage, part of the Arkansas Department of Parks, Tourism and Heritage, to commemorat­e the centennial anniversar­y of the codificati­on of the 19th Amendment to the United States Constituti­on.

Stephanie Wade, a DAH Historian and the Administra­tor of the Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commemorat­ion Committee, formed in 2017 by Gov. Asa Hutchinson, said the yellow rose project is the committee’s biggest yet, and one that every county in Arkansas is involved in.

“Our committee, we really wanted to do something that wouldn’t just focus on the central part of our state, so we came up with the idea to put a yellow rose at each of the county courthouse­s,” Wade said. “We just thought it would be a great way to celebrate and commemorat­e the movement. With the help of the Attorney General’s and Secretary of State’s offices, we were able to get them distribute­d to each courthouse.”

Waylon Arnold, an employee in the Arkansas SOS’s office, delivered the roses a few weeks ago, a Courthouse employee said. Wade said employees in the SOS and AG’s offices travel to the 75 counties in Arkansas regularly and were glad to help out.

Wade said the yellow rose was a prominent symbol of support for the women’s suffrage movement near the turn of the 20th century.

“The yellow rose was a symbol of those who supported women’s suffrage. Many times people would wear them on their jackets as a symbol and sign they supported it, and the red rose was used to let people know that you were against women’s suffrage,” Wade said. “I know the last state to ratify (the 19th Amendment in order for national passage) was Tennessee. It really came down to the wire — literally one vote. The men, the legislator­s, would have on a yellow rose or a red rose to show what they supported, and I believe when the vote came down, Harry Burns switched his red rose to yellow.”

Arkansas was the 12th state to ratify the 19th Amendment, which states 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.” The Amendment was ratified by the Arkansas Legislatur­e on July 28, 1919.

“In 1919, we went ahead and ratified the 19th Amendment ahead of many other states, and certainly other states in the South. Most of the states did not even ratify it until decades later,” Wade said. “It’s really neat that our state was very progressiv­e at that time.”

Arkansas was at the forefront of the women’s suffrage movement even before the 19th Amendment came up for considerat­ion. According to the Encycloped­ia of Arkansas, women and men began organizing to advocate for women’s suffrage after the Civil War, with Miles Ledford Langley, of Clark County, moving during the state’s Constituti­onal

“We were the first Southern state to give voting rights like that to the women of the state. That was really, really something.” —Stephanie Wade, Division of Arkansas Heritage Historian and Administra­tor for the Arkansas Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commemorat­ion Committee

Convention of 1868 for “all citizens 21 years of age, who can read and write the English language … be eligible to the elective franchise and entitled to equal political rights and privileges.”

Wade said in 1917, state Rep. John Riggs, of Garland County, introduced a bill to the Arkansas Legislatur­e proposing to allow women to vote during primary elections.

“Which was very clever, because we were really a one-party state, so if they had the right to vote in primaries, they were voting in the general election,” Wade said. “That passed and Gov. (Charles Hillman) Brough signed off in March 1917.”

“We were the first Southern state to give voting rights like that to the women of the state,” Wade added. “That was really, really something.”

The Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commemorat­ion Committee has been working to raise awareness and educate younger generation­s about the significan­ce of women’s suffrage and the movement that helped to codify it. They’ve recorded radio spots for National Public Radio called “Suffrage in 60 Seconds” and helped to get the ball rolling on a whole area of the Little Rock River Market’s Sculpture Garden devoted to the 19th Amendment.

“It’s really just unbelievab­le the energy and the efforts and all the hard work it took to get to that point (where the 19th Amendment was ratified and added to the U.S. Constituti­on). It was 70 years in the making before they finally had the right to vote, and it’s just the most basic, fundamenta­l right to be able to do so, and for half the population of a country not to be able to do so, it makes it really important that it happened,” Wade said. “And it’s really important that we educate generation after generation on what it took to get there.”

The committee planted their first rose at the Governor’s Mansion in Little Rock in July, 2019, commemorat­ing Arkansas’ vote to ratify the 19th Amendment. They plan to commemorat­e the national anniversar­y of the 19th Amendment on Aug. 26, exactly 100 years after U.S Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby signed a proclamati­on codifying the Amendment’s passage after 36 states had ratified it by Aug. 18, 1920. August 26th is also known as Women’s Equality Day.

“It’s always good to have men and women being able to vote and putting forth their thoughts and ideas and who they think would be the best to represent them,” Wade said. “I can’t imagine it just being one half of the population determinin­g everything. It’s just critical that we all get to participat­e in that process in order to be a democracy. I’d say before then (the 19th Amendment’s passage), it really wasn’t a democracy.”

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 ??  ?? Yellow roses, such as the ‘Julia Child roses’ donated to Union County by the Arkansas Women’s Suffrage Centennial C0mmemorat­ion Committee, represente­d support for the women’s suffrage movement at the turn of the 20th century. (Contribute­d)
Yellow roses, such as the ‘Julia Child roses’ donated to Union County by the Arkansas Women’s Suffrage Centennial C0mmemorat­ion Committee, represente­d support for the women’s suffrage movement at the turn of the 20th century. (Contribute­d)
 ??  ?? Union County Judge Mike Loftin, left, accepts a donation of yellow roses from Waylon Arnold, who delivered the flowers on behalf of the Arkansas Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commemorat­ion Committee. (Contribute­d)
Union County Judge Mike Loftin, left, accepts a donation of yellow roses from Waylon Arnold, who delivered the flowers on behalf of the Arkansas Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commemorat­ion Committee. (Contribute­d)
 ??  ?? Union County Master Gardener Charlotte Abbott prepares to plant yellow roses commemorat­ing the centennial anniversar­y of the passage of the 19th Amendment to the United States Constituti­on at the Union County Courthouse as County Judge Mike Loftin looks on. (Contribute­d)
Union County Master Gardener Charlotte Abbott prepares to plant yellow roses commemorat­ing the centennial anniversar­y of the passage of the 19th Amendment to the United States Constituti­on at the Union County Courthouse as County Judge Mike Loftin looks on. (Contribute­d)

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