The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Local suffragist­s helped pass amendment

- By Matthew Urtz

In July of 1848, a group of nearly 200 women met at the Wesleyan Chapel in Seneca Falls, launching the women’s rights movement. One of their goals was to attain the right to vote for women. It was 69 years later that New York voters approved women’s suffrage. Three years later a federal amendment was approved. In between, both men and women were drawn into the debate of whether women should (or should not) have the right to vote. Today we are focusing on those who were for women’s suffrage.

In April 1894, the City of Oneida hosted a conference on women’s suffrage at the Munroe Opera House (then located across from Madison Street on Main Street). The conference was part of a statewide initiative to have a conference in every county in the state. On the first night, Susan B. Anthony spoke to the crowd; on the second night, the Rev. Anna Shaw spoke. Newspaper accounts say the conference was a success and well attended.

The following year the Oneida Civics and Social Science Club, Madison County’s earliest pro-suffrage club, was organized. Formed in October of 1895, the club was active in the suffrage movement but it was organized to “…pursue a course of study on political equality, social science, the laws of our country and kindred topics that will prepare us for all the duties of good citizenshi­p.” The women would educate themselves on current events, local, state and national politics, world events and more. They also conducted letter campaigns and spoke to local and state politician­s on a number of issues, including suffrage and a local curfew.

The club also organized special speakers including, on two separate occasions, prominent national women’s suffragist Carrie Chap- man Catt. They would also regularly work with prominent Onondaga County suffragist Harriet May Mills to have her speak or assist in bringing other speakers.

As women’s suffrage moved towards a vote in 1915, a conference was held in Oneida and members attended local fairs and events, as well as the hop grower’s picnic, which is interestin­g as many members of the Civics Club were also members of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union. The group merged with organizati­ons in Oneida and Kenwood to form the Oneida Kenwood Suffrage Campaign Club.

The vote failed in Madison County by more than 1,600 votes.

Following the vote, another conference was held, and in May the Women’s Suffrage Party held their first convention in Oneida. The Oneida Kenwood Suffrage campaign had more than 125 members and was working to host fundraiser­s, meetings, dances, and dinners. They made their voices heard and in November 1917, the Suffrage Vote passed by a slim majority of

163, still that was nearly a 10 percent swing from the vote two years earlier.

On Oct. 11 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., at County Building No. 4 ( DMV Building), we will be putting the original meeting minutes (transcribe­d as well as the original), photos and poster images on display as part of our Archives Day celebratio­n. The Mad- ison County Historian’s Office is partnering with the Oneida Community Mansion House, Madison County Historical Society and Cazenovia Public Library to bring forth the story of the role of both the pro and anti-suffrage societies as we celebrate the 100th anniversar­y of women’s suffrage in New York state.

For more informatio­n, contact Matthew Urtz at 315-366-2453 or by emailing matthew.urtz@madisoncou­nty.ny.gov.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Dr. Anna Shaw and Carrie Chapman Catt, founder of the League of Women Voters, lead an estimated 20,000support­ers in a women’s suffrage march on New York’s Fifth Ave. in 1915.
AP PHOTO Dr. Anna Shaw and Carrie Chapman Catt, founder of the League of Women Voters, lead an estimated 20,000support­ers in a women’s suffrage march on New York’s Fifth Ave. in 1915.
 ?? PHOTO COURTESY NATIONAL ABOLITIONI­ST HALL OF FAME ?? A sample page from the seven suffrage scrapbooks at the Library of Congress assembled by Elizabeth and Anne Miller.
PHOTO COURTESY NATIONAL ABOLITIONI­ST HALL OF FAME A sample page from the seven suffrage scrapbooks at the Library of Congress assembled by Elizabeth and Anne Miller.
 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTO COURTESY NATIONAL ABOLITIONI­ST HALL OF FAME ?? Mother Elizabeth Smith Miller (1822-1911) and daughter Anne Fitzhugh Miller (1856-1912) moved to Geneva NY in 1859. Together they carried on many suffragett­e activities including holding the state suffrage conference in Geneva, speaking at state and...
PHOTO COURTESY NATIONAL ABOLITIONI­ST HALL OF FAME Mother Elizabeth Smith Miller (1822-1911) and daughter Anne Fitzhugh Miller (1856-1912) moved to Geneva NY in 1859. Together they carried on many suffragett­e activities including holding the state suffrage conference in Geneva, speaking at state and...
 ??  ?? Susan B. Anthony
Susan B. Anthony

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