USA TODAY US Edition

Suffrage pioneers honored in NYC

Central Park monument unveiled on anniversar­y

- Morgan Hines

The first monument honoring real women in Central Park was unveiled Wednesday – commemorat­ing the centennial anniversar­y of the 19th Amendment’s ratificati­on and its certificat­ion.

“We have broken the bronze ceiling,” Meredith Bergmannto­ld USA TODAY Wednesday morning. Bergmann is the renowned sculptor who created the Women’s Rights Pioneers Monument, which honors suffragist­s Sojourner Truth, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

“It seems especially appropriat­e that today, on Women’s Equality Day, we are unveiling a new statue in Central Park for the first time in over six decades: the first statue of real, nonfiction­al women, the first statue of an African American and significan­tly a statue that depicts three great Americans working together,” former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said in remarks at the event.

Like the women’s suffrage movement, which culminated with the ratificati­on of the 19th Amendment 100 years ago, it was a long road for the allvolunte­er nonprofit, Monumental Women, which ventured down a seven-year path with Bergmann to conceive, fund and create the monument.

“We are here to move history forward, and not even a pandemic can stop us,” Pam Elam, president of the board of Monumental Women, said in her remarks.

Monumental Women raised $1.5 million in private funding, and local Girl Scouts troops donated proceeds of cookie sales.

Sandra Pimentel, a resident of New York City, has been independen­tly fundraisin­g for a few years. During the pandemic, she started making masks to sell and contribute proceeds to the cause. The colors on the mask reflect those of the historical suffragist sashes.

“Today is one day, and the statue is here in perpetuity,” Pimentel told USA TODAY. “It’s not just the unveiling,” she added, noting that now, young people can walk by and learn about the women’s suffrage movement.

In designing the monument depicting Truth, Anthony and Stanton, Bergmann paid close attention to detail and included items significan­t to the three women: Truth’s knitting materials, Anthony’s traveling bag and Stanton’s books of papers.

The work of the three women depicted in the statue is now “our work,” Bergmann said in a release, noting during the event that while the three women did not live to see the 19th Amendment become part of the U.S. Constituti­on, “our rights were not gained by one dramatic action,” but by many.

“Most of the women who took up that fight never lived to see the promised land,” Clinton remarked.

“I can’t think of three more deserving women to put on a pedestal in Central Park,” Gail Brewer, borough president of Manhattan, said.

The 19th Amendment 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. Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriat­e legislatio­n.”

 ?? AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? The statue of women’s rights pioneers Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Sojourner Truth in Central Park.
AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES The statue of women’s rights pioneers Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Sojourner Truth in Central Park.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States