Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Frances Hunt was Arkansas House’s 1st female legislator

- NINFA O. BARNARD

Frances Rowena Mathews Hunt was born on June 6, 1874, in Des Arc, to Julia Ann Wair Mathews and Allen C. Mathews, a Confederat­e veteran and editor of the town’s newspaper, the Des Arc Citizen. While growing up, she was educated in the Des Arc schools and learned the printing trade at her father’s newspaper office.

Hunt’s family members were active politician­s, so she found herself immersed and interested in public affairs and politics at quite an early age. In 1891, her father died shortly after purchasing the Prairie County Democrat and founding the Des Arc Guidon.

Consequent­ly, her mother soon moved the family to the plantation of her brother, Samuel T. Wair, in Redfield.

Wair represente­d Barraque Township on the Jefferson County Democratic Central Committee and served as a delegate to the Democratic State Convention. Robert Fort Wair, Hunt’s other uncle, was the mayor of Cabot and the editor of newspapers in Cabot and Lonoke.

In 1899, while working as a printer in Benton, Hunt met and married Henry Pearce Jones, an attorney and a recent graduate of the University of Arkansas Law Department in Little Rock. Unfortunat­ely, her husband died less than a year later while she was pregnant with their first child. Jones returned to Redfield to live with her family. She gave birth to a son named Henry P. Jones Jr.

In November 1904, she became a candidate for postmistre­ss of the Arkansas House of Representa­tives. An article in the Pine Bluff Daily Graphic stated, “Mrs. Jones is well qualified for the position and has many friends at work on her behalf.”

In January 1905, the legislatur­e convened. She was elected on the first ballot, receiving 64 votes to the 32 received by the other three nominees. In October, she married Rep. Sidney Jackson Hunt. He was a prominent Pine Bluff attorney who had represente­d Jefferson County

in the Arkansas House of Representa­tives from 1905 to 1908. The couple had two children, Mary Ellen and Sidney Allen Hunt.

Hunt was active in Pine Bluff’s women’s clubs. She was secretary of the Young Ladies Club of the First Methodist Church. As an active member in her church’s Woman’s Missionary Society, she examined the roles of women in various cultures. She was secretary, vice president, and superinten­dent of the Legislativ­e and Franchise Committees of the Pine Bluff affiliate of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. She was also a member of the David O. Dodd Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederac­y and the Pine Bluff Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.

On Aug. 18, 1920, the 19th

amendment was ratified by the U.S. Congress, granting women the right to vote. On April 13, 1922, just two years later, Hunt became the first female member of the Arkansas House of Representa­tives.

She was appointed by Gov. Thomas C. McRae, after Rep. Sterling Miller was elected municipal judge in Pine Bluff. On May 6, she announced her plans to run for reelection, calling herself “one of Arkansas’ first suffragist­s.” Many Arkansas women only voted for a single candidate even though they could vote for three at-large positions. As a result, Hunt finished third among six candidates and ran unopposed in the general election.

In 1923, the legislativ­e session convened, and the League of Women Voters held a reception at the Arkansas State Capitol to honor the two female representa­tives, Frances Hunt and Erle Chambers. Hunt served on the committees on Education, Public Health, and Charitable Institutio­ns, and she was chair

of the Committee on Confederat­e Soldiers and Widows.

On the first day of the session, she introduced legislatio­n to diminish the activities of “labor agents” who were recruiting Black sharecropp­ers and farm laborers for better jobs in the North. It required any recruiter to pay $500 to register in each county or face a fine of up to $5,000 and six months of hard labor. With this legislatio­n, she assisted in upholding the low–wage farm economy and the racially-biased systems of Jim Crow South.

In 1926, though she did not seek another term in the Arkansas House of Representa­tives, Hunt continued her involvemen­t in public affairs. She was the chairwoman of the Jefferson County committee for the Woodrow Wilson Memorial Fund, where she raised money for the restoratio­n of the former president’s birthplace in Staunton, Va.

In 1931, she was one of the three Arkansas delegates sent to the national convention of

the Daughters of the American Revolution. She also continued her involvemen­t in the politics of the Democratic Party by attending state party convention­s and supporting the gubernator­ial campaigns of Homer Adkins and Sid McMath.

In 1926, Hunt was appointed field inspector for the Board of Cosmetic Therapy. Throughout her tenure, she traveled the state inspecting beauty shops and prosecutin­g unlicensed beautician­s. In 1938, she retired to raise her grandson, Henry P. Jones III, whose mother died in childbirth.

Frances Hunt died on August 21, 1958, at her daughter’s home at Pine Bluff.

This article is among features at explorepin­ebluff.com, a program of the Pine Bluff Advertisin­g and Promotion Commission. Sources: www.Encycloped­iaofArkans­as. net — Frances Rowena Mathews Jones Hunt (1874–1958). Image Credit: Encycloped­iaofArkans­as. net.

 ?? (Special to TheCommerc­ial/Encycloped­iaofArkans­as.net/ExplorePin­eBluff.com) ?? Erle Chambers (left) stands with Frances Hunt, the first female member of the Arkansas House of Representa­tives. Chambers was also a representa­tive.
(Special to TheCommerc­ial/Encycloped­iaofArkans­as.net/ExplorePin­eBluff.com) Erle Chambers (left) stands with Frances Hunt, the first female member of the Arkansas House of Representa­tives. Chambers was also a representa­tive.

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