|
*QUOTED
FROM THE OFFICIAL CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT WEB SITE*
"Key
coordinator of the woman suffrage movement and skillful
political strategist, Carrie (Lane) Chapman Catt revitalized
the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA)
and played a leading role in its successful campaign
to win voting rights for women. In 1920 she founded
the League of Women Voters upon ratification of the
Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Carrie
Clinton Lane was born on January 9, 1859, in Ripon,
Wisconsin, the second of three children of Lucius and
Maria (Clinton) Lane. At the age of seven, her family
moved to rural Charles City, Iowa, where she graduated
from high school in 1877. In 1880, she graduated from
the Iowa Agricultural College and Model Farm in Ames
(now Iowa State University) at the top of her class,
having worked her way through school by washing dishes,
working in the school library, and teaching. She was
also the only woman in her graduating class. After college,
she returned to Charles City to work as a law clerk
and, in nearby Mason City, as a school teacher and a
principal. In 1883, she became one of the first women
in the nation appointed superintendent of schools.
In
February 1885, Lane married Leo Chapman, editor and
publisher of the Mason City Republican, in a wedding
ceremony at her parents’ rural Charles City home. Mr.
Chapman died of typhoid fever the following year in
San Francisco, California, where he had gone to seek
new employment. Arriving a few days after her husband’s
death, the young widow decided to remain in San Francisco,
where she eked out a living as the city’s first female
newspaper reporter. In 1887, she returned to Charles
City and joined the Iowa Woman Suffrage Association
for whom she worked as a professional writer and lecturer.
After a short period of time, she became the group’s
recording secretary. From 1890 to 1892, she served as
the Iowa association’s state organizer.
At
the time of Carrie Chapman's rise to her state organization's
highest office, in June 1890, she married George Catt,
a fellow Iowa Agricultural College alumnus she had met
during her stay in San Francisco who encouraged her
suffrage activity. Mrs. Catt also began work nationally
for the National American Woman Suffrage Association,
speaking in 1890 at its Washington, D.C., convention.
In the following months, Catt’s work, and her writing
and speaking engagements, established her reputation
as a leading suffragist. In 1892, she was asked by Susan
B. Anthony to address Congress on the proposed suffrage
amendment. In 1900, she succeeded Anthony as NAWSA president.
From then on, her time was spent primarily in speechmaking,
planning campaigns, organizing women, and gaining political
experience.
In
1902, Catt helped organize the International Woman Suffrage
Alliance (IWSA), which eventually incorporated sympathetic
associations in 32 nations. In 1904, she resigned her
NAWSA presidency in order to care for her ailing husband.
His death in October 1905, followed by the deaths of
Susan B. Anthony (February 1906), Catt's younger brother
William (September 1907) and her mother (December 1907)
left Catt grief-stricken. Her doctor and friends encouraged
her to travel abroad; as a result, she spent much of
the following eight years as IWSA president promoting
equal-suffrage rights worldwide.
Catt returned to the
United States in 1915 to resume the leadership of NAWSA,
which had become badly divided under the leadership
of Anna Howard Shaw. In 1916, at a NAWSA convention
in Atlantic City, New Jersey, Catt unveiled her "Winning
Plan" to campaign simultaneously for suffrage on both
the state and federal levels, and to compromise for
partial suffrage in the states resisting change. Under
Catt’s dynamic leadership, NAWSA won the backing of
the U.S. House and Senate, as well as state support
for the amendment’s ratification. In 1917, New York
passed a state woman suffrage referendum, and by 1918,
President Woodrow Wilson was finally converted to the
cause.
On August 26, 1920,
the Nineteenth Amendment officially became part of the
United States Constitution. One hundred forty-four years
after U.S. independence, all women in the United States
were at last guaranteed the right to vote.
Stepping
down from the NAWSA presidency after its victory, Catt
continued her work for equal suffrage, promoting education
of the newly-enfranchised by founding the new League
of Women Voters and serving as its honorary president
for the rest of her life. In 1923, she published Woman
Suffrage and Politics: The Inner Story of the Suffrage
Movement with Nettie Rogers Shuler. In her later years,
Catt’s interests broadened to include the causes of
world peace and child labor. She founded the National
Committee on the Cause and Cure of War in 1925, serving
as its chair until 1932 and as honorary chair thereafter.
She also supported the League of Nations and, later,
the United Nations.
Honored and praised
by countless institutions for her more than half-century
of public service, Carrie Chapman Catt died of heart
failure at her New Rochelle, New York, home on March
9, 1947.
To learn more about
Carrie Chapman Catt, her contributions to women's rights,
and her childhood home, choose from the links below."
|