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September 23, 1923: National Women’s Party Celebrates Its Legacy, Vows to Move Forward at Colorado Pageant

Founding Feminists is FMF’s daily herstory column.

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Anyone who thinks the National Woman’s Party must have lost some of its drive or militance after finishing its part of the campaign to put the Susan B. Anthony (now the 19th) Amendment into the Constitution on August 26, 1920, clearly wasn’t at today’s colorful pageant in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Meeting over the weekend, the party celebrated 75 years of feminist progress, while making it clear that the battle for total equality is far from over.

Ava Belmont, President of the National Woman’s Party, let it be known at a banquet last night that the suffrage amendment was just one stepping stone on the path to equality, and that it’s time for women to assume political leadership:

For twenty centuries men have been running the world. Now it is time for women to take over affairs, and as they very nearly hold a balance of political power at this time, the day may not be as far distant as old party leaders imagine when there will be set up a woman’s government by women for women, children and humanity in general.

Plans were announced in April to set up a separate “Women’s Congress” in Washington, D.C., possibly as early as December, to debate the same issues as those of the U.S. Congress, so that women’s views could be made known. There is presently only one woman in Congress, Rep. Mae Ella Nolan, Republican of California. The National Woman’s Party may also become a formal political party with its own candidates and platform.

But Belmont reassured those who fear that feminists simply want to “get even” for thousands of years of male rule and plan to disempower and restrict men, that this is not the case:

Now don’t construe my meaning as that of a woman opposed to men. I am for men, but for women and children first. Men have forgotten us during the past, but we are going to remember them and take them right up and onward with us.

One prime example of that “equality for all” philosophy is the party’s enthusiastic endorsement of the Lucretia Mott (Equal Rights) Amendment. Written by the party’ founder, Alice Paul, it would outlaw any form of discrimination against either sex by any State, or by the United States, in any place subject to its jurisdiction. The party made full equality for women its “paramount issue” during the 1922 midterm elections and intends to do the same in the1924 General Election.

Despite her many years of work and unrivaled monetary contributions to the suffrage struggle, Belmont said that she had never voted, and would refuse to do so until she could vote for a woman candidate nominated by a woman’s party. She also criticized other wealthy women for not getting involved in the struggle for dignity, opportunity and equality for all women:

For nine years I have been as one crying in the wilderness to women of wealth and leisure to give over their pleasure and frivolities and do something to justify their existence. No reform ever appealed to people who have all they want.

Fortunately, there are exceptions to the rule. On July 28th, E.M. Levy announced that she had bequeathed $50,000 to the party in her new will. She had never taken much interest in politics until the National Woman’s Party came along, but is now an enthusiastic supporter, who has already made a number of generous contributions, including a $1,000 Life Membership.

The party concluded its conference today by putting on an elaborate pageant in the Garden of the Gods. It was reminiscent of the suffrage spectacles of a decade ago, and drew 20,000 spectators, plus reporters from many major newspapers, and newsreel cameras from Fox, Pathe, and Universal.

Schoolgirls holding up the purple, white and gold banners of the National Woman's Party at the pageant earlier today. Newsreel camera operators and photographers are in the trench in front of the banners.
Schoolgirls holding up the purple, white and gold banners of the National Woman’s Party at the pageant earlier today. Newsreel camera operators and photographers are in the trench in front of the banners.

The program opened with Ruth Montgomery, assisted by a 200-voice chorus, singing “Angels Ever Bright and Fair,” followed by trumpets announcing the procession that followed. Led by Sally Halthausen Gough on a black horse, it was intended to salute previous efforts for equality, and show how long the struggle has gone on since the original women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1848. It included everything from a covered wagon and bright red stagecoach to more modern forms of transportation, with hundreds of participants taking part. Many portrayed feminists of earlier days, and dressed in costumes from their time.

The pageant also featured exuberant singing of feminist songs such as “The March of the Women,” an anthem from suffrage days, which begins with “Shout, Shout, Up With Your Song,” accompanied by a large display of purple, white and gold banners of the National Woman’s Party held up by a delegation of schoolgirls. Other banners, bearing the words of Susan B. Anthony that “Failure is impossible” fluttered in the breeze as well.

Colorado is a very progressive State. Women won the ballot here in an 1893 Statewide ballot referendum, the first one ever to pass. (Women in Wyoming won the vote in 1869, but did so through the State Legislature’s action.) But the fact that the laws are far from equal even here was stressed in numerous speeches, and cited as proof that there is still much work to be done. Among today’s speakers were many veterans of the suffrage struggle, such as Alice Paul, Sue White and Eunice Brannan.

White, who played a major role in her home State of Tennessee’s crucial ratification of the 19th Amendment back in 1920, deplored the fact that even in 20th Century America, we are still in some respects living according to the English Common Law assumption that in marriage, the husband and wife become one, and the husband is the “one.”

It was noted by Alva Belmont that 30 years after winning the vote in Colorado, a wife’s earnings were still the property of her husband, and women can not serve on juries, thus denying them even so basic a right as a trial by a jury of their peers. Of course, she also noted that things are a lot better here than in Georgia, where a father can will his children to anyone he chooses without his wife’s consent. And in Louisiana, the husband is officially recognized as “head and master” of the household.

The 14th Amendment has failed to help women in any way thus far, so there’s still nothing in the Constitution to explicitly guarantee equal treatment under the law for women and men. But that oversight is something the National Woman’s Party intends to remedy, and there are plans to get the Mott Amendment formally introduced into Congress before the end of the year.

So, as exciting as their battle for the ballot may have been, there should be even more interesting times ahead for the National Woman’s Party on this long and bumpy road to equality!

INFLATIONARY NOTE: $50,000 in 1923 = $695,474 in 2014; $1,000 = $13,909.

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