Records Reveal Womenβs Equal Rights Struggles
By Kerri Lawrence Μύ| ΜύΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ News
WASHINGTON, December 7, 2018 β ΜύΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ records help tell the story of American womenβs fight to gain the right to vote and become full citizens, Deputy Archivist of the United States Debra Steidel Wall said during a panel discussion last night at the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ in Washington, DC. The discussion focused on how the womenβs rights movement has been shaped and changed by the systems, institutions, and individuals working against womenβs equality.Μύ
The programββWomen and the Vote: Opposition to Womenβs Equality, from Suffrage to the ERAββwas the first in a series of public programs hosted by the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ focusing on the womenβs movement, as the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ prepares for the upcoming 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment and the opening of our Rightfully Hers: ΜύAmerican Women and the Vote exhibit in March 2019, as well as the launch of a traveling exhibit, One Half of the People.
Wall introduced the program and detailed how the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ plans to commemorate the centennial anniversary of the 19th Amendment. She became Deputy Archivist of the United States in July 2011, previously served as the agency's Chief of Staff from 2008 to 2011, and held a variety of other management positions relating to bringing the agencyβs archival holdings to the public online.
βWe [will] use our records to tell the story of women's struggle for voting rights as a critical step toward equal citizenship,β Wall said. βThe 19th Amendment is rightly celebrated as a major milestone made possible by decades of suffragistsβ relentless political engagement. Yet it is just one critical piece of the larger story of women's battle for the vote. The exhibits will explore how American women across the spectrum of race, ethnicity, and class advanced the cause of suffrage and will follow the struggle for voting rights beyond 1920.β
Wall was recently appointed to the Womenβs Suffrage Centennial Commission, which was Μύcreated in 2017 by Congress through the Womenβs Suffrage Centennial Commission Act to lead national efforts to educate and celebrate the centennial of the passage and ratification of the 19th Amendment, which granted women the right to vote.
βI am excited and honored to work on this milestone centennial celebrating womenβs right to vote in our country,β Wall said. βI hope to use my role on the Commission to share more widely the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘β records on womenβs suffrage, including the original 19th Amendment that will be featured in our upcoming exhibit Rightfully Hers.
The βWomen and the Voteβ panelists included Elaine Weiss, author of The Womanβs Hour; Marjorie J. Spruill, author of Divided We Stand; and Carol Robles-RomΓ‘n, co-president and CEO of the ERA Coalition. Zakiya Thomas, executive director for the National Womenβs Party, moderated the discussion.
The women discussed their research on the suffragist movement and womenβs rights through the decades, sharing their personal experiences and the roles they are taking to help commemorate the centennial celebration.Μύ
βSuffrage was not just a political question,β Weiss said. βIt was never just a political debate. It was for many a social and a cultural and, for some, a moral debate about the role of women in society. It was going to change private life as well as public life in...the minds of those who opposed it, and so it takes on levels of emotional meaning. It was really a precursor again to what we call the culture wars.β
The panel discussed historic posters and broadsides that βpromoted fear if women were to gain the right to voteβ and the βthought that it would mean the moral collapse of the nation,β Weiss added.
Roblas-RomΓ‘n discussed the false understanding that the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), which was introduced into Congress in 1923, had passed and the implications within our society then and now. The ERA is a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution designed to guarantee equal legal rights for all American citizens regardless of sex. It seeks to end the legal distinctions between men and women in terms of divorce, property, employment, and other matters. Thirty-seven states have passed ERA bills to date.
βThere is so much misinformation and disinformation about the Equal Rights Amendment in this country today that 80 percent of Americans think it already passed,β Roblas-RomΓ‘n said.Μύ
The panel also discussed the role of women of color in the womenβs rights movement as well as the advancement of the ERA and their hopes for passage of an ERA bill in a 38th state to amend the U.S. Constitution in the near future. Μύ
on the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ YouTube channel.Μύ
The ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘β Rightfully Hers: American Women and the Vote exhibit will commemorate the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment by looking beyond suffrage parades and protests to the often overlooked story behind this landmark moment in American history.
βThis fuller retelling of the struggle for womenβs voting rights illustrates the dynamic involvement of American women across the spectrum of race, ethnicity, and class to reveal what it really takes to win the vote for one half of the people,β Wall said.
The exhibit opens March 8, 2019, in the Lawrence F. OβBrien Gallery of the ΝώΔαΛΉΘΛΣιΐΦ³‘ Museum in Washington, DC.
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