Today in Herstory: New York Women Are Determined to Vote, At Any Cost
Today in Herstory: New York Women Are Determined to Vote, At Any Cost
riot Stanton Blatch, founder of the Equality League of Self-Supporting Women in 1907, which five years ago became the Womens Political Union.
December 18, 1915: Though New York States suffrage referendum went down to defeat on November 2nd along with three others, Harriot Stanton Blatch said today that she and a number of other suffragists are still determined to cast their votes in next Novembers Presidential election, and have figured out a way to legally do it. How? Well, since a ballot box that accepts womens votes wont be available at their local precinct, theyll go to the nearest one that under the right circumstances will accept their ballots. Its in Kansas.
According to Blatchs lawyer, residence is determined by where one pays their personal taxes, so all that she and the others need to do to be eligible to vote is to reside for just six months in Idaho, Nevada, Oregon or Kansas and become a citizen of any of those equal suffrage States. The other seven suffrage States have longer residency requirements, so they wont do. Since Kansas is the closest to New York, thats the logical choice. Of course, as she explained, you do not have to live all the time in a place where you make your residence, though if that was necessary you would find me sitting six months on the prairies of Kansas getting ready for my chance to vote.
There will be a meeting in January to make definite plans, with Blatch leaving in March, and the others in April, which will make them all Kansas citizens in time to register for the election. Already there are a number of well-known suffrage pilgrims pledged to make the journey. Dora Lewis, active in Alice Pauls militant Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage; Mina Van Winkle, head of the Womens Political Union of New Jersey, and Blatchs sister Margaret have signed on. With the bleak outlook for suffrage referenda after the defeat of the drives in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York in just the past two months, the idea is appealing because enfranchisement could be gained quickly, and with certainty, at least for some.
As to what the suffragists will do there other than vote, Blatch is open to almost anything:
There is no knowing how this will develop and there are all sorts of possibilities. A few of us might build a house. If many women should wish to take up the idea we might build a town and then we would vote immediately in the municipal elections. We will pay our personal taxes wherever we locate, and that will take some money from New York. If many women should go who could tell? we might give Kansas another Presidential Elector and a greater representation in Congress.
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http://feminist.org/blog/index.php/2014/12/18/today-in-herstory-new-york-women-are-determined-to-vote-at-any-cost/