Swain in front of the Wyoming House for Historic Women |
I
believe I have mentioned before my considerable pride that my home state of Wyoming was the first jurisdiction in
the United States to give women free and equal suffrage with men in all
elections. This was accomplished in 1869
when the sparsely populated U.S.
Territory was still largely raw frontier.
A
fair amount has been written on pioneer women office holders like Esther Hobart Morris, a Justice of the Peace in South Pass or
Bailiff Mary Atkinson in Laramie, both in 1870. Less well known is the first woman to
actually cast a ballot in a general election on September 6, 1870, Louisa Ann Swain.
White women were still scarce in a place
where adventuresome men were seeking fortunes in mining, ranching, farming, and
the fine art of separating other fortune seekers from their gains in saloons
and whore houses. Others were laborers
on the railroad, hard rock miners, cowboys, and soldiers.
Their very scarcity raised their esteem and value in the rough and
tumble rail heads and mining boom towns.
Women
came in two classes, although it was quite possible to move up—or down—between them. First on the scene were, almost inevitably,
the whores. Many suffered and were
abused. But others prospered, saved
their money and often became local land owners and business women. More than a few married their more prosperous
Johns and by the acceptable alchemy
of the time were soon respectable ladies.
Gentlewomen
came first as the wives of officers
and non-coms at Army posts, with the bosses and foremen on the Union Pacific railroad construction, as the sun-bonnet pioneer
wives of would be sod busters. Then, as the towns became a little more
settled, they came as the wives of merchants, as school marms, and as single fortune hunters. Many of these women, too, went into business
running laundries, hotels, boarding houses and such. With their husbands mostly
too busy grubbing money to pay attention to civic affairs, women of both
classes, sometimes in an uneasy and suspicious alliance, sometimes at each
other’s throats, had become de facto
civic leaders even before the Territorial
legislature extended the franchise.
For
their part the powers in Cheyenne were
amenable to this radical new experiment because they hoped sooner rather than
later to become a state even though
the population was far below the usual requirement. They knew that theTerritory’s chances of admission to the Union would be enhanced if it was
safely Republican—the party of the rising cattle barons, mine owners, merchants, and professional classes. But Democrats—laborers,
miners, homesteaders, small ranchers threatened
to swamp Republicans at the polls.
Women, especially respectable women, were considered to be reliably Republican and adding them to the voting rolls
gave the party an edge.
Republicans
did come to dominate the state, but extending the vote to women frightened the Eastern Establishment and in the end
probably delayed admission to the Union until 1890. Certainly Harper’s Weekly and other
popular newspapers and magazines mocked Wyoming women voters mercilessly. But Wyoming stuck to its guns anyway— some said
because Territorial legislators were afraid of their wives.
Modest
Louisa Ann Swain, a demure Quaker grandmother,
probably did not set out to make history.
She was up and about early and left her home in Laramie carrying a small
tin pail, intent on purchasing some yeast at a general store for her
baking. On her errand she happened to
pass a polling place that was still being set up and not yet officially
open. Wanting to get on with her baking
without having to come back downtown, she inquired if she might be allowed to
cast her vote then.
The
accommodating election official obliged and as a small crowd of the usual
loafer and political hacks looked on, she marked her ballot. One of the observers was a reporter for the Laramie
Sentinel who described her as “a gentle white-haired housewife,
Quakerish in appearance.” The same paper
congratulated the good behavior of witnesses, “There was too much good sense in
our community for any jeers or sneers to be seen on such an occasion.”
Of
course other women made it to the polls that day. And it is even possible that in some other
town bereft of documentation someone else actually voted earlier. But let’s give Swain the credit she
deserves.
She
had been born in Norfolk, Virginia in
1800 as Louisa Ann Gardner, the
daughter of a sailing captain who
was lost at sea in her childhood. He widowed
mother moved to Charleston, South Carolina where she died sometime
latter leaving young Louisa an orphan.
Sent
to live with an uncle in Baltimore,
Maryland Louisa met and married Stephen
Swain, who operated a successful chair factory, in 1821. The couple had four children. But with the youngest still in swaddling,
Stephen got the itchy feet that seemed epidemic among 19th Century men. He sold
the factory and moved west, first to
Zanesville, Ohio, and later to Indiana.
When
the couple’s oldest son moved his family to Wyoming in 1868, the elder Swains
came with him. Not that they stayed
long. Within a year or so of fateful election with
Stephen ailing, the couple returned to Maryland where he died in 1872. In 1880 Louisa was laid by his side in the Friends Burial Ground.
The Louisa Swain Foundation dedicated the Wyoming House for Historic Women in
downtown Laramie in 2005. A life size bronze statue of Swain stands in
a plaza in front of the building which houses a sort of Wyoming Women’s Hall of
Fame. Thirteen honorees inside include
Esther Hobart Morris, bailiff Mary Atkinson, Nellie Tayloe Ross, first woman elected Governor in the United States
and first woman Director of the U.S. Mint,
Lynn Cheney, author and wife of Vice President Dick Cheney.
Four
years ago on this date in 2008 Congress declared
an official Louis Ann Swain Day.
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