Alice Paul on shipboard returning from Britain where she was schooled in the direct action militancy of the English Suffragettes led by Emmeline Pankhurst. |
Note—We just concluded a three-part series on Lucretia
Mott, the most senior of the first American Women’s Right’s activists and the
bold champion of abolitionism and a raft of social justice causes. Mott’s fame was largely eclipsed by the
younger women she mentored—Elizabeth Caddy Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. Now we turn to perhaps her greatest spiritual
descendent, the unflagging Alice Paul.
Like Mott she was a Hicksite Quaker and she was educated at the college Mott
helped found—Swarthmore. She became the
tireless leader of the most militant wing of the Women’s Suffrage movement and
perhaps more than anyone else deserves credit for the final victory of the 19th
Amendment. But her blunt and
unapologetic radicalism has caused her to almost be erased from our collective
memory in favor of the polite and genteel Carrie Chapman Catt. It was
an often testy good-cop/bad-cop tag team with Paul eagerly playing the
relentless heavy. It worked, but we don’t
like to be reminded about law-breaking uppity women. Here is her story.
Alice Paul, the Feminist and Suffragist whose steely nerves and militancy
did much to finally secure passage of the 19th
Amendment to the Constitution
was born in Mount Laurel Township, New Jersey on January 11, 1885. Her father was a wealthy and successful
banker who raised his family at Paulsdale, a gentleman’s farm. The family were devout Hicksite Quakers who lived
simply, if comfortably and who valued social responsibility and gender equality. Paul later credited her family and upbringing
for the strength to dedicate her
life to the cause of women’s equality.
She said that her mother taught her, “When you put your hand to
the plow, you can’t put it down until you get to the end of the row.”
Growing up in this loving
environment, Paul excelled at school
both as a scholar and as an athlete, competing basketball, baseball,
and field hockey in addition to
playing tennis on her home court and becoming a fine horsewoman.
In 1901 Paul entered Swarthmore
College, the elite Quaker school
which her maternal grandfather Judge
William Parry helped to found with Lucretia
Mott. She studied under many of the leading female academics in the
country. The advice of mathematics
professor Susan Cunningham became
her lifelong motto, “Use thy
gumption.” She was an outstanding student, elected the class poetess and a commencement
speaker at graduation in 1905.
Upon graduation, Paul went to work as a social worker at a New York
City settlement house. In 1907 she went to England to study advanced
methods at the Woodbrooke Settlement
in Birmingham. While in the country she met Christabel Pankhurst and her mother Emmeline, leaders of a new militant suffrage movement which
was making a sensation by using direct action tactics such as publicly heckling politicians, window smashing, and rock throwing, to raise public awareness. Although the press and establishment
were outraged, the movement was building
pressure for change in a way that years
of genteel persuasion had not. Paul enthusiastically joined the movement
and was arrested several times. On one occasion she boasted that she broke more than forty windows before she was pinched.
When Paul returned to the United States in 1910 she was determined to introduce the British methods to the languishing American movement.
Although there had been some
success in getting some states
to extend the franchise to women,
particularly in the West following
the example of Wyoming, resistance
in the East and South had ground
progress to a halt. As a graduate student at the University of Pennsylvania she joined
the National American Women’s Suffrage Association (NAWSA) and soon advanced to a leadership role.
Although the national
organization remained committed to a
state-by-state strategy as its top
priority, Paul was made Chair of
the Congressional Committee with the
responsibility of lobbying for Federal
action.
In 1912 Paul, Lucy
Burns and Crystal Eastman went
to Washington. Adopting then Pankhurst model the trio
organized a massive suffrage parade
to correspond with the inauguration
of Woodrow Wilson. The parade on March 3 down Pennsylvania Avenue was led by the beautiful blonde lawyer and activist Inez Milholland astride a white horse in flowing Greek robes. Behind her, Paul and her friends, also on
horseback, led thousands of women, and a few men, on parade. The procession
was quickly attacked by mobs of men
along the route, throwing rocks and battering
participants with clubs and fists as the police stood by without intervening. The subsequent national front-page publicity crowded out news of the inauguration
and put suffrage squarely back at the
center of the national debate.
Paul’s continued militancy in Washington soon put her at odds with the venerable
leader of the NAWSA, Carrie Chapman Catt,
who stood by her state-by-state strategy and had endorsed Wilson for President
and was trying to woo Democrats to
support suffrage. Paul wanted to “hold the President accountable” for failing to press for action. After working as a semi-autonomous affiliate of the NAWSA called the Congressional Union, the breach became irreparable in 1914 and Paul’s group severed ties with the national organization. Two years later they reorganized as the National
Women’s Party (NWP.)
The NWP began to organize regular Silent Sentinel protests at the gates of the White House holding
signs harshly criticizing the President. Wilson treated the protestors with bemusement at first, even tipping his hat to them as he passed
by. But the savagery of their attacks angered
him. He fully expected that when the U.S.
entered the World War in 1917,
the protests would end in a display of
national unity.
National Women's Party protestors at their daily vigil at the White House gates. After the U.S. entered the Great War, President Wilson ordered the women arrested and jailed. |
They did not. Paul stepped up the rhetoric, even referring
to the President as Kaiser Wilson. On several occasions Paul and her friends
were physically attacked. Wilson finally
ordered the arrests of the women on charges of interfering with traffic. They had to be hauled away physically, struggling
the whole time.
The charges themselves were not serious, but Paul and others refused to pay fines or cooperate
in any way. They were jailed.
When let out they returned
and were arrested again. Eventually they
were sent to a prison in Virginia, Occoquan Workhouse. Conditions were harsh and the women
were abused and beaten. In protest Paul led
a hunger strike. As the women grew weaker from the strike, they were ordered to be force fed raw
eggs though a tube physically shoved
down the struggling women’s throats. Several elderly and frail protestors
were seriously injured in this
way. Paul remained defiant and she was placed in an asylum as authorities sought
to have her declared insane.
But several of the women had high social connections, including the spouse of a Congressman. Word of their brutal treatment began to leak out. Public
sympathy began to swing to the
defiant women and against the Wilson administration. Exasperated, Wilson finally declared his support of a Federal Constitutional Amendment for
women’s suffrage as a war measure
and in recognition of the contribution
of women to the effort. He made no mention of Paul or the NWP, but no one doubted that their stubborn
militancy had forced his hand.
Lucy Burns, Paul's closest friend and accomplice in custody at the brutal Occoquan Workhouse where the NWP prisoners were abused and force fed. |
Upon release from prison, Paul stepped up lobbying efforts on behalf of the amendment.
Both Houses of Congress passed the 19th Amendment in 1919. Then
the battle moved to ratification by state legislatures. The state-by-state struggle long advocated by
Catt was back on. The NAWSA and NWP played a kind of “good
cop/bad cop” tag team on state legislatures with Catt’s group wooing them with compliments and kindness,
and Paul threatening disruption and defiance.
It proceeded, all
things considered, with astonishing
speed. On August 19, 1920 Tennessee passed
the Amendment by one vote, securing the
necessary support to become a part of the Constitution. When the Secretary
of State certified the adoption
on August 26, Paul and her cohorts proudly unfolded
a banner on the NWP headquarters
building in Washington and toasted
the event—with grape juice, of
course.
Alice Paul toasts the triumphant banner draped at National Women's Party Headquarters in Washington after the final ratification of the 19th Amendment. |
The achievement of the long-sought
goal actually perplexed women’s
organizations. Many did not know
what they should do. The NAWSA dissolved. Many of its leaders went on to found the League of Women Voters.
Others shifted their attention
to other social causes.
Paul remained determined to achieve complete social equality.
For her, the franchise was just
one step. Many states still had discriminatory property laws, marriage still made women virtual chattel of their husbands, and women’s employment opportunities and wages everywhere lagged men.
In 1923 on the 75th anniversary of the Seneca Falls Convention, Paul announced that she would be working
for a new constitutional amendment
called the Lucretia Mott Amendment. Drafted
by Paul, the amendment read:
Section 1.
Equality of Rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United
States or any state on account of sex.
Section 2.
The Congress shall have the power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the
provisions of this article.
Section 3.
This amendment shall take effect two years after the date of ratification.
The amendment would soon become better known simply as the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA).
Paul would spend the rest of her
life trying to win its support and passage.
By the late 1940’s both Republicans
and Democrats had endorsed the amendment in their platforms and several states had
adopted it. But progress stalled until a new generation of feminists took up the
struggle in the 1970’s.After the victory in 1923
Paul was author and life long champion of the Equal Rights Amendment. The quote comes from a psychatrist's evalutation notes when she was jailed for her White House protests. |
Paul went on to earn three degrees in law from Washington University and American University. She traveled
extensively in Latin America and
Europe promoting the cause of
women’s equality everywhere. In 1938 she
settled in Geneva, Switzerland where she founded the World Woman's Party (WWP), which tried to advance women’s
rights through the League of Nations. She returned to the U.S. in 1941. In the post
war years she used her experience with the WWP and the League of Nations to
support the inclusion of gender equality
in the United Nations Charter and
backed the establishment of the United
Nations Commission on the Status of Women.
Paul led a coalition that won approval—some say by convincing some Southern law makers to support an amendment in hopes of killing the whole bill—of the inclusion women in the
provisions of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, which would have greater
and farther reaching consequences for equality than any
action since the adoption of the 19th Amendment.
Paul never married. He work was her life. From 1929 her primary residence was the house
on Capital Hill that her wealthy
friend Alva Belmont bought years
earlier as the headquarters of the NWP.
Today it is preserved as the Sewall-Belmont House and Museum, dedicated to Paul, and the U.S.
women's suffrage and equal-rights movements.
Alice Paul at her home and former NWP Headquarters Belmont House in Washington in 1972. She never stopped campaigning for the Equal Rights Amendment. |
After suffering
a disabling stroke in 1974, Paul
eventually moved to the Quaker Greenleaf
Extension Home in Moorestown
Township, New Jersey, near her
family home of Paulsdale. She died there
at the age of 92 on July 9, 1977.
In 1985 the Alice Paul Institute was formed to
preserve Paulsdale and establish it as women’s
heritage and leadership center.
Despite her many accomplishments, Paul’s memory faded. Public
awareness centered on the first generation of suffragists like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Caddy Stanton. Paul’s aggressiveness—and
her embarrassment to the memory of
Woodrow Wilson, who had unjustifiably
been canonized a liberal saint primarily for his support of the League of Nations—caused her to be written out of many popular accounts of
the fight for suffrage. Her reputation
got a big boost with the 2004 HBO movie Iron Jawed Angels
starring Hillary Swank as Paul. The film is still regularly shown and has
become a staple of women’s history classes and projects.
ALICE PAUL IS SO AWESOME!
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