On
October 23, 1915 more than 25,000 women
marched down Fifth Avenue in New York City in one of the largest parades for Women’s Suffrage
yet held. That would be impressive enough, but the demonstration was only part of an unprecedented year-long campaign to convince Empire State
voters to approve a state constitutional
amendment giving women the vote.
Nothing like it had ever been seen in complexity
and breadth of organization.
New
York had long been a leading hot bed of
suffrage agitation. The Brooklyn Woman Suffrage Association was
formed in 1869 and the New York City chapter a year later. By 1903 there
were at least 15 organizations in the metropolitan
area promoting votes for women. That year the indefatigable Carrie
Chapman Catt brought the various organizations together under the umbrella of Interurban Woman
Suffrage Council (IWSC). Within two years it had more than
twenty affiliates and 150 individual
associate members who included both established
leaders and wealthy women who
could bankroll significant
campaigns. They established a headquarters in the Martha Washington
Hotel and employed Fannie Chafin to manage day to day operations.
Catt,
however, was not satisfied with just the stepped
up lobbying, public rallies, and
demonstrations. She realized that support for suffrage was largely still confined to well educated, middle class Protestant women. In order
to secure passage, it would be necessary to secure votes—votes of men of
all classes including the teeming ethnic
and religious minorities of New York
City. That required a political
operation modeled on the existing
apparatus of the Democratic and Republican parties.
The
IWSC called a founding convention of
the new Woman Suffrage Party of Greater New York at Carnegie Hall on
October 29, 1909. 804 delegates and 200 alternates attended the
convention. The Party set a goal of having a leader for each of the 63 Assembly
Districts of the city and a captain for
each of the 2,127 election districts (precincts), with a chair and
committee in each borough, under the direction a city
chair and board of directors—just
the way Tammany Hall did it.
It
was an ambitious project and obviously not all positions were filled immediately.
But the women were committed to the long
haul and built membership and capacity steadily. The party sent
its forces to local political
conventions; held mass meetings; issued thousands of leaflets in many languages; conducted street meetings, parades, plays, lectures, suffrage schools;
gave entertainments and teas; sent appeals to churches and all kinds of organizations and to
individual leaders; brought pressure on
legislators through their constituents
and obtained wide publicity in newspapers and magazines.
The
ground work was laid when the Assembly
voted to submit a suffrage amendment
to the voters in the November 1915
election. Catt became chair of the statewide
campaign, which divided the
state into two upstate districts and
metropolitan New York. Mary
Garrett Hay, chair of the City party, and her associates sprang into
action. They raised $50,000—an enormous sum in 1915—for the city campaign
alone. A careful campaign with designated
tasks from January to Election Day was planned. The campaign
committee was established—including
liaisons to the city’s ethnic
communities. In January alone there were 60 district conventions, 170 canvassing
suppers, four mass meetings, 27 canvassing conferences and a convention in Carnegie Hall.
The
plan was to personally canvas all
voters 661,164 registered voters in
their homes as well contacting them
in factories, offices, shops, and all manner of public gatherings.
Women spent thousands upon thousands of hours climbing narrow tenement staircases, and knocking on doors in dark grimy hallways as well as visiting fashionable apartments and suburbs. As the campaign rolled
on, registered membership in the
Party swelled to 60,535.
The
Party made special efforts to reach out to
men by meeting them where they worked. The designated a number special suffrage
days dedicated to various professions.
They visited firemen, barbers, street cleaners among others bringing each special and appropriate
gifts and literature. Workers in the subway excavations were visited with Irish banners and shamrock fliers; Turkish, Armenian, French, German
and Italian restaurants were
canvassed as were the laborers on the docks, on vessels, and
in public markets. They did not neglect the denizens of the offices either—they visited brokers, bankers, and lawyers smothering them all with flattery instead of yelling
in their faces.
Nor
did they neglect public spectacle.
In addition to the great Fifth Avenue March there was a Night of the
Interurban Council Fires, when on high
bluffs in the different boroughs huge
bonfires were lit, fireworks and
balloons sent up, with music, speeches, and displays of
illuminated transparencies. There were 28 neighborhood parades and numerous
torch light rallies. The party sponsored street festivals and dances on
the Lower East Side for the Irish, Syrians, Poles, and
Italians. There were meetings conducted in Yiddish and dozens of
other languages. Big events like a night with opera stars at Carnegie Hall attracted wide-spread press
attention.
According
to an article by Oreola Williams Haskell, head of the campaign’s press bureau by Election Day the
campaign had accomplished the following:
Voters canvassed (60 per cent of those enrolled): 396,698
Women canvassed: 60,535
Voters circularized: 826,796
Party membership increased from 151,688 to 212,223
Watchers and pickets furnished for the polls: 3,151
Numbers of leaflets printed and distributed: 2,883,264
Money expended from the City treasury: $25,579
Number of outdoor meetings: 5,225
Number of indoor meetings (district): 660
Number of mass meetings: 93
Political meetings addressed by Congressmen, Assemblymen and Constitutional
Convention delegates: 25
Total number of meetings: 6,003
Night speaking in theaters: 60
Theater Week (Miner’s and Keith’s): 2
Speeches and suffrage slides in movie theaters: 150
Concerts (indoor, 10 outdoor, 3): 13
Suffrage booths in bazaars: 6
Number of Headquarters (Borough 4, Districts, 20): 24
Campaign vans (drawn by horses 6, decorated autos 6, district autos 4), vehicles
in constant use: 16
Papers served regularly with news (English and foreign): 80
Suffrage editions of papers prepared: 2
Special articles on suffrage: 150
Sermons preached by request just before election: 64
Despite
all of these impressive efforts, the
campaign failed. In the City
the vote was 320,853 opposed and 238,098 in support. The defeat was more lopsided Up State. But the women
were far from discouraged. Two days after the election the City Party
united with the National Association for Women’s Suffrage in a
mass meeting at Cooper Union, and $100,000 was pledged for a new campaign fund.
Two
years later they ginned up the
campaign all over again. That time they won. New York State became one of the first Eastern states to adopt women’s suffrage—all
due to good old fashion street level
politics.
There
must be a lesson in that somewhere.
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