Descendants of suffrage movement rally for 100th anniversary for right-to-vote march

The official program for the “Woman Suffrage Procession"

The official program for the “Woman Suffrage Procession," held in Washington, D.C., on March 3, 1913. Women seeking the right to vote dressed in Greek-styled costumes and marched from the U.S. Capitol. (SHNS photo courtesy of Library of …

Inez Milholland led the 1913 parade dressed in all white

Inez Milholland led the 1913 parade dressed in all white atop a white horse named Grey Dawn. (SHNS photo courtesy of Library of Congress.)

Women prepare to march in the 1913 “Woman Suffrage Procession"

Women prepare to march in the 1913 “Woman Suffrage Procession,” starting at the U.S. Capitol/ Women from all 2. countries that had already achieved the right to vote participated in the march. (SHNS photo courtesy of Library of Congress.)

This map shows the order of the 1913 suffrage parade down Pennsylvania Ave

This map shows the order of the 1913 suffrage parade down Pennsylvania Ave. At the front is Inez Milholland, followed by women from other countries who had already given women the right to vote (SHNS photo courtesy of Library of Congress.)

The 22 original founders of Delta Sigma Theta sorority from Howard University

The 22 original founders of Delta Sigma Theta sorority from Howard University, whose first activity was to participate in the 1913 women’s suffrage march. (SHNS photo courtesy of Delta Sigma Theta.)

An ambulance attempts to make its way through the unruly crowd in 1913

An ambulance attempts to make its way through the unruly crowd in 1913 as the parade moves down Pennsylvania Avenue. More than 300 women were injured in the march and 100 were hospitalized. (SHNS photo courtesy of Library of Congress.)

Alice Paul toasts to suffrage in 1920

Alice Paul toasts to suffrage in 1920. Paul was imprisoned, placed in solitary confinement and force-fed for leading pickets outside President Woodrow Wilson’s White House. (SHNS photo courtesy of Library of Congress.)
 

Harriot Stanton Blatch, seen in the front row, marches in 1912

Harriot Stanton Blatch, seen in the front row, far right with the black academic robe, marches in a New York Suffrage Parade in 1912. She was the daughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who wrote the 19th Amendment.

Three generations of suffragists

Three generations of suffragists (from left to right): Nora Stanton Blatch DeForest Barney; Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who authored the 19th Amendment; and Harriot Stanton Blatch. (SHNS photo courtesy of Coline Jenkins.)

Coline Jenkins

Coline Jenkins, the great-granddaughter of voting-rights advocate Harriot Stanton Blatch, wears the academic robes that Stanton Blatch wore, as well as a “Votes for Women” sash worn by her foremothers. (SHNS photo courtesy of Coline …

Elizabeth Jenkins-Sahlin, a descendant of Harriot Stanton Blatch

Elizabeth Jenkins-Sahlin, a descendant of Harriot Stanton Blatch and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, will march in the Centennial Suffrage Celebration in Washington, D.C., on Sunday. (SHNS photo/Matt Anzur)

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Posted: 02/28/2013

WASHINGTON - A record number of American women voted in last year’s presidential election. But a century ago this weekend, women were marching down Pennsylvania Avenue demanding the right to vote as thousands of men jeered and spit at them.

Some descendants of the women who refused to be silenced will gather Sunday to commemorate the march that thrust the women’s movement into the national spotlight.

Among the marchers will be Coline Jenkins, 61, and her daughter, Elizabeth Jenkins-Sahlin, 28, the fifth- and sixth-generation descendants of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. The famed abolitionist and suffragist leader had died before the 1913 march, but her daughter, Harriot Stanton Blatch, was there lending years of experience to plan the event -- though it was thought scandalous to do so at the time.
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As you read, test your knowledge with our women’s suffrage quiz. All the answers are listed at the bottom of the page.

Question #1: In which year was the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution ratified, giving women the right to vote?

A: 1910
B: 1919
C: 1920
D: 1925

________________________________________

“The woman’s sphere was domestic,” Jenkins said. “It was considered promiscuous that a woman would speak in a public forum.”

On March 3, 1913, Blatch, Alice Paul, Inez Milholland, Lucy Burns and other suffragists from across the country and around the world participated in the first “Woman Suffrage Procession,” held the day before Woodrow Wilson’s inauguration as 28th president of the United States. When Wilson arrived in the capital by train during the march, he was surprised to find few people there to greet him. That snub was part of Paul and Burns’ plan.

Between 5,000 and 8,000 women from every state and 23 countries marched in the parade. They began at the Capitol, following the inaugural parade route, ending at the Treasury Department, next to the White House. Organized into parade units by state, then occupation, the marchers included scholars, nurses, librarians and teachers. Twenty-two African-American women from the historically black Howard University, who had just formed the Delta Sigma Theta sorority, marched as their first activity.
________________________________________

Question #2: Which state was the last to ratify the 19th Amendment, making it the law of the land?

A: Oklahoma
B: California
C: New York
D: Tennessee

________________________________________

The Thetas were asked to march in the back of the parade, said Gwendolyn Boyd, former president of the international sorority and chairwoman of the group's centennial celebration. But the sorority members were able to integrate themselves throughout the procession. Ida B. Wells-Barnett, the Chicago journalist and anti-lynching advocate, famously refused to march in the back of the parade, much to the chagrin of Alice Paul, who was afraid of losing the support of Southern women if she allowed the parade to be integrated. Wells waited on the street before joining the contingent of journalists as they passed by.

A crowd of nearly half a million men -- the city’s population of 331,000 had swelled for the inauguration -- jeered at the women and pelted them with rocks and rotten eggs, injuring more than 300 women and hospitalizing 100.

“The police were told to just stand back,” said Linda Denny, a member of the Suffrage Centennial Celebration planning committee and board member of the National Women’s History Museum. “Women had to walk single file through the immense crowds."
________________________________________

Question #3: How many of the Smithsonian's 19 museums are dedicated exclusively to women’s history?

A: None
B: One
C: Two

D: Three
________________________________________

Ambulances had a difficult time getting to the injured, Denny said. Eventually, troops on horseback from Fort Myer, across the Potomac River in Arlington, Va., were called in, but they found it nearly impossible to restore order, she said.

Inspired by parade leader Inez Milholland, who shone in a white dress atop a white horse, the women marched on, determined to win what had been granted to men with the signing of the Constitution.

Milholland died three years later, after collapsing on a stage where she was protesting Wilson’s refusal to listen to “dumb women.”

“Her legacy is crucial,” said John Marlin, Milholland’s great-nephew and chief economist for the New Jersey Institute for Social Justice. “She was the martyr of that movement.”

AUDIO: Marlin details parade
________________________________________

Question #4: How many countries gave women the right to vote before the United States did so?

A: None
B: 10
C: 16
D: 23

________________________________________

Milholland’s legacy inspired more than 2,000 women to protest daily at the White House from 1917 to 1919. Known as the “Silent Sentinels,” these women held up banners with sayings such as “Democracy should begin at home,” referring to World War I.

Women who participated in the protests were arrested for obstructing the sidewalks and imprisoned without trial. In jail, the women went on hunger strikes, but were force-fed with tubes, placed in solitary confinement and hit, beaten and kicked by the guards.

The press began to cover the plight of the suffragists, and public opinion shifted. Congress passed the 19th Amendment to the Constitution in May 1919. It was ratified in August 1920.

Forty years later, the direct actions and nonviolent methods employed by these women would be used by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and other leaders of the Civil Rights movement.
________________________________________

Question #5: Who were the authors of the 19th Amendment?

A: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
B: Florence Nightingale and Clara Barton
C: Louisa May Alcott and Elizabeth Bennett
D: Eva McDowell and Ruth Chadwick

________________________________________

Denny describes going through her daughter’s new high-school history textbook almost 20 years ago to discover four pictures and one paragraph about the decades-long movement for women’s rights, including a sentence announcing that women were given the right to vote in 1920.

“Women were anything but ‘given’ the right to vote,” Denny said. “It was a true battle.”

Jenkins-Sahlin, a Washington, D.C., resident who works for a social service agency, said women’s rights activists still have work to do.

“The women’s rights movement was the greatest bloodless revolution, and does continue in many ways,” she said. “This is a time to look back on our history proudly to see how far we’ve come and to also think about what we want for future generations. What is it that we want to be remembered for?”
________________________________________

Quiz Answers:

1. C. 1920

2. D. Tennessee

3. B. Zero. The National Women’s History Museum is online. The organization has been lobbying Congress for 15 years to get a plot of land to build an actual museum.

4. D. 23 other countries, including the Soviet Union, Norway, Germany and England.

5. A. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony.

Copyright 2013 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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