suffrage for women in the United States was an uphill struggle. Despite
even the reminder from the earliest days of the Revolution with Abigail
Adams writing to her husband, "Don't forget the Ladies,"", the right to
vote had been kept from women for over a century. While many abolitionists
worked with the suffrage movement, once the Civil War ended and the
Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments provided rights for
African Americans, women's suffrage seemed forgotten.
Leaders
like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Caddy Stanton continued the fight, but
great political ground was made until well into the twentieth century.
America had joined World War I in April of 1917 amid a fair amount of
protest of the involvement in Europe's war. President Woodrow Wilson used
propaganda machines to keep the war popular, showing films of troops in
training, "minute-men" giving public speeches over the importance of
making the world safe for democracy, and upholding ideals of everything
American. Meanwhile, the National Woman's Party, the renamed union of many
women's suffrage organizations, used negative publicity against the
President. He was routinely questioned why women weren't in his agenda of
support for all humankind. Women picketed the White House with placards
demanding the right to vote. Other placards displayed anti-war slogans,
which was growing among the movement.
The protesters, nicknamed the "Silent Sentinels", had gradually ended
their silence days before. As the President drove by, tipping his hat as
he usually did, the women shouted at him. Outraged bystanders began to
clash with the protesters, and eventually the police were brought in to
calm the situation by arresting many of the women on charges of
obstructing traffic. In the altercation, one of the leaders of the
suffragettes, Alice Paul of New Jersey, violently slipped out of a
policeman's grasp and fell, hitting her head on the pavement. Police and
protesters alike attempted medical help, but Alice died in a matter of
minutes. The women rose up in what many called a "riot", but police
quickly arrested whoever they could catch to be placed in the Occoquan
Workhouse in Virginia.
"The
suffragettes often hurt their own cause in England with their extreme
tactics. As I understand it, they did a lot less of that sort of stuff
here" - reader's commentAs the media and the remainders of the NWP
spread word about the death, Wilson faced a public relations disaster. In
a change from his usual quiet on the subject, he approached Congress with
a speech requesting women's suffrage, noting that they "were willing to
die, just as any man in the Revolution had been". Meanwhile, the negative
press only grew as the arrested women entered hunger strikes. Potential
bills flew around the Congress, drowning out suggestions for a temperance
amendment controlling alcohol. Opposition to suffrage repeated
pseudo-scientific evidence that women had smaller brains, and it was on a
demand that women could think just as well as men that a solution was
found. Common throughout the South, poll tests would be established to
prove literacy and basic knowledge of citizenship for a voter. The
Eighteenth Amendment, establishing the National Poll Test, would be
ratified January 6, 1919. Any citizen of the United States, male or
female, black or white, and even of any age, could vote after passing the
test and proving merit.
As the Test went into use around the United States, it became steadily
obvious that, statistically, the poor would be the first to be turned away
from voting. Only a few who recognized this matter took it seriously, and
of those, there were ones who used it to their advantage. Workers' rights
were a question of the unskilled laborers, but the increasing difficulty
of the Test kept them from voting. As the economy sank into the Great
Depression, social leaders spoke out against the Test. Facing his own
public relations issues, President Franklin Roosevelt urged Congress to
repeal the amendment with a new amendment continuing the guarantee the
vote for all adults, men and women. The Nineteenth Amendment would repeal
the Eighteenth in 1933, the first of many political shifts for the nation.
Although ignored in 1917, the idea of the prohibition of alcohol would
arise again in 1937 along with the control of marijuana. After two decades
of facing an explosion in organized crime, these measures, too, would be
repealed under the presidency of Stuart Symington in 1963 shortly before
his assassination in Dallas, Texas.