Volume III Part 91 (1/2)
The advocates of suffrage in St. Louis made their attacks at once in both Church[379] and State, and left no means of agitation untried. There has never been an a.s.sociation in any State that comprised so many able men and women who gave their best thoughts to every phase of this question, and who did so grand a work, until the unfortunate division in 1871, which seemed to chill the enthusiasm of many friends of the movement.
In the winter of 1869 the a.s.sociation sent a large delegation of ladies to the legislature with a pet.i.tion containing about 2,000 signatures. A correspondent in _The Revolution_, February 6, 1869, said:
It will not be feminine to say, yet I fear I must say, the women of Missouri have stormed their capitol, and if it is not yet taken, the outworks are in our hands, and I believe with a few more well-directed blows the victory will be ours. On February 3 a large delegation of ladies, representing the Suffrage a.s.sociation of Missouri, visited Jefferson City for the purpose of laying before the legislature a large and influentially signed pet.i.tion, asking the ballot for women; and we were gratified to see the great respect and deference shown to the women of Missouri by the wisest and best of her legislators in their respectful and cordial reception of the delegates. Both Houses adjourned, and gave the use of the house for the afternoon, when eloquent addresses were made by Mrs. J.G.
Phelps of Springfield, Dr. Ada Greunan of St. Louis, and the future orator of Missouri, Miss Phoebe Couzins, whose able and effective address the press has given in full. Of the brave men who stood up for us, it is more difficult to speak. To give a list would be impossible; for every name would require a eulogy too lengthy for the pages of _The Revolution_. We will, therefore, record them on the tablets of our memory with a hand so firm that they shall stand out brightly till time shall be no more. Of the small majority who oppose us we will say nothing, but throw over them the pall of merciful oblivion.
The first woman suffrage convention ever held in the city of St.
Louis, or the State of Missouri, a.s.sembled in Mercantile Library, October 6, 7, 1869. Many distinguished people were on the platform.[380] At this convention Mr. Francis Minor introduced a very able series of resolutions, on which Mrs. Minor made a remarkably logical address.[381] The following letter from Mr.
Minor shows the careful research he gave to the consideration of this question:
ST. LOUIS, December 30, 1869.
DEAR REVOLUTION: So thoroughly am I satisfied that the surest and most direct course to pursue to obtain a recognition of woman's claim to the ballot, lies through the courts of the country, that I am induced to ask you to republish the resolutions that I drafted, and which were unanimously adopted by the St. Louis convention. And I will here add, that to accomplish this end, and to carry these resolutions into practical effect, it is intended by Mrs.
Minor, the president of the State a.s.sociation, to make a test case in her instance at our next election; take it through the courts of Missouri, and thence to the Supreme Court of the United States at Was.h.i.+ngton. I think it will be admitted that these resolutions place the cause of woman upon higher ground than ever before a.s.serted, in the fact that for the first time suffrage is claimed as a privilege based upon citizens.h.i.+p, and secured by the Const.i.tution of the United States. It will be seen that the position taken is, that the States have the right to regulate, but not to prohibit, the elective franchise to citizens of the United States. Thus the States may determine the qualifications of electors. They may require the elector to be of a certain age, to have had a fixed residence, to be of a sane mind, and unconvicted of crime, etc., because these are qualifications or conditions that all citizens, sooner or later, may attain; but to go beyond this, and say to one-half the citizens of the State, notwithstanding you possess all these qualifications you shall never vote, is of the very essence of despotism. It is a bill of attainder of the most odious character.
A further investigation of the subject will show that the language of the const.i.tutions of all the States, with the exception of those of Ma.s.sachusetts and Virginia, on the subject of suffrage is peculiar. They almost all read substantially alike: ”White male citizens, etc., shall be ent.i.tled to vote,” and this is supposed to exclude all other citizens. There is no direct exclusion, except in the two States above named. Now the error lies in supposing that an enabling clause is necessary at all. The right of the people of a State to partic.i.p.ate in a government of their own creation requires no enabling clause; neither can it be taken from them by implication. To hold otherwise would be to interpolate in the const.i.tution a prohibition that does not exist. In framing a const.i.tution the people are a.s.sembled in their sovereign capacity; and being possessed of all rights and all powers, what is not surrendered is retained. Nothing short of a direct prohibition can work a disseizin of rights that are fundamental. In the language of John Jay to the people of New York, urging the adoption of the Const.i.tution of the United States, ”silence and blank paper neither give nor take away anything,” and Alexander Hamilton says (_Federalist_, No. 83), ”Every man of discernment must at once perceive the wide difference between silence and abolition.”
The mode and manner in which the people shall take part in the government of their creation may be prescribed by the const.i.tution, but the right itself is antecedent to all const.i.tutions. It is inalienable, and can neither be bought, nor sold, nor given away. But even if it should be held that this view is untenable, and that women are disfranchised by the several State const.i.tutions directly, or by implication, then I say that such prohibitions are clearly in conflict with the Const.i.tution of the United States, and yield thereto. The language of that instrument is clear and emphatic: ”All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States, and of the State wherein they reside.” ”No State shall make, or enforce any law that shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.” It would be impossible to add to the force or effect of such language, and equally impossible to attempt to explain it away.
Very respectfully, FRANCIS MINOR.
The St. Louis _Democrat_ spoke of the convention as follows:
Readers of our report have doubtless been interested to observe the fair spirit and dignified manner of the woman suffrage convention, and the ability displayed in some of the addresses. It is but due to the managers to say that they extended most courteous invitations to gentlemen not identified with the movement to address the convention, and state freely their objections to the extension of the franchise. Of those invited some were prevented by duties elsewhere from attending. Others, it may be, felt that it would scarcely be a gracious thing, in spite of the liberality of the invitation, to occupy the time of a convention in favor of the extension of the franchise with arguments against it. But the objections which, after all, probably have most weight with candid men are those which it is not easy to discuss in public, namely: ”Will not extension of suffrage to women have an injurious effect upon the family and s.e.xual relations?” ”Will not the ballot be used rather by that cla.s.s who would not use it wisely than by those who are most competent?” We do not argue these questions, but are sure that some frank discussion of them, however delicate the subject may be, is necessary to convince the great majority of those who are still doubting or opposed. Meanwhile the reports are of interest, and reflect no little credit upon the women of this city who have taken so prominent a part in the movement.
The officers of the Missouri Society were annually reelected for several years, and the work proceeded harmoniously until the division in the National a.s.sociation. The members of the Missouri Society took sides in this division as preference dictated. Mr.
and Mrs. Minor, Miss Forbes, Miss Couzins and others were already members of the National a.s.sociation, and sympathized with its views and modes of pus.h.i.+ng the question.
In order that there might be no division in the Missouri a.s.sociation, a resolution was introduced by Mr. Minor and unanimously adopted, declaring that each member of the society should be free to join the National body of his or her choice, and that the Missouri a.s.sociation, as a society, should not become auxiliary to either the ”National” or the ”American.” The good faith of the a.s.sociation was thus pledged to respect the feelings and wishes of each member, and as long as this course was observed all went well. But, at the annual meeting in 1871, just after Mrs. Minor had for the fifth time been unanimously reelected president, in violation of the previous action of the a.s.sociation a resolution was introduced and pa.s.sed, declaring that the a.s.sociation should henceforth become auxiliary to the American. This gross disregard of the wishes and feelings of those who were members of the National a.s.sociation left them no alternative, with any feeling of self-respect, but to withdraw; and accordingly Mrs. Minor at once tendered her resignation as president and her withdrawal as a member of the a.s.sociation. She was followed in this course by Mr. Minor, Miss Couzins, Miss Forbes and others.[382] However, the work went steadily on.
Meetings were held regularly from week to week, with occasional grand conventions, tracts and pet.i.tions were circulated, and constant agitation in some way kept up.
In answer to an earnest solicitation for facts and incidents of the suffrage movement in Missouri, Mrs. Rebecca N. Hazard, one of the earliest and most active friends in that State, sends us the following:
I think the cruel war had much to do in educating the women of Missouri into a sense of their responsibilities and duties as citizens; at least all who first took part in the suffrage movement had been active on the Union side during the war, and that having ended in the preservation of the government, they naturally began to inquire as to their own rights and privileges in the restored Union. My own feelings were first fully awakened by the hanging of Mrs. Surrat; for, although a Unionist and an abolitionist, I could but regard her execution by the government, considering her helpless position, as judicial murder. I wrote on the subject to the editor of the New York _Independent_. The letter was handed to Miss Anthony, and resulted in an invitation to the next meeting of the Equal Rights Society. This almost frightened me, for I had hitherto looked askance at the woman's rights movement.
Meeting an old friend and neighbor not long after, the talk turned upon negro suffrage. I expressed myself in favor of that measure, and timidly added, ”And go farther--I think women also should vote.” She grasped my hand cordially, saying, ”And so do I!” This was Mrs. Virginia L. Minor. We had each cherished this opinion, supposing that no other woman in the community held it; and this we afterwards found to have been the experience of many others. This was in 1866; and in the following autumn Mrs. Minor prepared and circulated for signatures a card of thanks to Hon.
B. Gratz Brown for the recognition of woman's political rights he had given in the United States Senate in a speech upon extending the suffrage to the women of the District of Columbia.[383] This card received enough names to justify another step--that of a pet.i.tion to the Missouri General a.s.sembly. This was headed by Mrs. Minor, and circulated with untiring energy by her, receiving several hundred signatures, and was sent to the legislature during the winter, where it received some degree of favor.
But as yet no effort had been made toward an organization. The first step in that direction was in May, 1867, by Mrs. Lucretia P. Hall and her sister, Miss Penelope Allen, daughters of Mrs.
Beverly Allen, and nieces of General Pope, in the parlors of Mrs.
Anna L. Clapp, the president of the Union Aid Society during the war. Mrs. Hall, Mrs. Clapp and myself called a public meeting on May 8, when the Woman Suffrage Society of Missouri was organized, with Mrs. Minor president.
In the winter of 1868 the a.s.sociation sent a large delegation of ladies to Jefferson with a pet.i.tion containing about 2,000 names, to present to the legislature. The Republicans were then in the ascendency, and the ladies having many professed friends among the members, were received with every demonstration of respect.
Addresses were made by Miss Phoebe Couzins and Dr. Ada Greunan.
The pet.i.tion was respectfully considered and a fair vote given for the submission of an amendment.
Subsequent sessions of the legislature have been besieged, as was also the const.i.tutional convention in 1875; but beyond the pa.s.sage of several laws improving the general status of women, we have not made much impression upon the law-making power of our State; not so much since the State pa.s.sed into the hands of the Democrats, as while the Republicans were in the majority.
But the public meetings and social influence of our a.s.sociation have done much for the cause of woman suffrage. Strangers are surprised to find so little prejudice existing against a movement so decidedly unpopular in many places. The convention held in St.