Showing posts with label right to vote. Show all posts
Showing posts with label right to vote. Show all posts

Sunday, February 23, 2020

Right to Vote - Check, Run for Office - Check

In my last post, I wrote about my nana and her mother gaining the right to vote. Since then, I have been introduced to a new ancestor on my dad’s side who went beyond casting a vote. Eusebia Krise born 1884 in Altoona, lived most of her life in the New York City area. Eusebia was 35 years old, single, working as a clerk for a furniture store in New York City when she gained the right to vote in 1920.

Eusebia's Candidate Photo
Two years later, living in the Junior League Hotel for Women at 78th Street and East River, New York City she decided to run for the 16th District New York State Senate seat as a Prohibition Party candidate. The Prohibition Party founded in 1869 is the nation’s third-oldest operating political party. Since 1872, the party has fielded presidential and vice presidential candidates every four years. The Prohibition Party was formed by a group of disillusioned Republicans defecting from the GOP, believing that big business had claimed their party. They decided to focus their new party on the continuing problems caused by alcohol. The new forward-thinking party also sought suffrage for women and was the first to grant women equal status as convention delegates. As a modern single working woman it is understandable why Eusebia would have been drawn to the party's women's plank. While we have not found any concrete information that Eusebia actively participated in the suffrage or prohibition movements, it seems logical she must have been involved in one if not both the movements, given her run for office on the Prohibition ticket. As the only woman running for the office she came in 4th in the field of five. Clearly this was a lady ahead of her time, and I am proud to call her cousin.

For my Armstrong cousins this diagram shows how Eusebia Krise fits into our family tree.  After a DNA match led me to Lewis Krise I have had contact with one of his great granddaughters who is a wealth of information on this branch of our family including providing pictures of Eusebia. There is a question as to whether Lewis Krise was Eusebia’s biological father. However, Lewis treated her like a daughter, and she carried the Krise name so she’s family.

#familyhistory #womensvote100 

Sunday, February 9, 2020

100th Anniversary of Women's Right to Vote

Ritts Family Reunion Circa 1927

This photo popped up on my Facebook timeline today. As we celebrate the 100th Anniversary of the Ratification of the 19th Amendment, I reflect on what a difference the suffrage movement had on the women in this picture. My Great Grandma, Lizzie Hudson Ritts [1866-1947] was a grandmother many times over before casting her first ballot. While my Nana, Mary Ritts Burket [1893-1981] was married and had a daughter before gaining the right to vote. My Aunt Maybelle Burket Gillespie [1917-1992] age three 100 years ago was part of the first generation of women to grow up with the right to vote. #WomensVote100

Mary Ritts Burket and Lizzie Hudson Ritts
Maybelle Burket Gillespie with her parents and childern

Monday, November 3, 2014

First Tuesday of November


Tomorrow is the first Tuesday after the first Monday of November, better known as Election Day. 

A uniform date for presidential elections was enacted by the Congress in 1845. Why was November chosen? In the 1840s the US was largely an agronomy society. By early November, harvesting would be completed and the winter snows would not have set in. Short distance transportation was accomplished by foot or hoof. It could easily take citizens a day to get to their polling location. Throw in astute political intuition that Sunday Sabbath was absolute, Monday would be needed by many to get to the polls, and Tuesday became the day to vote. So what is up with the first Tuesday after the first Monday thing? Well the Electoral College must convene the first Wednesday in December with the election held at most 34 days prior. Some bright soul figured out that if there is a November Monday before the first November Tuesday the math works.

This year some Senate seats and all of the House of Representatives seats are up for grabs. As are a host of State and local races around the country. Here in my corner of New Jersey we have County Freeholders and School Board races coming to a conclusion. What will that conclusion be? That is up to you and me. So exercise your civic duty and go vote!

PS. To anyone that votes at the Roxbury High School, we have treats and I Voted stickers!

Monday, August 18, 2014

Suffrage Amendment Ratified, Women Have Vote

The above was the headline in the New York Times on August 25, 1920 announcing the cerfication of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution. The privilege of voting has always been important to me. I remember the distress of not being able to vote in the 1980 Presidential election along with the rest of my dorm because I didn't turn 18 until nine days later. Following in my Grandma Armstrong's footsteps, I have worked as a poll worker on Election Day for over 20 years. As a woman of the 21st century, it is hard to believe that less than 100 years ago, women in the United States did not have the right to vote. By 1920 when the country finally granted women the right to vote my Nana Burket had survived growing up with nine brothers, lived through a world war, married and given birth to her first child. Unfortunately Nana died in 1981 long before I had grown out of the “it's all about me” teen stage. I missed out what would have been a profound discussion of what it was like to have gained the fundamental right of a citizen... to participate in government by our vote.

Women’s Suffrage Timeline


1787: The Constitutional Convention places voting rules in the hands of the states. Only New Jersey granted women the right to vote
1807: Women lose the right to vote in New Jersey
1848: The Seneca Falls Convention proposes women’s suffrage by Elizabeth Cady Stanton
1861-1865: The American Civil War. The suffrage movement was largely on hold during the conflict
1867: Susan B Anthony forms the Equal Rights Association
1869: The 1st US territory, Wyoming grants unrestricted suffrage to women
1870: The 15th amendment to the US Constitution is adopted granting voting rights to former male African-American slaves
1872: Susan B Anthony registers and votes in Rochester, New York, stating that the 14th Amendment to the US Constitution gives her the right to vote
1874: The Supreme Court in the case of Minor vs. Happersett rules that the 14th Amendment to the US
1875: Women begin winning the right to vote in school election starting with Minnesota and Michigan
1878: A federal amendment to the Constitution granting women the right to vote is introduced by Senator A.A. Sargeant of California
1882: The US House and Senate appoint committees on women's suffrage
1884: The House of Representatives debates women suffrage
1886: The suffrage amendment is defeated in the Senate
1887: The Supreme Court strikes down the law that gave women the right to vote in the Washington territory
1887: Women win the right to vote in Kansas municipal elections
1893: Colorado votes for women suffrage as western states and territories continue to lead the charge on women’s right to vote 
1912: Theodore Roosevelt's Progressive Party includes women suffrage as a part of its platform
1913: The Senate votes on a women suffrage amendment, but again it does not pass
1916: Woodrow Wilson and the Democratic Party Platform pledge to endorse women suffrage
1916: The first woman is elected to the US Congress. Montana sends Jeannette Rankin to the House of Representatives
November 14th, 1917: The "Night of Terror” suffragist prisoners are beaten and abused
1917: The New York becomes the 1st Eastern state to grant women full suffrage
1918: The House of Representatives passes the women’s right to vote
1918 Women suffrage is once again struck down in the Senate
1918: President Wilson declares his support for women suffrage
1919: The National American Woman Suffrage Association becomes the League of Women Voters
June 4, 1919: The Senate finally passes the women suffrage
August 18, 1920 Tennessee ratifies the suffrage amendment
August 26, 1920: The 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, stating, "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex. Congress shall have the power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation," becomes law.


The suffrage fight took over 100 years to result in women gaining the right to go into the voting booth. The least we can do is get out and vote every first Tuesday of November.