Early suffrage and formation of ESA 1859-1884
1859 Three feminists—Clarina Nichols, Mother Armstrong, and Mary Tenney Gray, attended the Wyandotte constitutional convention, representing Shawnee and Douglas County women’s groups, to urge the inclusion of equal suffrage in the new state’s constitution. They were not allowed to speak, but were granted the unprecedented right to acquire and possess property and to retain the equal custody of their children.
1861 The first Kansas state legislature gave women the right to vote in school elections.
1867 Woman suffrage and Negro suffrage were put on the ballot, in two separate referenda. This made Kansas the first state in the Union to consider woman suffrage. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony traveled the state campaigning for the ballot. Both proposals lost.
1868 In December, Senator S.C. Pomeroy of Kansas introduced the federal woman suffrage amendment in Congress.
1869 A women’s convention was held in Topeka to revive the cause.
1874 The Prohibition Party in Kansas endorsed woman suffrage.
1879 The first woman suffrage organization in Kansas, the Equal Suffrage Association (ESA), was established in Lincoln, Kansas.
1884 A statewide ESA was founded.
Women of Kansas get the vote 1885-1912
1885 A bill was introduced in Kansas to grant women municipal voting rights.
1887 Municipal suffrage was won in Kansas, allowing women to run for office in all city elections. On April 4, 1887, Susannah Medora Salter was elected mayor in Argonia, Kansas, in Sumner County, becoming the first woman mayor in the nation.
1888–89 Oskaloosa, Cottonwood Falls, Rossville, Elk Falls, and Baldwin elected women mayors.
1890–99 Canton, Edgerton, Iowa, Haddam, Pleasanton, Gaylord, Ellis, Jamestown, and Beattie chose women mayors.
1893 A constitutional amendment to grant woman suffrage in Kansas was again defeated.
1911 The Kansas suffrage amendment was resubmitted to the legislature and passed by a vote of 94 to 28.
1912 Kansas adopted a constitutional amendment granting women full suffrage.
Sharing our story
At the final convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, the League of Women Voters (LWV) was born. In March 1919, Carrie Chapman Catt, the strategist who led the suffrage movement to its final victory, called for the formation of a league of women voters to “finish the fight.” The occasion was the 50th Anniversary Jubilee Convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, in St. Louis, Missouri.
Jane Brooks of Wichita, wife of a prominent attorney and president of the Kansas Equal Suffrage Association (KESA), was elected chair of the national LWV, because, as a contemporary said, “She was attractive, able, and not tarred up as an old suffrage warhorse.” She went home to Kansas and set about dissolving the KESA and establishing the first local LWV in the country.
The KESA held its last meeting on Wednesday, June 4, 1919, and laid the foundation for the LWV of Kansas. The Sedgwick County League of Women Voters elected its first officers. One week later, the first meeting of the LWVK was held June 10-11, 1919, at the Hotel Lassen in Wichita. In January 1920, the state League held the “First School of Citizenship and Called Convention of the Kansas League of Women Voters,” again at the Hotel Lassen. Members from Topeka, Enterprise, Hutchinson, Emporia, Manhattan, Wichita, Lawrence, Leavenworth, and Winfield attended. Kansas Governor Henry J. Allen spoke on “Land Tenantry and Industrial Courts” and the heads of 25 local women’s organizations ranging from the Colonial Dames of America in the State of Kansas to the Thursday Afternoon Cooking Club served as “patronesses.”
In February 1920, the National American Woman Suffrage Association held its Victory Convention in Chicago, Illinois. Knowing that the battle was won and that the suffrage amendment would be ratified later that year, the Association reconstituted itself as the League of Women Voters, which Catt called “a mighty experiment.” Having won the vote, the women wanted to be well informed and use it wisely.
Throughout the 1920s, the LWVK held “citizenship schools” in conjunction with its state conventions. Said Carrie Chapman Catt, “We have faith in women to vote right only when they know what is right. Women do not need to be told whom to vote for. They need to know the facts, facts the citizenship school will go a long way to give.”