These names belong to ladies with some
serious moxie—they are the last names
of the women who led the charges of
thousands & participated in 72 years worth
of work for women rights, and of course,
the right to vote.
They are: Lucretia Mott. Elizabeth Cady
Stanton. Sojourner Truth. Susan B.
Anthony. Alice Paul. Inez Millholland.
Anna Howard Shaw. Harriet Stanton
Blatch. Jeannette Pickering Rankin. Carrie
Chapman Catt.
They were mothers of abolition, great
women’s advocates and activists of their
time. They may not have burned bras, but
they marched across the country, enduring
arrests, abuse, blatant discrimination,
protests, and donated all of their precious
time, to make it happen.
Mott and Stanton were the leading
ladies, holding the first convention of
this movement in 1848 in Seneca Falls,
New York, where they would draft the
Declaration of Sentiments, calling for
multiple resolutions for women’s rights,
including the right to simply be recognized
as a person rather than a property, rights
to her wages earned outside of the home,
the right and ability to be educated, and of
course, the right to vote. And with success,
many of those liberties were granted, aside
from the right to vote.
Mott (d. 1880) and Cady (d. 1902) would not
live to see or enjoy the fruition of their work
in gaining the right to vote, but the ladies
above, even as some died later on, would
participate and be hugely consequential in gaining grounds on women’s right to vote.
Their fight gained us many things we take for
granted today, including our education, and
our paychecks, let alone our voting rights.
It would result in the ratification of the 19th
Amendment introduced in 1919, and the right
to vote in 1920.
So, here we are celebrating 100 years of that
beautiful right. A right that was certainly
fought long and hard for, and we owe it to
these ladies, ourselves, and especially our
country to take part next month.
Think about this: According to the Pew
Research Center, in 2016, only 63% of
women who had the ability to vote, actually
casted their vote, leaving 37% of the female
population unaccounted for. And yes, one
does need to consider the many factors that
also play into those numbers. However, some of us just didn’t vote. And here, the objective
is to encourage you to vote if you haven’t or
were not planning on it. We need to do our
part to make sure if you are part of that 37%,
you use your ballot this year.
HOW TO GET STARTED?
Visit the Michigan Voter Information
Center online.
Not yet registered to vote?
You can register there.
Already registered? Find out where you can
vote, what to expect & for whom you can vote.
Want to know who you are voting for? Click
on “What’s on the ballot?” and from there
you can enter in your information to find out
what to expect on your election ticket. Names
sometimes have links of which you can find
your official’s page and read up on what they
are all about. Unfortunately, not all names
will/can have links, but you can Google them
fairly quickly.
Did you request an absentee ballot?
Look up
everyone on your ballot while you fill in your
bubbles! I did it for the August election, and
I’ll do it for November as well.
For more information, watch and read
local news profiles on candidates prior to
the election. In addition, we here at Moxie
Magazine are including a few female
candidate profiles in this month’s issue. We’re
all doing our part to keep you informed,
because there is only one thing worse than not
voting at all, and that is voting uninformed.
Lucretia, Elizabeth, Susan, and the rest of
the women’s movement leaders didn’t fight
so that we could sit back and just let things
happen. We don’t need to be activists or
abolitionists to have a say in what goes on
with our lives. There may be other causes on
the frontier to fight that voting will not be
the only means for change. But voting is one
simple thing you can do to help our fight. You
have a voice. You are encouraged to use it.