Women's Rights & Issues
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National Womans Party
The Suffrage Era
Alice Paul was a well-educated, Quaker woman working and studying in England in 1907 when she became interested in the issue of womens suffrage. She met Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters, Christabel and Sylvia, who were causing controversy throughout England with their militant tactics to secure the vote for women. Pauls participation in meetings, demonstrations and depositions to Parliament led to multiple arrests, hunger strikes, and force-feedings.
She returned to the United States in 1910 and after completing a Ph.D. in Economics at the University of Pennsylvania in 1912, turned her attention to the American suffrage movement. After the deaths of the two great icons of the movementElizabeth Cady Stanton in 1902 and Susan B. Anthony in 1906the suffrage movement was languishing, lacking focus and support under conservative suffrage organizations that were concentrating only on state suffrage. Paul believed that the movement needed to focus on the passage of a federal suffrage amendment to the U.S. Constitution. After joining the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) and assuming leadership of its Congressional Committee in Washington, DC, Paul created a larger organization, the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage. Pauls tactics were seen as too extreme for NAWSAs leadership and the Congressional Union split from NAWSA in 1914.
In 1916, the Congressional Union formed the Womans Party, comprised of the enfranchised members of the Congressional Union. In 1917, the two organizations formally merged to form the National Womans Party (NWP). From the Pankhursts, Paul adopted the philosophy to hold the party in power responsible. The NWP would withhold its support from the existing political parties until women had gained the right to vote and punish those parties in power who did not support suffrage. Under her leadership, the NWP targeted Congress and the White House through a revolutionary strategy of sustained dramatic, nonviolent protest. The colorful, spirited suffrage marches, the suffrage songs, the violence the women faced (they were physically attacked and their banners were torn from their hands), the daily pickets and arrests at the White House, the hunger strikes and brutal prison conditions, the national speaking tours and newspaper headlinesall created enormous public support for suffrage.
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The National Womans Party Today
The political strategies and tactics of Alice Paul and the NWP became a blueprint for civil-rights organizations and activities throughout the twentieth century. The NWP ceased to be a lobbying organization and became a 501©(3) educational organization in 1997. Today, the NWP seeks to educate the public about the womens rights movement and to use and preserve the Sewall-Belmont House, with its outstanding historic library and suffragist and ERA archives, to tell the inspiring story of a century of courageous activism by American women
http://www.sewallbelmont.org/learn/national-womans-party/
benddem
(3,172 posts)Thanks for the info.
CrispyQ
(36,492 posts)I had not heard of NWP.
niyad
(113,505 posts)best to erase our history.