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Mary Martha Thomas - The new woman in Alabama: social reforms, and suffrage, 1890-1920

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    The new woman in Alabama: social reforms, and suffrage, 1890-1920
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The new woman in Alabama: social reforms, and suffrage, 1890-1920: summary, description and annotation

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Between 1890 and 1920, middle-class white and black Alabama women created many clubs and organizations that took them out of the home and provided them with roles in the public sphere. Beginning with the Alabama Womans Christian Temperance Union in the 1880s and followed by the Alabama Federation of Womens Clubs and the Alabama Federation of Colored Womens Clubs in the 1890s, women spearheaded the drive to eliminate child labor, worked to improve the educational system, upgraded the jails and prisons, and created reform schools for both boys and girls. Suffrage was also an item on the Progressive agenda. After a brief surge of activity during the 1890s, the suffrage drive lay dormant until 1912, when women created the Alabama Equal Suffrage Association. During their campaigns in the 1915 and 1919 to persuade the legislature to enfranchise women, the leaders learned the art of politicshow to educate, organize, lobby, and count votes. Women seeking validation for their roles as homemakers and mother demanded a hearing in the political arena for issues that affected them and their families. In the process they began to erase the line between the public world of men and the private world of women. These were the New Women who tackled the problems created by the industrialization and urbanization of the New South. By 1920 Alabama women had created new public spaces for themselves in these voluntary associations. As a consequence of their involvement in reform crusades, the womens club movement, and the campaign for woman suffrage, women were no longer passive and dependent. They were willing and able to be rightful participants.Thomass book is the first of its kind to focus on the reform activities of women during the Progressive Era, and the first to consider the southern woman and all the organizations of middle-class black and white women in the South and particularly in Alabama. It is also the first to explore the drive of Alabama women to obtain the vote. The development of political power among southern women progressed slowly. Demolishing as it did the myth of the Southern Lady. Traditionally confined to the domestic sphere, southern women had no experience in public decision making and were discouraged from attaining the skills necessary for participation in public debate. The division of women by race and class further impeded their political education. But through their participation in so-called womens issueschild labor laws, temperance, and educational reformwomen gained experience in influencing political leaders. Black and white womens clubs provided the framework for state-wide lobbying.Only in the wake of their success with domestic issues tackled through club organizations and temperance unions did women dare seek the right to vote. They learned how to wield political power through acceptable ladylike avenues, and it was this experience that led to their long but eventually successful drive for woman suffrage. The New Woman eventually found a way to replace the Southern Lady.

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title The New Woman in Alabama Social Reforms and Suffrage 1890-1920 - photo 1

title:The New Woman in Alabama : Social Reforms, and Suffrage, 1890-1920
author:Thomas, Mary Martha.
publisher:University of Alabama Press
isbn10 | asin:0817305645
print isbn13:9780817305642
ebook isbn13:9780585201139
language:English
subjectWomen in politics--Alabama--History, Women--Suffrage--Alabama--History, Women--Alabama--Societies and clubs--History.
publication date:1992
lcc:HQ1236.5.U6T49 1992eb
ddc:324/.082
subject:Women in politics--Alabama--History, Women--Suffrage--Alabama--History, Women--Alabama--Societies and clubs--History.
Page i
The New Woman in Alabama
Page ii
Page iii The New Woman in Alabama Social Reforms and Suffrage - photo 2
Page iii
The New Woman in Alabama
Social Reforms and Suffrage, 1890-1920
Mary Martha Thomas
THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA PRESS
Tuscaloosa and London
Page iv
Copyright 1992 by The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487-0380
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
Designed by Paula C. Dennis
The paper on which this book is printed meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Science-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1984.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Thomas, Mary Martha, 1927
The new woman in Alabama: social reforms, and suffrage, 1890-1920
/ Mary Martha Thomas.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8173-0564-5
1. Women in politicsAlabama-History. 2. WomenSuffrage
AlabamaHistory. 3. WomenAlabamaSocieties and clubsHistory.
I. Title.
HQ1236.5.U6T49 1992
324.082-dc20 91-13069
CIP
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data available
Page v
Contents
Preface
vii
1. Introduction
1
2. Temperance Unions, 1882-1915
10
3. White Women's Clubs, 1890-1915
41
4. Black Women's Clubs, 1890-1920
69
5. Club Women and Child Labor, 1903-1919
92
6. The Suffrage Associations of the 1890s
118
7. Re-creation of the Suffrage Associations, 1910-1914
135
8. Campaign for a State Amendment, 1914-1915
152
9. Final Years of the Suffrage Drive, 1916-1919
174
10. Alabama Women in the 1920s
204
Notes
221
Bibliography
249
Index
263

Page vii
Preface
Originally my interest in Alabama women of the Progressive period centered on the suffrage drive. Scholars have investigated and written extensively on the national movement, but little has been written on the South and even less on the Alabama movement. As a result the existing knowledge is skewed toward national figures and northeastern activism. I felt that new information from Alabama and the South would complement our understanding of the overall movement.
As my research progressed, I became aware that virtually all suffrage histories treat the drive as an institutional reform entirely within the context of political history. My aim became to write a comprehensive history of the suffrage drive in Alabama that would reflect women's lives and the larger society in which they lived. I wanted, in short, to write the history of the suffrage movement within a feminist framework.
Moreover, as I investigated the activities of Alabama women, I became increasingly aware that suffrage was only one among many issues that interested the women of the state. They were also concerned with the abolition of child labor, the problems of poverty in an industrial community, the creation of reform schools for juvenile offenders, the
Page viii
improvement of the public schools, and a host of other reforms tackled by both black and white women.
Hence, as the work evolved, I found myself investigating the activities of the Alabama Woman's Christian Temperance Union, the Alabama Federation of Women's Clubs, and the Alabama Federation of Colored Women's Clubs as well as the Alabama Equal Suffrage Association. In the end I wrote the story of middle-class women, both black and white, as they moved from their private world of the home to the public world of politics and reform. These women did not fit the role of the mythical Southern Lady who was confined to the private world of the home and the hearth. They were active, articulate, gutsy women who defied convention and played an important role in the history of the state. They are also a group of women for whom I have the greatest admiration.
In the course of my research and writing, I have become indebted to librarians, archivists, colleagues, friends, and family. The original research was funded in part by generous grants from Jacksonville State University's newly established Faculty Research Program. The unsung heroes and heroines of most research projects are the librarians and archivists who assist scholars in their research. I wish especially to commend the staffs of the Alabama Department of Archives and History, the Birmingham Public Library, Tuskegee University, Jacksonville State University, The University of Alabama, Auburn University, the University of North Carolina, the Library of Congress, and the Schlesinger Library of Radcliffe College. I am especially indebted to Anne Johnson of Jacksonville State University, Wayne Flynt of Auburn University, and Betty Brandon of the University of South Alabama, who reviewed the manuscript and offered positive suggestions. No author could have asked for a better publisher than Malcolm M. MacDonald and the staff at The University of Alabama Press.
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