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North Dakota has a very contradictory history when it comes to women.
As the 19th century blended into the 20th, many thousands of women moved
here to homestead and wrestle out a living for themselves. Despite their
hardiness and proven strength, their road to getting the vote was a rocky
one. It was on this day in 1917 that they finally achieved their goal.
Womens Suffrage almost passed as early as 1872 -- in Dakota Territory
-- failing by only one vote. In 1885, Republican Territorial Governor,
Gilbert Pierce, vetoed the measure, reasoning that if they allowed women
to vote, it might ruin the territorys chances at statehood.
Four years later, the new state of North Dakota did give women the right
to vote on school issues, and in 1892, Independents backed Laura Eisenhuth
for Superintendent of Education. Although women were still being held
back, they have also had a tendency to make history; Eisenhuth won, making
her the first woman in the country to hold statewide elective office.
In 1913, the Womens Suffrage Act was again passed by the legislature,
but this time it was turned down by the states all-male voters.
Womens suffrage was closely linked to prohibition. In addition to
restricting the use of alcohol, the Christian Temperance Union wanted
also to limit child labor, restrict the sale of obscene literature, and
separate first offenders from long-term convicts in prisons. Those who
were opposed to these notions, especially those who favored the liquor
trade, strongly opposed them. Others who were opposed to womens
suffrage included the McKenzie political machine, the railroads, and foreign-born
men, particularly the Germans.
Things turned around for pro-active women when the Non-Partisan League
gained control. The NPL put womens suffrage on their platform, and
in 1917, the legislature gave women the right to vote in local and presidential
elections. Then two years later, they ratified the federal Woman Suffrage
amendment, and women were given the right to vote for statewide offices
as well.
For the first time, women used their full voting rights on November 2nd,
1920.
Later, North Dakota women made further headlines: just three years after
theyd won the vote, two women won seats in the ND State Legislature.
One of these, Minnie Craig, ended up serving as a Representative for six
consecutive sessions, and in 1933, she made history when she was elected
Speaker of the House. It was the first time in national history that a
woman served as the head of a legislative body.
The next step in womens rights began in 1923, with the Equal Rights
Amendment. When it finally came up for ratification in North Dakota in
1973, it passed in the Senate but lost by one vote in the House. The following
year, it came up for a vote again and passed, making North Dakota the
34th out of 38 states to ratify the ERA. Ultimately, that amendment failed.
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