In 1916, Jeannette Rankin was the
first woman elected to Congress as a Republican from Montana. Born in 1880, she
became a suffragette and professional lobbyist for the National American Woman
Suffrage Association. Her efforts helped win Montana women the vote in 1914. The
first opportunity for Montana women to vote came when Jeannette ran for
Congress. In victory, she said, “I am deeply conscious of the responsibility
resting upon me.”
Not only a suffragette, she was a
pacifist. She made no secret of how she felt about the war raging in Europe. “If
they are going to have war, they ought to take the old men and leave the young
to propagate the race.”
Colleagues in the suffrage
movement didn’t want her to vote no, fearing she would tarnish their cause.
That didn’t sway her. “I want to stand by my country, but I cannot vote for
war. I vote no.” The National American Woman Suffrage Association announced she
hadn’t voted for the suffragists, “she represents Montana.”
After serving one term, she
worked for pacifism, social welfare (she had worked for a time as a social
worker before Congress), and women’s causes for peace. With another war looming
in 1940, she again ran for Congress, saying, “No one will pay any attention to
me this time. There is nothing unusual about a woman being elected.”
With the attack on Pearl Harbor,
the House and Senate met to deliberate on declaring war. She wanted to speak, but
Speaker Sam Rayburn refused to recognize her, calling her out of order for her
efforts. Some members asked her to either vote for war or abstain. Her vote of
no met with hisses and boos.
“As a woman, I can’t go to war,
and I refuse to send anyone else,” she declared. Hers was the only vote against
war, 388 to 1.
Her brother who financed her
campaigns wired, “Montana is 100 percent against you.” Colleagues and reporters
ignored her for the rest of her term, and she did not run for re-election.
Would you have had the courage of
your convictions to stand firm while everyone else railed against you?
Terri Wangard writes novels that entertain and enlighten. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers (ACFW) has won and been a finalist in various writing contests. When not writing, she’s likely to be reading. Her four novels have all been set in World War II, but her recently published novella, Where My Heart Resides, is a contemporary romance. Learn more at www.terriwangard.com
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