Women's Equality
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (left) and Lucretia Mott (right), two leaders in the 19th-century women's movement, are depicted with hands clasped in bright colors. At lower center, an extended hand reaches towards the women's joined hands.
Marisol, French artist, 1930–2016
Delaware Art Museum, Gift of Lorillard, a Division of Loew's Theatres, Inc., 1975
Styria Studio Inc.
1975
© Marisol. Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
15-color lithograph, 34 1/2 × 29 3/4 in. (87.6 × 75.6 cm)
Women at the Polls in New Jersey in the Good Old Days
A group of elegant women at center-left are depicted casting their votes at a desk. The rest of the room is filled with male figures of different ages and social classes, who watch the women and speak among themselves.
Howard Pyle, American illustrator, 1853–1911
HathiTrust Digital Library, original from the University of Michigan
<a href="https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015021733699;view=1up;seq=658"><em>Harper's Weekly Magazine</em>, vol. 24, November 30, 1880, p. 724</a>
1880
Public domain
Women at the Polls
<p>Colonel Higginson is reported to have said the late Convention for equal suffrage in Worcester that the failure of women to vote at the school elections showed that they did not care to vote, and that when they showed the wish, the right of suffrage would be granted. As a statement of the fact of the indisposition to vote, this remark is undoubtedly true. The number of women who wish to vote is very small, and, so far as our own observation extends, the diligent efforts of those who insist that they ought to wish to vote do not produce much effect. Yet it is unquestionably true that laws made by men exclusively have often been very unjust to women. A quarter of a century ago Mr. Gladstone denounced some such laws as a reproach to England and to civilization. But there is a constant amelioration of harsh laws, and despite the injustice it remains true that women at large are not greatly interested in the movement for their enfranchisement.</p>
<p>But because women who do not feel disfranchisement to be unjust are different, shall those who do feel the injustice be denied the right? The question is much like that of all emancipation. It is not whether the individual slaves or any considerable number of them wish to be free, but whether slavery is not necessarily hurtful to the whole community. The principle of popular government is the participation of all intelligent adult citizens under equal considerations. How can a political community wisely contemn its fundamental principle even although the disregard does not threaten it with immediate disaster? Is not permanent disregard of conceded rights dangerous demoralizing? And what reason is there in the argument that a hundred persons who are qualified to do something, and desire to do it, should not be allowed to until a thousand who are equally qualified, but have no desire, shall change their minds?</p>
<p>The extension to women of the right of voting at school meetings in New York was evidently not the result of an overwhelming wish of the women in New York to vote at school meetings, as the elections of the 12<sup>th</sup> of October proved. The law was passed because there was no good reason against it. The Legislature said that if Mrs. A., whose children went to the school, and who was taxed to maintain it, wished to have a voice in the disposition of the money and the management of the school, she should not be debarred because Mrs. B. thought it would be a great nuisance. We understand the difficulties. But the principle is sound that in a popular government the whole adult intelligence should take part. If women are competent to vote at school meetings, they can not, on other questions involving the common interests of the sexes, be classed fairly with criminals and lunatics. This was the conviction of the people of New Jersey many years ago, and women were enfranchised and voted. The charming picture drawn for the Weekly by Mr. Howard Pyle, which appears in this number, is a glimpse of the quaint and old times, and is in itself a pleasant argument. There is nothing disagreeable or unwomanly in the expression of interest and preference which is indicated by casting the ballot in this drawing, and there is an intimation of the humanizing and refining influence which would result from the voting of women upon subjects which they have a common concern with men—an influence which is felt in every fair association of men and women.</p>
HathiTrust Digital Library, original from the University of Michigan
<a href="https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015021733699;view=1up;seq=657">Published in <em>Harper's Weekly,</em> Vol. 24, November 13, 1880, 723.</a>
When Women Vote. What Will Happen if the Polling Place is Located in a Millinery Shop.
A group of girls are depicted in style reminiscent of Charles Dana Gibson, standing in a shop trying on ornate hats. At left, an insert depicts women looking into a hat shop window where a sign reads "vote here."
Gordon Grant, American illustrator, 1875–1962
HathiTrust Digital Library, original from the University of Minnesota
<a href="https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951002801295r;view=1up;seq=230"><em>Puck</em>, Vol. 65, No. 1678, April 28, 1909</a>
1909
When Women Vote
A group of girls are depicted in style reminiscent of Charles Dana Gibson, standing in a shop trying on ornate hats. At left, an insert depicts women looking into a hat shop window where a sign reads "vote here."
Gordon Grant, American illustrator, 1875–1962
Delaware Art Museum, Gift of Joseph P. Fraczkowski, 1988
<a href="https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951002801295r;view=1up;seq=230"><em>Puck</em>, Vol. 65, No. 1678, April 28, 1909</a>
1909
Public domain
Ink and gouache on illustration board, 16 × 22 1/4 in. (40.6 × 56.5 cm)
Votes for Women
Top image:
A group of finely-dressed women are depicted walking to the right. Each woman holds up a letter, spelling out the phrase "Votes for Women."
Middle image:
Met with opposition from two police officers at the right, the women turn back, their signs getting disorganized until the only letters held aloft spell "Frost."
Bottom image:
The women walk back towards the left in a single file line, their letters now reading "No Votes For Em." A woman is depicted at the right lowering her sign with the letter "W."
Leighton Budd, American illustrator, active early 20th century
Delaware Art Museum
<em>Puck</em>, September 22, 1909
1909
Public domain
Commercial relief process with hand-coloring, 11 × 7 15/16 in. (27.9 × 20.2 cm)
The Mean Thing
<em>Puck</em>, vol. 65, July 14, 1909. Hathi Trust, original from the University of Minnesota.
July 14, 1909
The 1920's... The Migrants Arrive and Cast Their Ballots
People taking part in voting are depicted in a stylized, semi-abstract manner in bright red, blue, white, ocher, brown, and black hues.
Jacob Lawrence, American painter, 1917–2000
Delaware Art Museum, Gift of Lorillard, a Division of Loew's Theatres, Inc., 1975
Ives-Sillman Inc.
1975
© The Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence Foundation, Seattle / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Seven-color screen print, 32 × 24 7/8 in. (81.3 × 63.2 cm)
Socialist Party Suffrage for Women Campaign Fund
A drawing of a man and woman facing one another flanking a hand holding a torch in front of a globe. The text reads "Socialist Party" and "Suffrage for Women Campaign Fund."
John Sloan, American painter, etcher, and illustrator, 1871–1951
Delaware Art Museum, Gift of Helen Farr Sloan, 2000
c. 1913
© Delaware Art Museum / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Not for reproduction or publication.
Sketch for Women at the Polls in New Jersey in the Good Old Times
A cluster of women in a room is lightly rendered in pencil. Seated figures flank the central women at lower right and lower left.
Howard Pyle, American illustrator, 1853–1911
Delaware Art Museum, Gift of Willard S. Morse, 1925
Published in <a href="https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015021733699;view=1up;seq=658"><em>Harper's Weekly</em>, Vol. 24, November 13, 1880, 724.</a>
1880
Public domain
Graphite on gray-green paper, 8 1/4 × 11 9/16 in. (21 × 29.4 cm)