Record #: SR2013-177   
Type: Resolution Status: Adopted
Intro date: 2/13/2013 Current Controlling Legislative Body: Committee on Committees, Rules and Ethics
Final action: 5/8/2013
Title: Establishment of subcommittee of Committee on Committees, Rules and Ethics to commemorate 100th anniversary of women's suffrage in Chicago
Sponsors: Burke, Edward M., Austin, Carrie M.
Topic: CITY COUNCIL - Miscellaneous
Attachments: 1. SR2013-177.pdf, 2. R2013-177.pdf
Committee on Committees, Rules, and Ethics

SUBSTITUTE RESOLUTION
WHEREAS, On June 11, 1913, the Illinois legislature adopted the Illinois Presidential and Municipal Suffrage Bill; and
WHEREAS, On June 26, 1913, Governor Dunne signed the bill authorizing woman suffrage for all elections not established in the state constitution, thus making Illinois the first state east of the Mississippi to grant women the right to vote for President; and

WHEREAS, The women's suffrage movement had strong roots in Chicago and Illinois; and

WHEREAS, In 1912, Grace Wilbur Trout, then head of the Chicago Political Equality League and president of the state organization, organized programs to increase membership and lobby public officials to support a woman's right to vote; and

WHEREAS, Jane Addams and Elizabeth Burke of the University of Chicago served as delegates to the Women's Suffrage Legislature in 1911; and

WHEREAS, Ida B. Wells-Barnett organized the Alpha Suffrage Club in Chicago in 1913 and successfully integrated the U.S. suffrage movement when she refused to walk at the rear of a 1913 Washington, D.C. parade and instead walked alongside her white Illinois peers; and

WHEREAS, In 1915, Wells-Barnett helped elect Oscar Stanton De Priest as Alderman of the 2nd Ward and Chicago's first African American Alderman; and

WHEREAS, On July 26, 1913, Gertrude B. Blackwelder, former president of the Chicago Woman's Club, became the first woman to vote in Cook County after casting a ballot in Morgan Park at an election to vote upon a proposed bond issue for a $45,000 high school; and

WHEREAS, Women in Chicago had their first opportunity to exercise their right of suffrage during the 1914 aldermanic primary elections; and

WHEREAS, Women voted for the first time in a Chicago mayoral election in the spring of 1915, using ballots that were kept separate from the men's; and

WHEREAS, The League of Women Voters was founded by the National American Woman Suffrage Association in Chicago in ...

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