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Oregon Equal Suffrage Amendment

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The Oregon Equal Suffrage Amendment was an amendment to the constitution of the U.S. state of Oregon, establishing women's suffrage, which was passed by ballot initiative in 1912. It had previously been placed on the ballot, initially by referral from the Oregon Legislative Assembly and later by popular initiative, in 1884, 1900, 1906, 1908, and 1910.[1] When the initiative was ratified in 1912, Oregon became the seventh state to extend the right to vote to women.[2]

year type "yes" votes "no" votes % "yes"
1884 referral 11,223 28,176 28
1900 referral 26,255 28,402 48
1906 initiative 36,902 47,075 44
1908 initiative 36,858 58,670 39
1910 initiative 35,270 59,065 37
1912 initiative 61,265 57,104 52

Ballot measure #2 on the state's 1906 ballot was the "first attempt in American political history to amend the constitution of a state by the direct initiative of the people, and without any intervention by the legislature."[3] The initiative failed, with 36,902 votes in favor and 47,075 against.[4]

Abigail Scott Duniway was a longtime advocate for women's suffrage in Oregon.[5]

In March 1915, the Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger honored three early women in public service in Oregon, in the wake of the passage of the equal suffrage amendment: Fern Hobbs (left) was private secretary to Governor Oswald West, and was later appointed by him to the newly-established State Industrial Accident Commission. Katherine Clarke (center), was appointed to a vacancy in the State Senate by West. Due to doubts about the legality of the appointment, Clarke insisted on a special election, in which she defeated two male opponents. Marian Towne (right), the first woman ever elected to the Oregon Legislature, served in the Oregon House of Representatives.

References

  1. ^ Jensen, Kimberly (March 17, 2018). "Woman Suffrage in Oregon". Oregon Encyclopedia.
  2. ^ http://www.oregonlive.com/politics/index.ssf/2012/11/on_election_eve_oregon_celebra.html
  3. ^ Foxcroft, Frank (1906). "Constitution-Mending and the Initiative" . The Atlantic Monthly. Vol. 97.
  4. ^ https://sos.oregon.gov/blue-book/Pages/state/elections/history.aspx
  5. ^ Moynihan, Ruth Barnes (1983). Rebel for Rights: Abigail Scott Duniway. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03478-4. p. 216.