riends and Fellow-citizens: I stand before you to-night, under
indictment for the alleged crime of having voted at the last
Presidential election, without having a lawful right to vote. It shall
be my work this evening to prove to you that in thus voting, I not only
committed no crime, but, instead, simply exercised my citizens right,
guaranteed to me and all United States citizens by the National
Constitution, beyond the power of any State to deny.
Our democratic-republican government is based on the idea of the natural
right of every individual member thereof to a voice and a vote in making
and executing the laws. We assert the province of government to be to
secure the people in the enjoyment of their unalienable rights. We throw
to the winds the old dogma that governments can give rights. Before
governments were organized, no one denies that each individual possessed
the right to protect his own life. liberty and property. And when 100 or
1,000,000 people enter into a free government, they do not barter away
their natural rights; they simply pledge themselves to protect each
other in the enjoyment of them, through prescribed judicial and
legislative tribunals. They agree to abandon the methods of brute force
in the adjustment of their differences, and adopt those of civilization.
Nor can you find a word in any of the grand documents left us by the
fathers that assumes for government the power to create or to confer
rights. The Declaration of Independence, the United States Constitution,
the constitutions of the several states and the organic laws of the
territories, all alike propose to protect the people in the exercise of
their God-given rights. Not one of them pretends to bestow rights.
"All men are created equal, and endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable rights. Among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness. That to secure these, governments are instituted among men,
deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed."
Here is no shadow of government authority over rights, nor exclusion of
any from their full and equal enjoyment. Here is pronounced the right of
all men, and "consequently," as the Quaker preacher said, "of all
women," to a voice in the government. And here, in this very first
paragraph of the declaration, is the assertion of the natural right of
all to the ballot; for, how can "the consent of the governed" be given,
if the right to vote be denied. Again:
"That whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends,
it is the right of the people to alter or abolish it, ad to institute a
new government, laying its foundations on such principles, and
organizing its powers in such forms as to them shall seem most likely to
effect their safety and happiness."
Surely, the right of the whole people to vote is here clearly implied.
For however destructive in their happiness this government might become,
a disfranchised class could neither alter nor abolish it, nor institute
a new one, except by the old brute force method of insurrection and
rebellion. One-half of the people of this nation to-day are utterly
powerless to blot from the statute books an unjust law, or to write
there a new and a just one. The women, dissatisfied as they are with
this form of government, that enforces taxation without
representation,-that compels them to obey laws to which they have never
given their consent,-that imprisons and hangs them without a trial by a
jury of their peers, that robs them, in marriage, of the custody of
their own persons, wages and children,-are this half of the people left
wholly at the mercy of the other half, in direct violation of the spirit
and letter of the declarations of the framers of this government, every
one of which was based on the immutable principle of equal rights to
all. By those declarations, kings, priests, popes, aristocrats, were all
alike dethroned, and placed on a common level politically, with the
lowliest born subject or serf. By them, too, me, as such, were deprived
of their divine right to rule, and placed on a political level with
women. By the practice of those declarations all class and caste
distinction will be abolished; and slave, serf, plebeian, wife, woman,
all alike, bound from their subject position to the proud platform of
equality.
The preamble of the federal constitution says:
"We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect
union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the
common defense, promote the general welfare and secure the blessings of
liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and established this
constitution for the United States of America."
It was we, the people, not we, the white male citizens, nor yet we, the
male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed this Union. And we
formed it, not to give the blessings or liberty, but to secure them; not
to the half of ourselves and the half of our posterity, but to the whole
people-women as well as men. And it is downright mockery to talk to
women of their enjoyment of the blessings of liberty while they are
denied the use of the only means of securing them provided by this
democratic-republican government-the ballot.
The early journals of Congress show that when the committee reported to
that body the original articles of confederation, the very first article
which became the subject of discussion was that respecting equality of
suffrage. Article 4th said:
"The better to secure and perpetuate mutual friendship and intercourse
between the people of the different States of this Union, the free
inhabitants of each of the States, (paupers, vagabonds and fugitives
from justice excepted,) shall be entitled to all the privileges and
immunities of the free citizens of the several States."
Thus, at the very beginning, did the fathers see the necessity of the
universal application of the great principle of equal rights to all-in
order to produce the desired result-a harmonious union and a homogeneous
people.
Luther Martin, attorney-general of Maryland, in his report to the
Legislature of that State of the convention that framed the United
States Constitution, said:
"Those who advocated the equality of suffrage took the matter up on the
original principles of government: that the reason why each individual
man in forming a State government should have an equal vote, is because
each individual, before he enters into government, is equally free and
equally independent."
James Madison said;
"Under every view of the subject, it seems indispensable that the mass
of the citizens should not be without a voice in making the laws which
they are to obey, and in choosing the magistrate who are to administer
them." Also, "Let it be remembered, finally, that it has ever been the
pride and the boast of America that the rights for which she contended
were the rights of human nature."
And these assertions of the framers of the United States Constitution of
the equal and natural rights of all the people to a voice in the
government, have been affirmed and reaffirmed by the leading statesmen
of the nation, throughout the entire history of our government.
Thaddeus Stevens, of Pennsylvania, said in 1866:
"I have made up my mind that elective franchise is one of the
inalienable rights meant to be secured by the declaration of
independence."
B. Gratz Brown, of Missouri, in the three days discussion in the United
States Senate in 1866, on Senator Cowans motion to strike "male" from
the District of Columbia suffrage bill, said:
"Mr. President, I say here on the floor of the American Senate, I stand
for universal suffrage; and as a matter of fundamental principle, do not
recognize the right of society to limit on any ground of race or sex. I
will go farther and say, that I recognize the right of franchise as
being intrinsically a natural right. I do not believe that society is
authorized to impose any limitation upon it that do not spring out of
the necessities of the social state itself. Sir, I have been shocked, in
the course of this debate, to hear Senators declare this right only a
conventional and political arrangement, a privilege yielded to you and
me and others; not a right in any sense, only a concession! Mr.
President, I do not hold my liberties by any such tenure. On the
contrary, I believe that whenever you establish that doctrine, whenever
you crystalize that idea in the public mind of this country, you ring
the death-knell of American liberties."
Charles Summer, in his brave protests against the fourteenth and
fifteenth amendments, insisted that, so soon as by the thirteenth
amendment the slaves became free men, the original powers of the United
States Constitution guaranteed to them equal rights-the right to vote
and to be voted for. In closing one of his great speeches he said;
"I do not hesitate to say that when the slaves of our country became
citizens they took their place in the body politic as a component part
of the people, entitled to equal rights, and under the protection of
these two guardian principles: First-That all just government stand on
the consent of the governed; and second, that taxation without
representation is tyranny; and these rights it is the duty of Congress
to guarantee as essential to the ideal of a Republic."
The preamble of the Constitution of the State of New York declares the
same purpose. It says:
"We, the people of the State of New York, grateful to Almighty God for
our freedom, in order to secure its blessings, do establish this
Constitution."
Here is not the slightest intimation either of receiving freedom from
the United States Constitution, or of the State conferring the blessings
of liberty upon the people; and the same is true of every one of the
thirty-six State Constitutions. Each and all, alike declare rights
God-given, and that to secure the people in the enjoyment of their
inalienable rights, is their one and only object in ordaining and
establishing government. And all of the State Constitutions are equally
emphatic in their recognition of the ballot as the means of securing the
people in the enjoyment of these rights.
Article 1 of the New York State Constitution says:
"No member of this State shall be disfranchised or deprived of the
rights or privileges secured to any citizen thereof, unless by the law
of the land, or the judgement of his peers."
And so carefully guarded is the citizens right to vote, that the
Constitution makes special mention of all who may be excluded. It says:
"Laws may be passed excluding from the right of suffrage all persons who
have been or may be convicted of bribery, larceny or any infamous
crime."
In naming the various employments that shall not affect the residence of
voters-the 3d section of article 2d says "that being kept at any alms
house, or other asylum, at public expense, nor being confined at any
public prison, shall deprive a person of his residence," and hence his
vote. Thus is the right of voting most sacredly hedged about. The only
seeming permission in the New York State Constitution for the
disfranchisement of women is in section 1st of article 2d, which says:
"Every male citizen of the age of twenty-one years, c., shall be
entitled to vote."
But I submit that in view of the explicit assertions of the equal right
of the whole people, both in the preamble and previous article of the
constitution, this omission of the adjective "female" in the second,
should not be construed into a denial; but, instead, counted as of no
effect. Mark the direct prohibition: "No member of this State shall be
disfranchised, unless by the law of the land, or the judgment of his
peers." "The law of the land," is the United States Constitution: and
there is no provision in that document that can be fairly construed into
a permission to the States to deprive any class of their citizens of
their right to vote. Hence New York can get no power from that source to
disfranchise one entire half of her members. Nor has "the judgment of
their peers" been pronounced against women exercising their right to
vote; no disfranchised person is allowed to be judge or juror- and none
but disfranchised persons can be womens peers; nor has the legislature
passed laws excluding them on account of idiocy of lunacy; nor yet the
courts convicted them of bribery, larceny, or any infamous crime.
Clearly, then, there is no constitutional ground for the exclusion of
women from the ballot-box in the State of New York, No barriers whatever
stand to-day between women and the exercise of their right to vote save
those of precedent and prejudice.
The clauses of the United States Constitution, cited by our opponents as
giving power to the States to disfranchise any classes of citizens they
shall please, are contained in sections 2d and 4th of article 1st. The
second says:
"The House of Representatives shall be composed of members chosen every
second year by the people of the several States; and the electors in
each State shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the
most numerous branch of the State Legislature."
This cannot be construed into a concession to the States of the power to
destroy the right to become an elector, but simply to prescribe what
shall be the qualification, such as competency of intellect, maturity of
age, length of residence, that shall be deemed necessary to enable them
to make an intelligent choice of candidates. If, as our opponents
assert, the last clause of this section makes it the duty of the United
States to protect citizens in the several States against higher or
different qualifications for electors for representatives in Congress,
than for members of Assembly, them must the first clause make it equally
imperative for the national government to interfere with the States, and
forbid them from arbitrarily cutting off the right of one-half of the
people to become electors altogether. Section 4th says:
"The time, places and manner of holding elections for Senators and
Representatives shall be prescribed in each State by the Legislative
thereof; but Congress may at any time, by law, make or alter such
regulations, except as to the places by choosing Senators."
Here is conceded the power only to prescribed times, places and manner
of holding the elections; and even with these Congress may interfere,
with all excepting the mere place of choosing Senators. Thus you see,
there is not the slightest permission in either section for the States
to discriminate against the right of any class of citizens to vote.
Surely, to regulate cannot be to annihilate! nor to qualify to wholly
deprive. And to this principle every true Democrat and Republican said
amen, when applied to black men by Senator Sumner in his great speeches
for EQUAL RIGHTS TO ALL from 1865 to 1869; and when, in 1871, I asked
that Senator to declare the power of the United States Constitution to
protect women in their right to vote-as he had done for black men-he
handed me a copy of all his speeches during that reconstruction period,
and said:
"Miss Anthony, put sex where I have race or color, and you have here the
best and strongest argument I can make for woman. There is not a doubt
but women have the constitutional right to vote, and I will never vote
for a sixteenth amendment to guarantee it to them. I voted for both the
fourteenth and fifteenth under protest; would never have done it but for
the pressing emergency of that hour; would have insisted that the power
of the original Constitution to protect all citizens in the equal
enjoyment of their rights should have been vindicated through the
courts. But the newly made freedmen had neither the intelligence, wealth
nor time to wait that slow process. Women possess all these in an
eminent degree, and I insist that they shall appeal to the courts, and
through them establish the power of our American magna charta, to
protect every citizen of the Republic. But, friends, when in accordance
with Senator Sumners counsel, I went to the ballot-box, last November,
and exercised my citizens right to vote, the courts did not wait for me
to appeal to them-they appealed to me, and indicted me on the charge of
having voted illegally.
Senator Sumner, putting sex where he did color, said:
"Qualifications cannot be in their nature permanent or insurmountable.
Sex cannot be a qualification any more than size, race, color, or
previous condition of servitude. A permanent or insurmountable
qualification is equivalent to a de-privation of the suffrage. In other
words, it is the tyranny of taxation without representation, against
which our revolutionary mothers, as well as fathers, rebelled."
For any State to make sex a qualification that must ever result in the
disfranchisement of one entire half of the people, is to pass a bill of
attainder, or an ex post facto law, and is therefore a violation of the
supreme law of the land. By it, the blessings of liberty are forever
withheld from women and their female posterity. To them, this government
has no just powers derived from the consent of the governed. To them
this government is not a democracy. It is not a republic. It is an
odious aristocracy; a hateful obligarchy of sex. The most hateful
aristocracy ever established on the face of the globe. An obligarchy of
wealth, where the rich govern the poor; an obligarchy of learning, where
the educated govern the ignorant; or even an obligarchy of race, where
the Saxon rules the African, might be endured; but this obligarchy of
sex, which makes father, brothers, husband, sons, the obligarchs over
the mother and sisters, the wife and daughters of every household; which
ordains all men sovereigns, all women subjects, carries dissension,
discord and rebellion into every home of the nation. And this most
odious aristocracy exists, too, in the face of Section 4, of Article 4,
which says:
"The United States shall guarantee to every State in the Union a
republican form of government."
What, I ask you, is the distinctive difference between the inhabitants
of a monarchical and those of a republican form of government, save that
in the monarchical the people are subjects, helpless, powerless, bound
to obey laws made by superiors-while in the republican, the people are
citizens, individual sovereigns, all clothed with equal power, to make
and unmake both their laws and law makers, and the moment you deprive a
person of his right to a voice in the government, you degrade him from
the status of a citizen of the republic, to that of a subject, and it
matters very little to him whether his monarch be an individual tyrant,
as is the Czar of Russia, or a 15,000,000 headed monster, as here in the
United States; he is a powerless subject, serf or slave; not a free and
independent citizen in any sense.
But is urged, the use of the masculine pronouns he, his and him, in all
the constitutions and laws, is proof that only men were meant to be
included in their provisions. If you insist on this version of the
letter of the law, we shall insist that you be consistent, and accept
the other horn of the dilemna, which would compel you to exempt women
from taxation for the support of the government, and from penalties for
the violation of laws.
A year and a half ago I was at Walla, Walla, Washington Territory. I saw
there a theatrical company, called the "Pixley Sisters," playing before
crowded houses, every night of the whole week of the territorial fair.
The eldest of those three fatherless girls was scarce eighteen. Yet
every night a United States officer stretched out his long fingers, and
clutched six dollars of the proceeds of the exhibition of those orphan
girls, who, but a few years before, were half starvelings in the streets
of Olympia, the capital of the far-off northwest territory. So the poor
widow, who keeps a boarding house, manufacturers shirts, or sells apples
and peanuts on the street corners of our cities, is compelled to pay
taxes from her scanty pittance. I would that the women of this republic,
at once, resolve, never again to submit of taxation, until their right
to vote be recognized. {Begin handwritten} amen {End handwritten}
Miss Sarah E. Wall, of Worcester, Mass., twenty years ago, took this
position. For several years, the officers of the law distrained her
property, and sold it to meet the necessary amount; still she persisted,
and would not yield an iota,
though every foot of her lands should be struck off under the hammer.
And now, for several years, the assessor has left her name off the tax
list, and the collector passed her by without a call.
Mrs. J. S. Weeden, of Viroqua, Wis., for the past six years, has refused
to pay her taxes, though the annual assessment is $75.
Mrs. Ellen Van Valkenburg, of Santa Cruz, Cal., who sued the County
Clerk for refusing to register her name, declares she will never pay
another dollar of tax until allowed to vote; and all over the country,
women property holders are waking up to the injustice of taxation
without representation, and ere long will refuse, en masse, to submit to
the imposition.
There is no she, or her, or hers, in the tax laws.
The statute of New York reads:
"Every person shall be assessed in the town or ward where he resides
when the assessment is made, or the lands owned by him c." "Every
collector shall call at least once on the person taxed, or at his usual
place of residence, and shall demand payment of the taxes charged on
him. If any one shall refues to pay the tax imposed on him, the
collector shall levy the same by distress and sale of his property"
The same is true of all the criminal laws:
"No person shall be compelled to be a witness against himself, c."
The same with the law of May 31st, 1870, the 19th section of which I am
charged with having violated; not only are all the pronouns in it
masculine, but everybody knows that that particular section was intended
expressly to hinder the rebels from voting. It reads "If any person
shall knowingly vote without his having a lawful right," c. Precisely so
with all the papers served on me-the U.S. Marshals warrant, the
bail-bond, the petition for habeas corpus, the bill of indictment-not
one of them had a feminine pronoun printed in it; but, to make them
applicable to me, the Clerk of the Court made a little carat at the left
of "he" and placed an "s" over it, thus making she out of he. Then the
letters "is" were scratched out, the little carat under and "er" over,
to make her out of his, and I insist if government officials may thus
manipulate the pronouns to tax, fine, imprison and hang women, women may
take the same liberty with them to secure to themselves their right to a
voice in the government.
So long as any classes of men were denied their right to vote, the
government made a show of consistency, by exempting them from taxation.
When a property qualification of $250 was required of black men in New
York, they were not compelled to pay taxes, so long as they were content
to report themselves worth less than that sum; but the moment the black
man died, and his property fell to his widow or daughter, the black
womans name would be put on the assessors list, and she be compelled
to pay taxes on the same property exempted to her husband. The same is
true of ministers in New York. So long as the minister lives, he is
exempted from taxation on $1,500 of property, but the moment the breath
goes out of his body, his widows name will go down on the assessors
list, and she will have to pay taxes on the $1,500. So much for the
special legislation in favor of women.
In all the penalties and burdens of the government, (except the
military,) women are reckoned as citizens, equally with men. Also, in
all privileges and immunities, save those of the jury box and ballot
box, the two fundamental privileges on which rest all the others. The
United States government not only taxes, fines, imprisons and hangs
women, but it allows them to pre-empt lands, register ships, and take
out passport and naturalization papers. Not only does the law permit
single women and widows to the right of naturalization, but Section 2
says: "A married woman may be naturalized without the concurrence of her
husband." (I wonder the fathers were not afraid of creating discord in
the families of foreigners); and again: "When an alien, having complied
with the law, and declared his intention to become a citizen, dies
before he is actually naturalized, his widow and children shall be
considered citizens, entitled to all rights and privileges as such, on
taking the required oath." If a foreign born woman by becoming a
naturalized citizen, is entitled to all the rights and privileges of
citizenship, is not a native born woman, by her national citizenship,
possessed of equal rights and privileges?
The question of the masculine pronouns, yes and nouns, too, has been
settled by the United States Supreme Court, in the Case of Silver versus
Ladd, December, 1868, in a decision as to whether a woman was entitled
to lands, under the Oregon donation law of 1850. Elizabeth Cruthers, a
widow, settled upon a claim, received patents. She died, and her son was
heir. He died. Then Messrs. Ladd Nott took possession, under the general
pre-emption law, December, 1861. The administrator, E. P. Silver,
applied for a writ of ejectment at the land office in Oregon City. Both
the Register and Receiver decided that an unmarried woman could not hold
land under that law. The Commissioner of the General Land Office, at
Washington, and the Secretary of the Interior, also gave adverse
opinions. Here patents were issued to Ladd Nott, and duly recorded. Then
a suit was brought to set aside Ladds patent, and it was carried
through all the State Courts and the Supreme Court of Oregon, each, in
turn, giving adverse decisions. At last, in the United States Supreme
Court, Associate Justice Miller reversed the decisions of all the lower
tribunals, and ordered the land back to the heirs of Mrs. Cruthers. The
Court said:
"In construing a benevolent statute of the government, made for the
benefit of its own citizens, inviting and encouraging them to settle on
its distant public lands, the words a single man, and unmarried man may,
especially if aided by the context and other parts of the statute, be
taken in a generic sense. Held, accordingly, that the Fourth Section of
the Act of Congress, of September 27th, 1850, granting by way of
donation, lands in Oregon Territory, to every white settler or occupant,
American half-breed Indians included, embraced within the term single
man an unmarried woman."
And the attorney, who carried this question to its final success, is now
the United States senator elect from Oregon, Hon. J. H. Mitchell, in
whom the cause of equal rights to women has an added power on the floor
of the United States Senate.
Though the words persons, people, inhabitants, electors, citizens, are
all used indiscriminately in the national and state constitutions, there
was always a conflict of opinion, prior to the war, as to whether they
were synonymous terms, as for instance:
"No person shall be a representative who shall not have been seven years
a citizen, and who shall not, when elected, be an inhabitant of that
state in which he is chosen. No person shall be a senator who shall not
have been a citizen of the United States, and an inhabitant of that
state in which he is chosen."
But, whatever there was for a doubt, under the old regime, the adoption
of the fourteenth amendment settled that question forever, in its first
sentence: "All persons born or naturalized in the United States and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States
and of the state wherein they reside."
And the second settles the equal status of all persons-all citizens:
"No states shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens; nor shall any state deprive any
person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law, nor
deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the
laws."
The only question left to be settled, now, is: Are women persons? And I
hardly believe any of our opponents will have the hardihood to say they
are not. Being persons, then, women are citizens, and no state has a
right to make any new law, or to enforce any old law, that shall abridge
their privileges or immunities. Hence, every discrimination against
women in the constitutions and laws of the several states, is to-day
null and void, precisely as is every one against negroes.
Is the right to vote one of the privileges or immunities of citizens? I
think the disfranchised ex-rebels, and the ex-state prisoners will agree
with me, that it is not only one of the them, but the one without which
all the others are nothing. Seek the first kingdom of the ballot, and
all things else shall be given thee, is the political injunction.
Webster, Worcester and Bouvier all define citizen to be a person, in the
United States, entitled to vote and hold office.
Prior to the adoption of the thirteenth amendment, by which slavery was
forever abolished, and black men transformed from property to persons,
the judicial opinions of the country had always been in harmony with
these definitions. To be a person was to be a citizen, and to be a
citizen was to be a voter.
Associate Justice Washington, in defining the privileges and immunities
of the citizen, more than fifty years ago, said: "they included all such
privileges as were fundamental in their nature. And among them is the
right to exercise the elective franchise, and to hold office."
Even the "Dred Scott" decision, pronounced by the abolitionists and
republicans infamous, because it virtually declared "black men had no
rights white men were bound to respect," gave this true and logical
conclusion, that to be one of the people was to be a citizen and a
voter.
Chief Judge Daniels said:
"There is not, it is believed, to be found in the theories of writers on
government, or in any actual experiment heretofore tried, an exposition
of the term citizen, which has not been considered as conferring the
actual possession and enjoyment of the perfect right of acquisition and
enjoyment of an entire equality of privileges, civil and political."
Associate Justice Taney said:
"The words people of the United States, and citizens, are synonymous
terms, and mean the same thing. They both describe the political body,
who, according to our republican institutions, form the sovereignty, and
who hold the power and conduct the government, through their
representatives. They are what we familiarly call the sovereign people,
and every citizen is one of this people, and a constituent member of
this sovereignty."
Thus does Judge Taneys decision, which was such a terrible ban to the
black man, while he was a slave, now, that he is a person, no longer
property, pronounce him a citizen possessed of an entire equality of
privileges, civil and political. And not only the black man, but the
black woman, and all women as well.
And it was not until after the abolition of slavery, by which the
negroes became free men, hence citizens, that the United States
Attorney, General Bates, rendered a contrary opinion. He said:
"The constitution uses the word citizen only to express the political
quality, (not equality mark,) of the individual in his relation to the
nation; to declare that he is a member of the body politic, and bound to
it by the reciprocal obligations of allegiance on the one side, and
protection on the other. The phrase, a citizen of the United States,
without addition or qualification, means neither more nor less than a
member of the nation."
Then, to be a citizen of this republic, is no more than to be a subject
of an empire. You and I, and all true and patriotic citizens must
repudiate this base conclusion. We all know that American citizenship,
without addition or qualification, means the possession of equal rights,
civil and political. We all know that the crowing glory of every citizen
of the United States is, that he can either give or withhold his vote
from every law and every legislator under the government.
Did "I am Roman citizen," mean nothing more than that I am a "member" of
the body politic of the republic of Rome, bound to it by the reciprocal
obligations of allegiance on the one side, and protection on the other?
Ridiculously absurd question, you say. When you, young man, shall travel
abroad, among the monarchies of the old world, and there proudly boast
yourself an "American citizen," will you thereby declare yourself
neither more nor less than a "member" of the American nation?
And this opinion of Attorney General Bates, that a black citizen was not
a voter, made merely to suit the political exigency of the republican
party, in that transition hour between emancipation and enfranchisement,
was no less in-famous, in spirit or purpose, than was the decision of
Judge Taney, that a black man was not one of the people, rendered in the
interest and the behest of the old democratic party, in its darkest hour
of subjection to the slave power. Nevertheless, all of the adverse
arguments, adverse congressional reports and judicial opinions, thus
far, have been based on this purely partisan, time-serving opinion of
General Bates, that the normal condition of the citizen of the United
States is that of disfranchisement. That only such classes of citizens
as have had special legislative guarantee have a legal right to vote.
And if this decision of Attorney General Bates was infamous, as against
black men, but yesterday plantation slaves, what shall we pronounce upon
Judge Bingham, in the house of Representatives, and Carpenter, in the
Senate of the United States, for citing it against the women of the
entire nation, vast numbers of whom are the peers of those honorable
gentlemen, themselves, in moral!! intellect, culture, wealth,
family-paying taxes on large estates, and contributing equally with them
and their sex, in every direction, to the growth, prosperity and
well-being of the republic? And what shall be said of the judicial
opinions of Judges Carter, Jameson, McKay and Sharswood, all based upon
this aristocratic, monarchial idea, of the right of one class to govern
another?
I am proud to mention the names of the two United States Judges who have
given opinions honorable to our republican idea, and honorable to
themselves-Judge Howe, of Wyoming Territory, and Judge Underwood, of
Virginia.
The former gave it as his opinion a year ago, when the Legislature
seemed likely to revoke the law enfranchising the women of that
territory, that, in case they succeeded, the women would still possess
the right to vote under the fourteenth amendment.
Judge Underwood, of Virginia, in nothing the recent decision of Judge
Carter, of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia to women the
right to vote, under the fourteenth and fifteenth amendment, says;
"If the people of the United States, by amendment of their constitution,
could expunge, without any explanatory or assisting legislation, an
adjective of five letters from all state and local constitutions, and
thereby raise millions of our most ignorant fellow-citizens to all of
the rights and privileges of electors, why should not the same people,
by the same amendment, expunge an adjective of four letters from the
same state and local constitutions, and thereby raise other millions of
more educated and better informed citizens to equal rights and
privileges, without explanatory or assisting legislation?"
If the fourteenth amendment does not secure to all citizens the right to
vote, for what purpose was the grand old charter of the fathers lumbered
with its unwieldy proportions? The republican party, and Judges Howard
and Bingham, who drafted the document, pretended it was to do something
for black men; and if that something was not to secure them in their
right to vote and hold office, what could it have been? For, by the
thirteenth amendment, black men had become people, and hence were
entitled to all the privileges and immunities of the government,
precisely as were the women of the country, and foreign men not
naturalized. According to Associate Justice Washington, they already had
the
"Protection of the government, the enjoyment of life and liberty, with
the right to acquire and possess property of every kind, and to pursue
and obtain happiness and safety, subject to such restraints as the
government may justly prescribe for the general welfare of the whole;
the right of a citizen of one state to pass through or to reside in any
other state for the purpose of trade, agriculture, professional pursuit,
or otherwise; to claim the benefit of the writ of habeas corpus, to
institute and maintain actions of any kind in the courts of the state;
to take, hold, and dispose of property, either real or personal, and an
exemption from higher taxes or impositions than are paid by the other
citizens of the state."
Thus, you see, those newly freed men were in possession of every
possible right, privilege and immunity of the government, except that of
suffrage, and hence, needed no constitutional amendment for any other
purpose. What right, I ask you, has the Irishman the day after he
receives his naturalization papers that he did not possess the day
before, save the right to vote and hold office? And the Chinamen, now
crowding our Pacific coast, are in precisely the same position. What
privilege or immunity has California or Oregon the constitutional right
to deny them, save that of the ballot? Clearly, then if the fourteenth
amendment was not to secure to black men their right to vote, it did
nothing for them, since they possessed everything else before. But, if
it was meant to be a prohibition of the states, to deny or abridge their
right to vote-which I fully believe-then it did the same for all
persons, white women included, born or naturalized in the United States;
for the amendment does not say all male persons of African descent, but
all persons are citizens.
The second section is simply a threat to punish the states, by reducing
their representation on the floor of Congress, should they disfranchise
any of their male citizens, on account of color, and does not allow of
the inference that the states may disfranchise from any, or all other
causes, nor in any wise weaken or invalidate the universal guarantee of
the first section. What rule of law or logic would allow the conclusion,
that the prohibition of a crime to one person, on severe pains and
penalties, was a sanction of that crime to any and all other persons
save that one?
But, however much the doctors of the law may disagree, as to whether
people and citizens, in the original constitution, were once and the
same, or whether the privileges and immunities in the fourteenth
amendment include the right of suffrage, the question of the citizens
right to vote is settled forever by the fifteenth amendment. "The
citizens right to vote shall not be denied by the United States, nor
any state thereof; on account of race, color, or previous condition of
servitude." How can the state deny or abridge the right of the citizen,
if the citizen does not possess it? There is no escape from the
conclusion, that to vote is the citizens right, and the specifications
of race, color, or previous condition of servitude can, in no way,
impair the force of the emphatic assertion, that the citizens right to
vote shall not be denied or abridged.
The political strategy of the second section of the fourteenth
amendment, failing to coerce the rebel states into enfranchising their
negroes, and the necessities of the republican party demanding their
votes throughout the South, to ensure the re-election of Grant in 1872,
that party was compelled to place this positive prohibition of the
fifteenth amendment upon the United States and all the states thereof.
If we once establish he false principle, that United States citizenship
does not carry with it the right to vote in every state in this Union,
there is no end to the petty freaks and cunning devices, that will be
resorted to, to exclude one and another class of citizens from the right
of suffrage.
It will not always be men combining to disfranchise all women; native
born men combining to abridge the rights of all naturalized citizens, as
in Rhode Island. It will not always be the rich and educated who may
combine to cut off the poor and ignorant; but we may live to see the
poor, hardworking, uncultivated day laborers, foreign and native born,
learning the power of the ballot and their vast majority of numbers,
combine and amend state constitutions so as to disfranchise the
Vanderbilts and A. T Stewarts, the Conklings and Fentons. It is poor
rule that wont work more ways than one. Establish this precedent, admit
the right to deny suffrage to the states, and there is no power to
foresee the confusion, discord and disruption that may await us. There
is, and can be, but one safe principle of government-equal rights to
all. And any and every discrimination against any class, whether on
account of color, race, nativity, sex, property, culture, can but
imbitter and disaffect that class, and thereby endanger the safety of
the whole people.
Clearly, then, the national government must not only define the rights
of citizens, but it must stretch out its powerful hand and protect them
in every state in this Union.
But if you will insist that the fifteenth amendments emphatic
interdiction against robbing United States citizens of their right to
vote, "on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude,"
is a recognition of the right, either of the United States, or any
state, to rob citizens of that right, for any or all other reason, I
will prove to you that the class of citizens for which I now plead, and
to which I belong, may be, and sure, by all the principles of our
government, and many of the laws of the states, included under the term
"previous condition of servitude."
First.-The married women and their legal status. What is servitude? "The
condition of a slave." What is a slave? "A person who is robbed of the
proceeds of his labor; a person who is subject to the will of another."
By the law of Georgia, South Carolina, and all the states of the South,
the negro had no right to the custody and control of his person. He
belonged to his master. If he was disobedient, the master had the right
to use correction. If the negro didnt like the correction, and
attempted to run away, the master had a right to use coercion to bring
him back.
By the law of every state in this Union to-day, North as well as South,
the married woman has no right to the custody and control of her person.
The wife belongs to her husband; and if the refuses obedience to his
will, he may use moderate correction, and if she doesnt like his
moderate correction, and attempts to leave his "bed and board," the
husband may use moderate coercion to bring her back. The little word
"moderate," you see, is the saving clause for the wife, and would
doubtless be overstepped should offended husband administer his
correction with the "cat-o-nine-tails," or accomplish his coercion with
blood-hounds.
Again, the slave had no right to the earnings of his hands, they
belonged to his master; no right to the custody of his children, they
belonged to his master; no right to sue or be sued, or testify in the
courts. If he committed a crime, it was the master who must sue or be
sued.
In many of the states there has been special legislation, giving to
married women the right to property inherited, or received by bequest,
or earned by the pursuit of any avocation outside of the home; also,
giving her the right to sue and be sued in matters pertaining to such
separate property; but not a single state of this Union has eve secured
the wife in the enjoyment of her right to the joint ownership of the
joint earnings of the marriage copartnership. And since, in the nature
of things, the vast majority of married women never earn a dollar, by
work outside of their families, nor inherit a dollar from their fathers,
it follows that from the day of their marriage to the day of the death
of their husbands, not one of them ever has a dollar, except it shall
please her husband to let her have it.
In some of the states, also, there have been laws passed giving to the
mother a joint right with the father in the guardianship of the
children. But twenty years ago, when our womans rights movement
commenced, by the laws of the State of New York, and all the states, the
father had the sole custody and control of the children. No matter if he
were a brutal, drunken libertine, he had the legal right, without the
mothers consent, to apprentice her sons to rumsellers, or her daughters
to brothel keepers. He could even will away an unborn child, to some
other person than the mother. And in many of the states the law still
prevails, and the mothers are still utterly powerless under the common
law.
I doubt if there is, to-day, a State in this Union where a married woman
can sue or be sued for slander of character, and until quite recently
there was not one in which she could sue or be sued for injury of
person. However damaging to the wifes reputation any slander may be,
she is wholly powerless to institute legal proceedings against her
accuser, unless her husband shall join with her; and how often have we
hard of the husband conspiring with some outside barbarian to blast the
good name of his wife? A married woman cannot testify in courts in cases
of joint interest with her husband. A good farmers wife near Earlville,
Ill., who had all the rights she wanted, went to a dentist of the
village and had a full set of false teeth, both upper and under. The
dentist pronounced them an admirable fit, and the wife declared they
gave her fits to wear them; that she could neither chew nor talk with
them in her mouth. The dentist sued the husband; his counsel brought the
wife as witness; the judge ruled her off the stand; saying "a married
woman cannot be a witness in matters of joint interest between herself
and her husband." Think of it, ye good wives, the false teeth in your
mouths are joint interest with your husbands, about which you are
legally incompetent to speak!! If in our frequent and shocking railroad
accidents a married woman is injured in her person, in nearly all of the
States, it is her husband who must sue the company, and it is to her
husband that the damages, if there are any, will be awarded. In
Ashfield, Mass., supposed to be the most advanced of any State in the
Union in all things, humanitarian as well as intellectual, a married
woman was severely injured by a defective sidewalk. Her husband sued the
corporation and recovered $13,000 damages. And those $13,000 belong to
him bona fide; and whenever that unfortunate wife wishes a dollar of it
to supply her needs she must ask her husband for it; and if the man be
of a narrow, selfish, nighardly nature, she will have to hear him say,
every time, "What have you done, my dear, with the twenty-five cents I
gave you yesterday?" Isnt such a position, ask you, humiliating enough
to be called "servitude?" That husband, as would any other husband, in
nearly every State of this Union, sued and obtained damages for the loss
of the services of his wife, precisely as the master, under the old
slave regime, would have done, had his slave been thus injured, and
precisely as he himself would have done had it been his ox, cow or horse
instead of his wife.
There is an old saying that "a rose by any other name would smell as
sweet," and I submit it the deprivation by law of the ownership of ones
own person, wages, property, children, the denial of the right as an
individual, to sue and be sued, and to testify in the courts, is not a
condition of servitude most bitter and absolute, though under the sacred
name of marriage?
Does any lawyer doubt my statement of the legal status of married women?
I will remind him of the fact that the old common law of England
prevails in every State in this Union, except where the Legislature has
enacted special laws annulling it. And I am ashamed that not one State
has yet blotted from its statue books the old common law of marriage, by
which blackstone, summed up in the fewest words possible, is made to
say, "husband and wife are one, and that one is the husband."
Thus may all married women, wives and widows, by the laws of the several
States, be technically included in the fifteenth amendments
specification of "condition of servitude," present or previous. And not
only married women, but I will also prove to you that by all the great
fundamental principles of our free government, the entire womanhood of
the nation is in a "condition of servitude" as surely as were our
revolutionary fathers, when they rebelled against old King George. Women
are taxed without representation, governed without their consent, tried,
convicted and punished without a jury of their peers. And is all this
tyranny any less humiliating and degrading to women under our
democratic-republican government to-day than it was to men under their
aristocratic, monarchical government one hundred years ago? There is not
an utterance of old John Adams, John Hancock or Patrick Henry, but finds
a living response in the soul of every intelligent, patriotic woman of
the nation. Bring to me a common-sense woman property holder, and I will
show you one whose soul is fired with all the indignation of 1776 every
time the tax-gatherer presents himself at her door. You will not find
one such but feels her condition of servitude as galling as did James
Otis when he said:
"The very act of taxing exercised over those who are not represented
appears to me to be depriving them of one of their most essential
rights, and if continued, seems to be in effect an entire
disfranchisement of every civil right. For, what one civil right is
worth a rush after a mans property is subject to be taken from him at
pleasure without his consent? If a man is not his own assessor in
person, or by deputy, his liberty is gone, or he is wholly at the mercy
of others."
What was the three-penny tax on tea, or the paltry tax on paper and
sugar to which our revolutionary fathers were subjected, when compared
with the taxation of the women of this Republic? The orphaned Pixley
sisters, six dollars a day, and even the women, who are proclaiming the
tyranny of our taxation without representation, from city to city
throughout the country, are often compelled to pay a tax for the poor
privilege of defending our rights. And again, to show that
disfranchisement was precisely the slavery of which the fathers
complained, allow me to cite to you old Ben. Franklin, who in those
olden times was admitted to be good authority, not merely in domestic
economy, but in political as well; he said:
"Every man of the commonalty, except infants, insane persons and
criminals, is, of common right and the law of God, a freeman and
entitled to the free enjoyment of liberty.
That liberty or freedom consists in having an actual share in the
appointment of those who are to frame the laws, and who are to be the
guardians of every mans life, property and peace. For the all of one
man is as dear to him as the all of another; and the poor man has an
equal right, but more need to have representatives in the Legislature
that the rich one. That they who have no voice or vote in the electing
of representatives, do not enjoy liberty, but are absolutely enslaved to
those who have votes and their representatives; for to be enslaved is to
have governors whom other men have set over us, and to be subject to
laws made by the representatives of others, without having had
representatives of our own to give consent in our behalf."
Suppose I read it with the feminine gender:
"That women who have no voice nor vote in the electing of
representatives, do not enjoy liberty, but are absolutely enslaved to
men who have votes and their representatives; for to be enslaved is to
have governors whom men have set over us, and to be subject to the laws
made by the representatives of men, without having representatives of
our own to give consent in our behalf."
And yet one more authority; that of Thomas Paine, than whom not one of
the Revolutionary patriots more ably vindicated the principles upon
which our government is founded:
"The right of voting for representatives is the primary right by which
other rights are protected. To take away this right is to reduce man to
a state of slavery; for slavery consists in being subject to the will of
another; and he that has not a vote in the election of representatives
is in this case. The proposal, therefore, to disfranchise any class of
men is as criminal as the proposal to take away property."
Is anything further needed to prove womans condition of servitude
sufficiently orthodox to entitle her to the guaranties of the fifteenth
amendment?
Is there a man who will not agree with me, that to talk of freedom
without the ballot, is mockery-is slavery-to the women of this Republic,
precisely as New Englands orator Wendell Phillips, at the close of the
late war, declared it to be to the newly emancipated black men?
I admit that prior to the rebellion, by common consent, the right to
enslave, as well as to disfranchise both native and foreign born
citizens, was conceded to the States. But the one grand principle,
settled by the war and the reconstruction legislation, is the supremacy
of national power to protect the citizens of the United States in their
right to freedom and the elective franchise, against any and every
interference on the part of the several States. And again and again,
have the American people asserted the triumph of this principle, by
their overwhelming majorities for Lincoln and Grant.
The one issue of the last two Presidential elections was, whether the
fourteenth and fifteenth amendments should be considered the irrevocable
will of the people; and the decision was, they shall be-and that it is
only the right, but the duty of the National Government to protect all
United States citizens in the full enjoyment and free exercise of all
their privileges and immunities against any attempt of any State to deny
or abridge.
And in this conclusion Republican and Democrats alike agree.
Senator Frelinghuysen said:
"The heresy of State rights has been completely buried in these
amendments, that as amended, the Constitution confers not only national
but State citizenship upon all persons born or naturalized within our
limits."
The Call for the national Republican convention said:
"Equal suffrage has been engrafted on the national Constitution; the
privileges and immunities of American citizenship have become a part of
the organic law."
The national Republican platform said:
"Complete liberty and exact equality in the enjoyment of all civil,
political and public rights, should be established and maintained
throughout the Union by efficient and appropriate State and federal
legislation."
If that means anything, it is that Congress should pass a law to require
the States to protect women in their equal political rights, and that
the States should enact laws making it the duty of inspectors of
elections to receive womens votes on precisely the same conditions they
do those of men.
Judge Stanley Mathews-a substantial Ohio democrat-in his preliminary
speech at the Cincinnati convention, said most emphatically:
"The constitutional amendments have established the political equality
of all citizens before the law."
President Grant, in his message to Congress March 30th, 1870, on the
adoption of the fifteenth amendment, said:
"A measure which makes at once four millions of people voters, is indeed
a measure of greater importance than any act of the kind from the
foundation of the Government to the present time."
How could four millions negroes be made voter if two millions were not
included?
The California State Republican convention said:
"Among the many practical and substantial triumphs of the principles
achieved by the Republican party during the past twelve years, it
enumerated with pride and pleasure, the prohibiting of any State from
abridging the privileges of any citizen of the Republic, the declaring
the civil and political equality of every citizen, and the establishing
all these principles in the federal constitution by amendments thereto,
as the permanent law."
Benjamin F. Butler, in a recent letter to me, said:
"I do not believe anybody in Congress doubts that the Constitution
authorizes the right of women to vote, precisely as if authorizes trial
by jury and many other like rights guaranteed to citizens."
And again, General Butler said:
"It is not laws we want; there are plenty of laws-good enough, too.
Administrative ability to enforce law is the great want of the age, in
this country especially. Everybody talks of law, law. If everybody would
insist on the enforcement of law, the government would stand on a firmer
basis, and question would settle themselves."
An it is upon this just interpretation of the United States Constitution
that our National Woman Suffrage Association which celebrates the
twenty-fifth anniversary of the womans rights movement in New York on
the 6th of May next, has based all its arguments and action the past
five years.
We no longer petition Legislature or Congress to give us the right to
vote. We appeal to the women everywhere to exercise their too long
neglected "citizens right to vote." We appeal to the inspectors of
election everywhere to receive the votes of all United States citizens
as it is their duty to do. We appeal to United States commissioners and
marshals to arrest the inspectors who reject the names and votes of
United States citizens, as it is their duty to do, and leave those alone
who, like our eighth ward inspectors, perform their duties faithfully
and well.
We ask the juries to fail to return verdicts of "guilty" against honest,
law-abiding, tax-paying United States citizens for offering their votes
at our elections. Or against intelligent, worthy young men, inspectors
of elections, for receiving and counting such citizens votes.
We ask the judges to render true and unprejudiced opinions of the law,
and wherever there is room for a doubt to give its benefit on the side
of liberty and equal rights to women, remembering that "the true rule of
interpretation under our national constitution, especially since its
amendments, is that anything for human rights is constitutional,
everything against human right unconstitutional."
And it is on this line that we propose to fight our battle for the
ballot-all peaceably, but nevertheless persistently through to complete
triumph, when all United States citizens shall be recognized as equals
before the law.