Jam'iyyar Mata ta Kasa
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| Bayanai | |
| Iri | ma'aikata da jam'iyyar siyasa |
| Ƙasa | Tarayyar Amurka |
| Ideology (en) | Feminism |
| Mulki | |
| Hedkwata | Washington, D.C. |
| Tarihi | |
| Ƙirƙira | 1916 |
| Wanda ya samar | |
| Dissolved |
1 ga Janairu, 2021 1930 |
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Jam'iyyar Mata ta Kasa ( NWP ) ƙungiya ce ta siyasa ta mata ta Amurka wacce aka kafa a 1916 don yaƙin neman zaɓen mata . Bayan cimma wannan buri tare da amincewar 1920 na gyare-gyare na goma sha tara ga Kundin Tsarin Mulki na Amurka, NWP ta ba da shawarar wasu batutuwa ciki har da Daidaita Hakkokin . Mafi shaharar shugabar Jam'iyyar Mata ta Kasa ita ce Alice Paul, kuma abin da ya fi shahara shi ne bikin 1917-1919 Silent Sentinels a wajen kofar Fadar White House.
A ranar 1 ga Janairu, 2021, NWP ta daina aiki a matsayin ƙungiya mai zaman kanta mai zaman kanta kuma ta sanya haƙƙoƙin alamar kasuwanci da sauran amfani da sunan jam'iyyar ga ƙungiyoyin sa-kai na ilimi, Cibiyar Alice Paul. [1] Cibiyar Alice Paul ta gayyaci mambobi uku na NWP Board of Directors don shiga cikin hukumar su kuma a nan gaba za su kirkiro wani sabon kwamiti don "shawarwari kan yiwuwar fadada shirye-shirye zuwa yankin Washington, DC da kuma kasa". Takardu da kayan tarihi na NWP, an ba su gudummawa ga Library of Congress da kuma National Park Service don sa su samuwa ga jama'a.
Dubawa
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]Jam'iyyar Mata ta Kasa ta kasance fice daga Ƙungiyar Majalissar Wakilai don Suffrage na Mata, wadda Alice Paul da Lucy Burns suka kafa a 1913 don yin yaki don zaben mata . Jam'iyyar Mata ta Kasa ta balle daga babbar kungiyar 'yan takarar mata ta Amurka, wacce ta mayar da hankali kan yunkurin samun kuri'ar mata a matakin jiha. NWP ta ba da fifiko wajen amincewa da gyaran kundin tsarin mulki da ke tabbatar da zaɓen mata a duk faɗin Amurka.
Tarihin farko
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]Alice Paul yana da alaƙa ta kut-da-kut da Ƙungiyar Siyasa ta Mata ta Ingila (WSPU), wanda Emmeline Pankhurst ta shirya. Yayin da yake dalibi a kwaleji a Ingila, Bulus ya shiga cikin Pankhursts da yakin neman zaben Ingilishi. A wannan lokacin Alice Paul ya sadu da Lucy Burns, wanda zai ci gaba da zama co-kafa NWP. Ko da yake Bulus yana da alaƙa da yaƙin neman zaɓe na tsageru a Ingila, sa’ad da ta fita don neman zaɓe a Amurka, maimakon haka Paul ya soma tawaye na farar hula a Amurka. Misali, ‘yan WSPU sun yi wa ‘yan majalisa kaca-kaca, sun tofa albarkacin bakinsu kan jami’an ‘yan sanda, kuma sun yi ta kone-kone. [2]
Paul da Burns sun ji cewa wannan gyare-gyaren wani rugujewa ne mai kisa daga manufa ta gaskiya kuma ta zama dole na wani gyare-gyaren tarayya mai cike da duk wani abu da ke kare haƙƙin dukan mata-musamman kamar yadda aka tsinkayi zagaye na zaɓen raba gardama na jihohi a lokacin da kusan lalata dalilin. A cikin kalmomin Bulus: "Yana da ɗan wuya a bi da tare da tsanani wani equivocating, evasive, yara maye gurbin mai sauki da kuma mutunci zabe gyara yanzu a gaban Congress."
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Hoton Alice Paul, 1915
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Lucy Burns, Mataimakin Shugaban Majalisar Wakilai, 1913
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Alkali Mary Bartelme, NWP mataimakin shugaba, 1916-1917 [3]
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Nina Allender, 'yar wasan kwaikwayo ta siyasa don The Suffragist
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Doris Stevens, marubucin Jailed for Freedom
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liyafar shayi a NWP don Alice Brady
Adawa ga Wilson
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]
Matan da ke da alaƙa da jam'iyyar sun gudanar da wani faretin faretin zaɓe mai ban sha'awa a ranar 3 ga Maris, 1913, kwana ɗaya kafin bikin rantsar da Wilson.
A yayin taron farko na kungiyar, Paul ya bayyana cewa jam’iyyar ba za ta kasance jam’iyyar siyasa ta gargajiya ba, don haka ba za ta amince da dan takarar shugaban kasa a lokacin zabe ba. Yayin da ba jam'iyya ba, NWP ta jagoranci mafi yawan hankalinta ga Shugaba Woodrow Wilson da 'yan jam'iyyar Democrat, suna sukar su a matsayin alhakin rashin zartar da gyaran kundin tsarin mulki. A sakamakon haka, a cikin 1918, Paul ya gudanar da yakin neman zabe wanda ya kaurace wa 'yan Democrat saboda kin goyon bayan zaben mata. Sun yanke shawarar kauracewa jam'iyyar baki daya, ciki har da 'yan Democrat masu goyon bayan zaben. A ƙarshe, ƙauracewa 'yan Democrat da NWP ke jagoranta ya haifar da rinjaye na Republican a cikin gidan. [4] Jam'iyyar Mata ta Kasa ta ci gaba da mai da hankali kan zabe a matsayin babban dalilinsu. Ya ƙi ko dai ya goyi baya ko kai hari ga shigar Amurka a yakin duniya, yayin da abokin hamayyar NAWSA, karkashin Carrie Chapman Catt ya ba da cikakken goyon baya ga kokarin yakin. Sakamakon haka, ƙungiyar masu fafutuka daban-daban irin su masu fafutuka da masu ra'ayin gurguzu sun ja hankalin NWP saboda adawa da shugaba mai adawa da zaɓe.
Zabar Fadar White House
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]
Rikicin da ke ci gaba da karuwa a Turai bai hana Alice Paul da NWP daga nuna rashin amincewa da matsayin Wilson na munafunci a kan yakin ba. Wilson ya inganta ra'ayin wanzar da dimokuradiyya a kasashen waje, duk da cewa har yanzu Amurka ta hana rabin 'yan kasarta 'yancin kada kuri'a. An yi la'akari da zabin NWP a matsayin masu rikici saboda sun ci gaba a lokacin yakin da sauran kungiyoyi masu rinjaye kamar NAWSA suka zaɓi don tallafawa kokarin yaki. Wanda aka fi sani da " Silent Sentinels ", aikin nasu ya ci gaba daga ranar 10 ga Janairu, 1917 har zuwa Yuni 1919. An amince da masu zaɓen da farko, amma lokacin da suka ci gaba da cin zarafi bayan da Amurka ta ayyana yaƙi a 1917, 'yan sanda sun kama su don hana zirga-zirga. Ko da kuwa yanayin, matan sun tsaya a wajen fadar White House suna rike da tutoci, kullum suna tunatar da Wilson game da munafuncinsa. Lokacin da aka fara kama su, Lucy Burns ta yi iƙirarin cewa su fursunonin siyasa ne amma an ɗauke su a matsayin fursunoni na yau da kullun. A matsayin girmamawa ga sadaukarwar da suka yi na zaɓe, sun ƙi biyan tara kuma ya karɓi lokacin kurkuku.
Shugaban Kwamitin Kasa na Kasa, 1920
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]Florence Bayard Hilles a matsayin shugabar kwamitin kasa da Miss Mary Ingham a matsayin sakatariya.
| State | Name | City or town | Notes | Image |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alabama | Sara Haardt | Montgomery | Head of the Alabama branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Arizona | Nellie A. Hayward | Douglas | Head of the Arizona branch of the National Woman's Party. Was assistant secretary of the 6th Arizona State Legislature, a member of the Arizona House of Representatives elected in 1918 from Cochise County, Arizona, and along with former suffrage leaders Rosa McKay, Pauline O'Neill, and Anna Westover, voted for the Susan B. Anthony Amendment that passed both houses without a dissenting vote. | |
| California | Genevieve Allen | San Francisco | Head of the California branch of the National Woman's Party (NWP). A member of the National Woman's Party seeking then U.S. Senator Warren G. Harding's support. | |
| Colorado | Bertha W. Fowler | Colorado Springs | Head of the Colorado branch of the National Woman's Party. Dr. Caroline Spencer was secretary. | |
| Connecticut | Katharine Martha Houghton Hepburn (Mrs. Thomas N. Hepburn) |
Hartford | Head of the Connecticut branch of the National Woman's Party and chairperson of the National Executive Committee of the NWP. | |
| Delaware | Florence Bayard Hilles | Wilmington | Head of the Delaware branch of the National Woman's Party and a member of the national executive committee. Daughter of Thomas F. Bayard. Spent 3 days of a 60-day sentence for picketing the White House and was pardoned by President Wilson. | |
| District of Columbia | Delia Sheldon Jackson | Head of the Washington D.C. branch of the National Woman's Party. A member of the group that called on Senator Harding for support. | ||
| Florida | Helen Hunt | Jacksonville | Head of the Florida branch of the National Woman's Party. Hunt was a journalist and lawyer, born February 10, 1892, to Aaron and Lillian Hunt.[5] | |
| Georgia | Mrs. W.A. Maddox | Atlanta | Head of the Georgia branch of the National Woman's Party | |
| Idaho | Mrs. John E. White | Twin Falls | Head of the Idaho branch of the National Woman's Party | |
| Illinois | Mrs. Lola Maverick Lloyd | Head of the Illinois branch of the National Woman's Party | ||
| Indiana | Mrs. W.C. Bobbs | Indianapolis | Head of the Indiana branch of the National Woman's Party. Eleanor P. Barker served as state chair of the Indiana chapter of the Congressional Union for Women's Suffrage and was on the advisory council for the National Woman's Party.[6] | |
| Iowa | Mrs. Florence Harsh | Des Moines | Head of the Iowa branch of the National Woman's Party | |
| Kansas | Mrs. Lilla Day Monroe | Topeka | Head of the Kansas branch of the National Woman's Party. President of the Kansas Equal Suffrage Association, editor of "The Club Member" and "The Kansas Woman?s Journal," and was a founding member of the Good Government Club.[7] | |
| Kentucky | Edith Callahan | Louisville | Head of the Kentucky branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Louisiana | Mrs. E. G. Graham (Eleanor G. Graham) |
New Orleans | Head of the Louisiana branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Maine | Florence Brooks Whitehouse (Mrs. Robert Treat Whitehouse) |
Portland, Maine | Helped launch and served as first head of the Maine branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Maryland | Mrs. Donald R. Hooker | Baltimore | Head of the Maryland branch of the National Woman's Party. Editor of the Maryland Suffrage News then The Suffragist. | |
| Massachusetts | Agnes H. Morey | Brookline | Head of the Massachusetts branch of the National Woman's Party. Her daughter, Katharine A. Morey (One of the Silent Sentinels), was also a leader in the suffrage movement. | |
| Michigan | Marjorie Miller Whittemore (Mrs. W. Nelson Whittemore) |
Detroit | Head of the Michigan branch of the National Woman's Party. Not to be confused with her sister-in-law Miss Margaret Faye Whittemore, also a member of the NWP.[8][9] | |
| Minnesota | Sarah Tarleton Colvin (Mrs. A. R. Colvin) |
St. Paul | Head of the Minnesota branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Mississippi | Ann Calvert Neely | Vicksburg, Mississippi | Head of the Mississippi branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Missouri | Mrs. H.B. Leavens | Kansas | Head of the Missouri branch of the National Woman's Party. Formed the Kansas City Woman Suffrage Association in 1911 along with others such as Dr. Dora Green, Helen Osborne (Secretary), Mrs. G.B. Longan, Mrs. Henry N. Ess (President), and Clara Cramer Leavens (Treasurer). | |
| Nebraska | Gertrude Hardenburg Laws Hardy (Mrs. W. E. Hardy) |
Lincoln | Head of the Nebraska branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| New Hampshire | Mrs. Winfield Shaw | Manchester | Head of the New Hampshire branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| New Jersey | Alison Turnbull Hopkins (Mrs. J. A. H. Hopkins) |
Newark | Head of the New Jersey branch of the National Woman's Party. Married to J. A. H. Hopkins, a member of The Committee of 48. | |
| New Mexico | Cora Armstrong Kellam (Mrs. Arthur A. Kellam) |
Albuquerque | Head of the New Mexico branch of the National Woman's Party. Along with Florence Bayard Hilles (Delaware NWP chairperson) were members of the "Women's Committee of the Council of National Defense" met with President and Mrs. Wilson on Federal Suffrage Amendment. | |
| New York | Alva Belmont (Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont) |
Long Island | Head of the New York branch of the National Woman's Party. Mrs. John Winters Brannan (acting) | |
| North Carolina | Ella St. Clair Thompson | Spruce Pine | Head of the North Carolina branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| North Dakota | Beulah McHenry Amidon (Mrs. Chas. Amidon) |
Fargo | Head of the North Dakota branch of the National Woman's Party. She should not be confused with her daughter, also named Beulah Amidon (later Beulah Amidon Ratliff) and known as the "Prettiest Picket"[10] | |
| Ohio | Helen Clegg Winters (Mrs. Valentine Winters) |
Dayton | Head of the Ohio branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Oklahoma | Miss Ida F. Halsey | Oklahoma City | Head of the Oklahoma branch of the National Woman's Party. Was replaced by Florence Etheridge Cobb in 1922. | |
| Oregon | Mrs. W. J. Hawkins | Portland | Head of the Oregon branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Pennsylvania | Miss Mary H. Ingham | Philadelphia | Head of the Pennsylvania branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Rhode Island | Mary Lavinia Archbold Van Beuren (Mrs. Michael Van Beuran) |
Newport | Head of the Rhode Island branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| South Carolina | Mrs. W. P. Vaughan | Greenville | Head of the South Carolina branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| South Dakota | Harriet E. Fellows Mrs. A. R. Fellows |
Sioux Falls | Head of the South Dakota branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Tennessee | Sue White | Jackson | Head of the Tennessee branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Texas | Anna Tidball Millett (Mrs. Paul Millett) |
Fort Worth | Head of the Texas branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Utah | Mrs. Louise Garnett | Salt Lake City | Head of the Utah branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Virginia | Mrs. Sophie G. Meredith | Richmond | Head of the Virginia branch of the National Woman's Party.[11] | |
| Washington | Mrs. Sophie L. W. Clark | Seattle | Head of the Washington branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| West Virginia | Miss Florence Hoge | Wheeling | Head of the West Virginia branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Wisconsin | Mabel Raef Putnam[12] Mrs. Frank Putnam |
Milwaukee | Head of the Wisconsin branch of the National Woman's Party. | |
| Wyoming | Mrs. P. E. Glafcke | Cheyenne | Head of the Wyoming branch of the National Woman's Party. |
Manazarta
[gyara sashe | gyara masomin]- ↑ "Alice Paul Institute Receives National Woman's Party Trademarks". Alice Paul Institute. Retrieved 2021-07-21.
- ↑ Lance, Keith (June 1979). "Strategy Choices of the British Women's Social and Political Union, 1903–18". Social Science Quarterly. 60 (1): 51–53. JSTOR 42860512.
- ↑ "Judge Mary A. [Mary Margaret] Bartelme, of Illinois, is second vice-chairman of the National Woman's Party. She is the judge of the Children's Night Court of Chicago". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ↑ "TACTICS AND TECHNIQUES OF THE NATIONAL WOMAN'S PARTY SUFFRAGE CAMPAIGN" (PDF). American Memory.
- ↑ Robison, Jim (October 31, 2004). "Florida's Helen Hunt Championed Suffrage". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved 2019-04-15.
- ↑ "Indiana and the 19th Amendment (U.S. National Park Service)". www.nps.gov (in Turanci). Retrieved 2024-07-10.
- ↑ Robison, Jim. "Mrs. E. G. Graham". Library of Congress. Retrieved 2019-04-15.
- ↑ "Margaret Fay Whittemore". mccurdyfamilylineage.com. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
- ↑ "National Woman's Party Photograph Collection - 1916.001.059.01". National Woman's Party. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
- ↑ "Amidon, Beulah". National Woman's Party. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
- ↑ Kollatz Jr., Harry (March 30, 2018). "The Zealous but Forgotten Pioneer". Richmondmag. Retrieved 2019-04-18.
- ↑ "Women Congratulate Governor Blaine for Signing the Women's Rights Bill". Wisconsin Historical Society. 1 December 2003. Retrieved 10 November 2019.