Full Text of HR0096 101st General Assembly
HR0096 101ST GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
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| 1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
| 2 | | WHEREAS, Illinois is a proud leader in the story of women's | 3 | | suffrage in the United States of
America; and
| 4 | | WHEREAS, The efforts of millions of American women, | 5 | | starting in the nineteenth century, played a
decisive role in | 6 | | winning the right to vote; many of these women lived and fought | 7 | | for suffrage in
Illinois, making the Prairie State a nationwide | 8 | | leader in the successful effort; and
| 9 | | WHEREAS, Illinois women's rights advocates included Jane | 10 | | Addams, Frances Willard, and Ruth
Hanna McCormick; and | 11 | | WHEREAS, Jane Addams's fight for the rights of all people | 12 | | helped her win the Nobel Peace Prize
in 1931; and
| 13 | | WHEREAS, After founding the Women's Christian Temperance | 14 | | Union (WCTU), Frances Willard
was honored by her fellow | 15 | | Illinoisans and by members of Congress by having a statue | 16 | | placed in the
national Statuary Hall in the United States | 17 | | Capitol in Washington, D.C.; when the statue was erected
in | 18 | | 1905, it made her the first woman honored among America's | 19 | | greatest individuals; and | 20 | | WHEREAS, After fighting successfully for women's suffrage |
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| 1 | | in Illinois and nationwide, Ruth Hanna
McCormick herself ran | 2 | | for an at-large seat in the U.S. House of Representatives and, | 3 | | in 1928, became a Republican
congresswoman from Illinois, | 4 | | before becoming the first woman nominated by a major party for | 5 | | the U.S. Senate in 1930; and | 6 | | WHEREAS, Women like Addams, Willard, and McCormick faced | 7 | | many opponents but fought hard
and recruited other fighters to | 8 | | help carry the torch, and, in 1913, Illinois became the first | 9 | | state east of
the Mississippi to grant women the right to vote; | 10 | | and | 11 | | WHEREAS, Starting in 1914, Illinois women were extended the | 12 | | right to vote for local and countywide offices,
creating a | 13 | | strange halfway point as Prairie State election officials | 14 | | handed short-sheet ballots to
female voters that only listed | 15 | | the races for which they were allowed to vote; and | 16 | | WHEREAS, Organizations led by the Illinois Equal Suffrage | 17 | | Association, headed by Chicago's
Grace Wilbur Trout, demanded | 18 | | an equal ballot for women; and | 19 | | WHEREAS, With the entry of the United States into World War | 20 | | I, women workers became an
essential part of the war effort, | 21 | | and many men in Illinois and nationwide recognized there
was | 22 | | not a moral case for denying women the right to an equal vote; |
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| 1 | | and | 2 | | WHEREAS, In May 1919, Illinois Republican Congressman | 3 | | James Mann sponsored the Nineteenth Amendment to the
| 4 | | Constitution of the United States, the Woman's Suffrage | 5 | | Amendment, and persuaded his colleagues
in the U.S. House and | 6 | | Senate to send it to the states for ratification; and | 7 | | WHEREAS, Outsider-activists, such as Grace Wilbur Trout, | 8 | | and political insiders, such as Ruth
Hanna McCormick, had | 9 | | already prepared the Illinois General Assembly for receipt of | 10 | | this
pioneering constitutional document; and | 11 | | WHEREAS, On June 10, 1919, Illinois lawmakers in | 12 | | Springfield made the Land of Lincoln the first
state in the | 13 | | nation to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. | 14 | | Constitution, the constitutional amendment that granted the | 15 | | right to vote to women in all elections nationwide, including | 16 | | federal
elections for offices such as U.S. President; and
| 17 | | WHEREAS, With the help of political efforts and publicity | 18 | | organized in press centers, such as
Chicago, by activists, such | 19 | | as Addams and Trout, and political figures, such as McCormick,
| 20 | | the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified nationwide in less than | 21 | | eighteen months; this made it
possible for American women to | 22 | | vote for President in the election of 1920 and, again, in every
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| 1 | | election since; and
| 2 | | WHEREAS, Illinois remembers the work
carried out by | 3 | | fighters for women's votes one hundred years ago; therefore, be | 4 | | it
| 5 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE | 6 | | HUNDRED FIRST GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | 7 | | we commemorate the approaching l00th anniversary on June 10, | 8 | | 2019, of the ratification by the State of Illinois of the | 9 | | Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States; | 10 | | and be it further | 11 | | RESOLVED, That we remember in this commemoration the hopes | 12 | | and dreams of the hundreds of
thousands of Illinois women of | 13 | | all political parties who organized themselves, from the 1870s | 14 | | into
the 1910s, into the half-century-long effort to win the | 15 | | right to vote in America; and be it further
| 16 | | RESOLVED, That copies of this resolution be presented to | 17 | | the Jane Addams Hull-House Museum in
Chicago, to the Frances | 18 | | Willard House Museum and Archives in Evanston, and to the | 19 | | Robert R.
McCormick Foundation/Cantigny Park in Wheaton in | 20 | | commemoration and observance of the
differences between, and | 21 | | the united desires of, the pioneer fighters for women's | 22 | | suffrage in Illinois.
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