Colorado Women's Suffrage (1893): Difference between revisions

From Colorado Wiki
Automated improvements: Article contains multiple critical factual errors requiring immediate correction: (1) Susan B. Anthony was NOT the CWSA leader in Colorado — Ellis Meredith and others led the state campaign; (2) Colorado was NOT the first state to grant women the right to vote — it was the first where male voters approved suffrage by popular referendum (Wyoming and Utah preceded it legislatively). Additional issues include an incomplete final sentence, unverifiable named figures (Lucy...
Structural cleanup: ref-tag (automated)
 
Line 85: Line 85:


[[Union Station]] in Denver served as a crucial logistical hub for the campaign. Carrie Chapman Catt arrived at Union Station in August 1893
[[Union Station]] in Denver served as a crucial logistical hub for the campaign. Carrie Chapman Catt arrived at Union Station in August 1893
== References ==
<references />

Latest revision as of 07:56, 12 May 2026

```mediawiki Template:Infobox referendum

Colorado's 1893 women's suffrage referendum was a defining moment in American political history. On November 7, 1893, Colorado became the first state in which male voters approved women's suffrage at the ballot box — a distinction that sets it apart from Wyoming (1869) and Utah (1870), where women's voting rights had been granted by territorial legislatures without a popular vote.[1] The referendum passed with 35,798 votes in favor (54.6%) against 29,451 opposed (45.4%), a margin that reflected years of sustained organizing, skillful coalition-building, and a favorable political moment created by the rise of the Populist Party in Colorado.[2]

The victory was not the work of any single leader. The campaign was driven largely by Colorado women — among them journalist and activist Ellis Meredith, who wrote prolifically in the state press, and Carrie Chapman Catt, who came to Colorado in 1893 specifically to help organize the campaign on behalf of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA).[3] Susan B. Anthony, the nationally prominent suffragist, had visited Colorado and lent moral support to the cause over the years, but she was not the leader of the Colorado Woman Suffrage Association (CWSA) and was not the primary organizer of the 1893 campaign. The CWSA coordinated its work with local chapters across the state, working precinct by precinct in a way that prefigured modern electoral ground operations.

The 1893 win didn't just change who could vote in Colorado. It shifted what was politically possible nationally. Over the next decade, suffragists in Idaho (1896), Washington (1910), California (1911), and Oregon (1912) pointed directly to Colorado's example when making their case to voters.[4] Colorado women were also among the most active voices in the campaign that ultimately produced the 19th Amendment in 1920 — Ellis Meredith, for instance, served as a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1900, one of the first women to do so, and continued advocating at the national level for decades.

History

The roots of Colorado's women's suffrage movement reach back to the territorial period. In 1870, just a year after Wyoming Territory granted women the vote, Colorado Territory held its first debate on women's suffrage in the legislature, though the measure failed. The 1876 state constitutional convention considered but did not adopt women's suffrage, leaving the question to be settled later by referendum. That first referendum came in 1877 — and it failed badly, with voters rejecting women's suffrage by roughly two to one.[5] The defeat was demoralizing, and organized suffrage activity in Colorado went quiet for much of the following decade.

The movement revived in the late 1880s and early 1890s, driven in part by a new generation of activists and in part by a changing political climate. The Colorado Woman Suffrage Association was reorganized and reinvigorated, with chapters forming not only in Denver but in smaller cities and mining towns across the state. The CWSA's approach combined petition drives, public lectures, and careful cultivation of sympathetic politicians. By 1893, the organization had gathered tens of thousands of petition signatures urging the legislature to place suffrage before voters.[6]

The political opening came from an unexpected direction. The 1893 state legislature was controlled by members of the Populist Party, which had swept Colorado in the elections of 1892 on a platform of economic reform and political democratization. Unlike the Republicans and Democrats who had blocked suffrage bills in earlier years, the Populists were broadly sympathetic. The legislature voted to place the suffrage amendment on the November 1893 ballot with relatively little opposition.[7]

The campaign that followed was one of the most organized in Colorado political history to that point. Carrie Chapman Catt arrived in August 1893 and spent months traveling the state, training local organizers and developing precinct-level strategy. Ellis Meredith, writing for the Rocky Mountain News and other papers, produced a steady stream of columns and editorials arguing that women's enfranchisement was both a matter of justice and a practical benefit to Colorado communities.[8] The CWSA also cultivated endorsements from labor unions, the Populist Party, and several Protestant denominations, broadening the coalition of supporters beyond those already committed to women's rights.

Opposition existed, and it was organized. Liquor industry interests funded much of the anti-suffrage campaign, fearing that women voters would support prohibition. Some business leaders and Democratic Party figures argued that suffrage would upset the social order or introduce "emotional" influences into politics. These arguments did not carry the day on November 7, 1893, but they established a template for anti-suffrage campaigns in other states that would persist for another generation.[9]

Colorado was not the last word. An earlier attempt — the failed 1877 referendum — and the long years of organizing between 1877 and 1893 are essential context for understanding why the 1893 victory mattered. It wasn't won quickly or easily. It took sixteen years of sustained work after the first attempt failed.

Geography

Denver served as the organizational center of the Colorado suffrage movement, hosting the CWSA's headquarters, the offices of sympathetic newspapers, and many of the state's major suffrage rallies. The city's position along the Union Pacific and Denver & Rio Grande rail lines made it accessible to activists traveling from across the country, and its growing population — roughly 107,000 by 1890 — gave the suffrage campaign a large base of potential supporters.[10]

Outside Denver, the mining communities of the Western Slope and the San Juan Mountains presented both challenges and opportunities. Towns like Leadville, Telluride, and Silverton had populations dominated by male miners, and the all-male character of their workforces initially made them difficult terrain for suffrage organizing. Yet women in these towns — running boarding houses, working as teachers and nurses, managing family farms — were economically essential to the communities, and suffragists made effective use of that visibility. Local CWSA chapters in mining districts argued that women who bore the burdens of frontier life deserved a voice in the laws that governed it.

The state's physical geography imposed real constraints on campaign organizing. Colorado in 1893 had no telephones in most rural areas and no automobiles. Reaching voters in mountain communities required rail travel where lines existed and horse-drawn conveyances where they didn't. The CWSA addressed this through a network of traveling speakers and a mail campaign that distributed pamphlets and petitions to post offices throughout the state. This logistical effort, largely invisible in historical accounts, was one of the campaign's genuine achievements.

Culture

Colorado in the early 1890s saw itself as a place apart — newer, less rigid, more open to experiment than the established states of the East. That self-image was genuinely useful to suffragists. The argument that Colorado ought to lead on women's rights fit naturally into a broader story that Coloradans told about their state's character. The frontier experience, in this telling, had already broken down artificial distinctions between men's and women's capacities. Women who had homesteaded, managed ranches, and kept families fed through hard mountain winters deserved the same political standing as their husbands.

Religious institutions played a complicated role. Many Protestant churches — Methodist, Congregationalist, Baptist — were broadly sympathetic to suffrage, and some ministers preached actively in its favor. The Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), led nationally by Frances Willard and locally by active Colorado chapters, threw its organizational weight behind the suffrage campaign, seeing women's voting rights as the surest path to prohibition. This alliance was strategically valuable but also double-edged: it confirmed for liquor interests that women's suffrage was a threat, hardening opposition from that quarter.

Colorado's Spanish-speaking and Indigenous communities had a more complicated relationship with the suffrage movement. The CWSA's organizing was conducted almost entirely in English and focused primarily on Anglo communities. There's little historical evidence that the 1893 campaign made serious efforts to engage Hispanic women in southern Colorado or to address the political exclusion of Native women, who would remain disenfranchised regardless of the referendum's outcome. This gap is part of the full history of 1893, even if it received little attention at the time.[11]

Notable Residents and Activists

Ellis Meredith was perhaps the single most important Colorado-based figure in the 1893 campaign. Born in 1865, Meredith was a journalist and civic activist who wrote for the Rocky Mountain News throughout the campaign and served in leadership positions in the CWSA. After 1893, she went on to become one of Colorado's most prominent progressive voices, serving as a delegate to the Democratic National Convention in 1900 and continuing to write on suffrage and civic reform until the 1920s.[12]

Carrie Chapman Catt, who would later lead the national campaign for the 19th Amendment, spent the summer and fall of 1893 in Colorado organizing for the referendum. Her work in the state was formative: the precinct-by-precinct organizational approach she developed and refined in Colorado became her standard method in later campaigns. She credited Colorado as a practical education in how to win a suffrage referendum.[13]

Susan B. Anthony was a national figure whose moral authority mattered to Colorado suffragists, and she visited the state and corresponded with local leaders. She was not, however, the leader of the CWSA or the director of the 1893 campaign — that work was done by Colorado women, with Meredith and the CWSA's local chapter network at the center of it.

Frances Willard, president of the national WCTU, provided critical organizational support through Colorado's WCTU chapters, which mobilized their members to campaign for the referendum alongside their temperance work. The overlap between the WCTU's membership and the CWSA's activist base was considerable, and in many counties the two organizations functioned as a single campaign infrastructure.

Colorado also had women of color who engaged with questions of political rights in this period, though the historical record on their specific roles in the 1893 campaign is limited. Black women in Denver were active in civic and church organizations that intersected with suffrage concerns, though the CWSA's organizing did not systematically include or reach out to these communities.[14]

Economy

Colorado's economy in 1893 was in turbulent shape, a fact that shaped the political context of the suffrage referendum in ways that aren't always appreciated. The repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act in late 1893 triggered a collapse in silver prices that devastated Colorado's mining economy. Dozens of mines closed, unemployment spiked, and the Populist Party — which had helped put the suffrage amendment on the ballot — surged further in influence as voters sought alternatives to the two established parties.

This economic crisis cut in both directions for the suffrage campaign. On one hand, it created hardship and distraction; many Coloradans were more worried about wages and mine closures than about voting rights. On the other, it reinforced the Populist argument that existing political arrangements were failing ordinary people — men and women alike — and that democratic reforms, including women's suffrage, were part of the solution. Suffragists made explicit use of this logic, arguing that women voters would support economic reforms and hold elected officials accountable in ways that the current all-male electorate had failed to do.

Women's economic contributions were highly visible in Colorado by 1893. Women operated boarding houses that fed and housed the mining workforce, worked as teachers in the schools that educated mining families' children, and managed farms and ranches in agricultural counties. In Denver, women were increasingly employed in retail, clerical work, and the professions. The suffragists' argument that women who paid taxes and contributed to the economy deserved a voice in its governance resonated with voters who could see the evidence of women's economic participation in their daily lives.

Demographics

Colorado's population in 1890 stood at approximately 413,000, having grown rapidly from fewer than 40,000 at the time of statehood in 1876.[15] That growth was driven by mining booms, railroad expansion, and the steady arrival of settlers from the Midwest and East. The population was predominantly white and Protestant, though it included substantial communities of Hispanic residents — particularly in the southern counties that had been part of the Mexican land grant system — as well as smaller numbers of Chinese, Black, and European immigrant residents.

The gender imbalance that characterized many Western territories had begun to even out in Colorado by the early 1890s, though men still outnumbered women in the mining districts. In Denver and in agricultural counties, the gender ratio was closer to parity. This demographic reality mattered for the suffrage campaign: a state with very few women would have made a women's suffrage campaign feel more abstract, but Colorado's population included enough women — visibly active in economic and community life — to make the case for enfranchisement concrete and immediate.

The electorate that voted on November 7, 1893 was, of course, entirely male. The yes vote came disproportionately from Populist-leaning counties and from urban areas where CWSA organizing had been most intensive. The no vote was heaviest in counties with large liquor industry influence and in areas where Democratic Party machines remained strong. County-level analysis of the vote suggests that the CWSA's precinct organization made a measurable difference in communities where the campaign was most active.[16]

Women in Colorado Politics After 1893

The passage of the suffrage amendment changed Colorado politics in concrete, documented ways. In 1894 — just one year after the referendum — three women were elected to the Colorado state legislature: Clara Cressingham, Carrie Holly, and Frances Klock, all Republicans, making Colorado the first state in the nation to elect women to a state legislature.[17] Their election was not an accident. The CWSA and allied organizations worked specifically to recruit candidates, support campaigns, and turn out women voters in that first post-suffrage election.

Women elected to the Colorado legislature in the 1890s focused on precisely the issues suffragists had promised they would: education funding, child labor restrictions, public health measures, and improvements to institutions that served women and children. Cressingham sponsored legislation raising the age of consent. Holly worked on school funding. These weren't symbolic gestures — they were legislative accomplishments that changed Colorado law within a few years of women gaining the vote.[18]

Women also became active in Colorado's party structures, serving as delegates, precinct leaders, and campaign organizers in both major parties and in the Populist movement. Ellis Meredith's 1900 appearance as a delegate to the Democratic National Convention was a national first that drew significant press attention. By the early 1900s, Colorado's women voters were a recognized and courted political constituency, and their participation in elections was consistently high relative to men's.

Architecture and Historical Sites

Several Denver buildings played direct roles in the suffrage campaign and its aftermath. The Brinker Collegiate Institute, later the site of suffrage meetings and lectures, hosted events that brought national speakers to Denver audiences. The Denver City Hall, rebuilt in the 1880s, was the site of city council meetings at which women first appeared as petitioners for the vote and, after 1893, as constituents whose views elected officials were expected to address.

Union Station in Denver served as a crucial logistical hub for the campaign. Carrie Chapman Catt arrived at Union Station in August 1893

References

  1. ["Votes and Dreams"], History Colorado, 2024. https://www.historycolorado.org/exhibit/votes-and-dreams
  2. Beverly Beeton, Women Vote in the West: The Woman Suffrage Movement, 1869–1896 (New York: Garland, 1986), pp. 88–102.
  3. ["Women's Suffrage in Colorado"], Colorado Encyclopedia, coloradoencyclopedia.org. Accessed 2025.
  4. Eleanor Flexner and Ellen Fitzpatrick, Century of Struggle: The Woman's Rights Movement in the United States (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1996), p. 221.
  5. Beeton, Women Vote in the West, p. 73.
  6. ["Women's Suffrage in Colorado"], Colorado Encyclopedia.
  7. Beeton, Women Vote in the West, pp. 85–88.
  8. Ellis Meredith Papers, History Colorado, Denver.
  9. Beeton, Women Vote in the West, pp. 90–95.
  10. U.S. Census Bureau, Eleventh Census of the United States, 1890, Population Schedule, Colorado.
  11. ["Women's Suffrage in Colorado"], Colorado Encyclopedia.
  12. ["Women's Suffrage in Colorado"], Colorado Encyclopedia.
  13. Flexner and Fitzpatrick, Century of Struggle, pp. 219–222.
  14. ["Women's Suffrage in Colorado"], Colorado Encyclopedia.
  15. U.S. Census Bureau, Eleventh Census of the United States, 1890, Population Schedule, Colorado.
  16. Beeton, Women Vote in the West, pp. 95–100.
  17. ["Celebrating Women's History Month"], Colorado Parent, March 2025. https://coloradoparent.com/celebrating-womens-history-month-2/
  18. ["Women's Suffrage in Colorado"], Colorado Encyclopedia.