This timeline provides an overview of the political movement for women's suffrage in California. Women's suffrage became legal with the passage of Proposition 4 in 1911 yet not all women were enfranchised as a result of this legislation.
1860s
1868:
Suffragist Laura de Force Gordon delivered a lecture advocating for women's suffrage in San Francisco.[1]
1869:
A small group of women, including Emily Pitts Stevens, met to form the California Woman Suffrage Association.[2]
The California legislature passed a bill extending suffrage to women. However, this was not a bill granting suffrage entirely to women; it was only for voting in school elections, not municipal elections. This bill was vetoed by Governor Henry Markham.[8]
Both Laura de Force Gordon and Nellie Holbrook Blinn believed they each should be the president of the California State Woman Suffrage and Educational Association.[6] This led to a political dispute with Gordon stating Blinn's side were acting as "kindergartners".[6]
Republican Party speaker Nellie Blinn became president of the state association and with Clara Foltz and others successfully lobbied the Republican Party to add the following to their state platform, "taxation without representation is against the principles of the government. We favor an extension of the right of suffrage to all citizens of the United States, both men and women."[7]
1895:
Mary Wood Swift became second Vice President for the California Suffrage Association and hosted parlor discussions.[6]
Naomi Anderson moved to California to organize suffragists after lecturing about temperance and suffrage through the midwest.[10] She also lobbied the California legislature.[11]
Susan B. Anthony campaigned for suffrage in California.[12][13][14] Leading up to the 1896 vote, Anthony encouraged California suffragists to be "all partisan" by avoiding partisan politics until women were enfranchised.[9]
African American Sacramento suffragist Naomi Anderson drew large crowds with her speeches on women's suffrage. She was described as a "wonderful orator" by suffragist Mary Keith.[9]
Ellen Sargent supervised a petition drive on behalf of women's suffrage in northern California and Alice Moore McComas oversaw the petitions in southern California.[7]
The first ballot measure to propose women's suffrage failed with only 44.6% support[6][9]
Alice Park began her work as head of the literature committee of the CESA, carefully preserving many of the documents related to the suffrage movement in California.[21] In the 1930s she donated many of her papers to the Huntington Library in San Marino which houses a significant women's suffrage collection. Park also collected a large number of votes for women buttons (see image on the right).
Led by Mary McHenry Keith, the leader of the Berkeley Political Equality League, women in Oakland make a public statement protesting their lack of voting rights. Keith proposed adding the following statement to a cornerstone of the newly created Berkeley City Hall stating, "“We…hereby commit the cause of Equal Suffrage for man and woman to the judgment of future generations, in the confidence that in after years whoever shall read these lines will wonder that so late as the year 1908 the women of California were political serfs; they were taxed without representation, governed without their consent, and classed under the law with idiots, insane persons, criminals, minors and other defective classes…We, about to die, greet you, the inheritors of a better age, men and women of the future Berkeley, equal before the law, enfranchised citizen; co-operating in all public service.”[23]
Over 300 women marched on behalf of suffrage in Oakland behind a silk banner which featured the seal of California.[24][25]
1909:
Lillian Harris Coffin received press attention for lobbying in Sacramento on behalf of the women suffrage bill.[26]
Maud Younger founded the Wage Earner's Equal Suffrage League in 1909.[3] She played a key role in California's passage of an eight hour work day.[27]
Ruth Wilson served as a leader of California's anti-suffrage association. Wilson was the mother of General George S. Patton.[3]
Suffragists were successful in lobbying the Republican Party of California to include support for suffrage in their platform. The Democratic Party of California did not include an endorsement for suffrage in their platform that year.[29]
Selina Solomons founded the Votes for Women club in San Francisco. This club encouraged working class women to join the suffrage movement.[30]
1911:
In May 1911, Kate Brousseau was elected to the board of directors for the CESL while also leading the literature committee[31]
After receiving intense lobbying from members of the CESL, Phoebe Hearst announced she was a suffragist in the summer of 1911. That year she wrote to Caroline Severance saying, "I share your feeling about the benefit our State will receive through the right of its women to the ballot...I am a suffragist."[28]
Los Angeles clubwoman Maria de Lopez translated suffrage campaign materials into Spanish.[6][32]
Many suffragists remained politically active through the new California Civic League.[33]
When proposition 4 was passed, Alice Stone Blackwell stated California was, "the greatest single advance that the suffrage movement in America has yet made."[6]
1912:
Ty Leung was the first Chinese-American woman to vote.[34]
Selina Solomons published "How We Won the Vote in California" which provides a detailed account of the California suffrage movement.[29]
1913:
Winning Equal Suffrage in California: Reports of Committees of the College Equal Suffrage League of Northern California[35]
1914:
Native American civil rights advocate Marie Louise Bottineu Baldwin met with President Woodrow Wilson to advocate for Indian suffrage[36]
^ abcdefghijkGullett, Gayle (2000). Becoming Citizens: The Emergence and Development of the California Women's Movement, 1880-1911. University of Illinois Press. ISBN0-252-06818-1.
^ abcCooper, Donald (Winter 1989). "The California Suffrage Campaign of 1896: Its Origin, Strategies, Defeat". Southern California Quarterly. 71 (4): 311–325. doi:10.2307/41171453. JSTOR41171453.
^Swatt, Steve; Swatt, Susie; Lavally, Rebecca (2019). Paving the Way: Women's Struggle for Political Equality in California. Berkeley Public Policy Press.
^Cooney, Jr., Robert P.J. (2005). Winning the Vote: The Triumph of the American Woman Suffrage Movement. National Women's History Project. ISBN0-9770095-0-5.
^Wilson, Ann Marie; Cherny, Robert; Irwin, Mary Ann (2011). California Women and Politics: From the Gold Rush to the Great Depression. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN978-0-8032-3503-8.
^Marino, Kelly. "Votes for College Women: Women's Suffrage and Higher Education in Modern America". Dissertation at Binghamton University State University of New York: 54.