This is a timeline of women's suffrage in Nevada. In 1869, Curtis J. Hillyer introduced a women's suffrage resolution in the Nevada Legislature which passed, though it would wait for another legislative session to approve a second time. The first women's suffrage convention took place in 1870 in Battle Mountain Station. Several women's suffrage resolutions are voted on, or approved, but none complete the criteria to become amendments to the Constitution of Nevada. In the 1880s, women gain the right to run for school offices and several women run and win. Some Nevada women's suffrage groups work throughout the 1890s and hold more conventions. However, most suffrage work slows down or stops around 1899. The Nevada Equal Franchise Society (NEFS) was created in 1911. That same year, Attorney Felice Cohn writes a women's suffrage resolution that is accepted and passed by the Nevada Legislature. Anne Henrietta Martin becomes president of NEFS in 1912. The next year, Cohn's resolution passes a second time and will go out as a voter referendum the next year. On November 3, 1914 Nevada voters approve women's suffrage. Women in Nevada continue to be involved in suffrage campaigning. On February 7, 1920 Nevada ratifies the Nineteenth Amendment.
19th century
1860s
1869
Curtis J. Hillyer introduces an equal suffrage bill in the Nevada Legislature.[1] The bill passes to amend the state constitution, but it needs to pass a second vote in two years.[1]
1870s
1870
July 4: First women's suffrage convention in Nevada is held in Battle Mountain Station.[2]
1871
The equal suffrage amendment introduced by Hillyer doesn't pass the required second vote.[1]
1873
Another equal suffrage resolution is unsuccessfully proposed by Assemblyman Oscar Grey.[3]
1880s
1881
A joint legislative committee in the Nevada Legislature recommends amending the state constitution in favor of women's suffrage, but it fails to gain support.[3]
1883
Hannah K. Clapp leads the fight to see the Nevada Senate pass a women's suffrage bill, but the bill does not pass the Assembly.[4]
1885
A women's suffrage resolution passes in the Nevada Legislature and waits to be approved again in two years.[3]
1887
The women's suffrage resolution fails to pass.[3] However, a resolution for women to run for school offices is passed and waits to be approved again in two years.[3]
1889
The School office resolution passes and women may run.[3]
1890s
1890
Several women are elected to school trustee positions and two women, Susan Miller and Josephine Taylor are elected as school superintendents.[3]
1894
November 30: The Lucy Stone Non-Partisan Equal Suffrage League is formed in Austin, Nevada.[4]
1895
February: An equal suffrage bill passes the Nevada Legislature and waits to be approved a second time in two years.[5]
April 27: Suffrage Special delegates meet with Governor Emmet D. Boyle in Carson City and attempt to interest women in a new women's party.[18]
Martin accompanies the Suffrage Special for part of its journey.[19]
Nevada women are able to vote for the first time in county and state elections.[3]
1918
August: The Woman Citizens' Club endorses suffragist Sadie D. Hurst for Nevada Assembly.[20]
November: Hurst wins and becomes the first woman to hold office in the Assembly.[20]
1919
January: Hurst proposes a resolution to the United States Congress that would show Nevada's support for a federal suffrage amendment.[20] It passes.[20]
February 7: A special session is called in the Nevada Legislature to speedily ratify the Nineteenth Amendment.[22] Hurst presides over the proceedings and it is passed.[23]
March: A bill sponsored by Luella Kirkbride Drumm to eliminate the state requirement that married women in Nevada “use the designation ‘Mrs.’” when “[registering] to vote under their own first names" is approved by the Nevada Assembly.[25][26]
^Cegavske, Barbara K. Political History of Nevada (Twelfth Edition). Carson City, Nevada: Office of the Nevada Secretary of State and the Research Division, Legislative Counsel Bureau, 2018.