A Southern Woman Speaks Her Mind
By: James Calloway
PPR.010246
Papers
ca. 1920
United States
English
Printed on Paper
17.1 × 11 × 0.04 in. (43.4 × 28 × 0.1 cm)
Not on View
This broadside was created by antisuffrage activists in an effort to halt the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment. The campaign for the women’s vote reached a watershed moment in June 1919, when the Senate passed the suffrage amendment. By the following summer, 35 states had ratified the amendment, one short of what was needed for it to become law. Supporters and critics campaigned fiercely to sway public opinion, sometimes appealing to the Bible to support their position. This broadside reprints an article by James Calloway, a writer for the Macon (GA) Telegraph and staunch antisuffragist. A handwritten note at the top reads, “Any southern born man who votes for the Anthony Amendment,” as opponents called the Nineteenth Amendment because of Susan B. Anthony’s leadership, “unsheathes his sword against his own flesh, sells his birthright, and is a traitor to his state and womanhood!”
Printed around 1920 by an unknown printer.[1] Acquired by the 2000s by New England Book Auctions, Sunderland, Massachusetts;[2] Purchased in 2017 by Rebecca Dodson, private collector, Tennessee;[3] Purchased in 2019 by Green Collection, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, under the curatorial care of Museum of the Bible, Washington, DC.
Notes: [1] While the creator of this broadside is unknown, it was likely a southern branch of the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. Similar broadsides include a printer’s mark for Edwards & Broughton Printing Co., Raleigh, North Carolina. Likewise, there are accounts of similar broadsides being distributed in Nashville in the days leading up to Tennessee’s vote. See Kathi Kern, Mrs. Stanton's Bible (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2002), 4–5. [2] The previous owner who wrote the note at the top of the broadside is unknown at this time. [3] This broadside and three others made up Catalogue 459, Lot 23, of New England Book Auction’s February 28, 2017, sale.
To acquire permission to use this image, please visit our Rights and Reproduction page .
Martin Luther, Autograph Letter Signed, 1518
“The Old Rugged Cross” signed by George Bennard