Still unwilling to believe that we would be forced to resume our militancy we attempted to talk to the President again A special deputation of women munition workers was sent to him under our auspices. The women waited for a week, hoping he would consent to see them among his receptions-to the Blue Devils of France, to a Committee of Indians, to a Committee of Irish Patriots, and so forth.
"No time," was the answer. And the munition workers were forced to submit their appeal in writing.
"We are only a few of the thousands of American women," they wrote the President, "who are forming a growing part of the army at home. The work we are doing is hard and dangerous to life and health, making detonators, handling TNT, the
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highest of all explosives. We want to be recognized by our country, as much her citizens as our soldiers are."
Mr. Tumulty replied for the President:
"The President asks me to say that nothing you or your a.s.sociates could say could possibly increase his very deep interest in this matter and that he is doing everything that he could with honor and propriety do in behalf of the [suffrage] amendment."
An opportunity was given the President to show again his sympathy for a world-wide endeavor just after having ignored this specific opportunity at home. He hastened to accept the larger field. In response to a memorial transmitted through Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, President of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance, the French Union for Woman Suffrage urged the President to use his aid on their behalf "which will be a powerful influence for woman suffrage in the entire world." The memorial was endorsed by the suffrage committee of Great Britain, Italy, Belgium, and Portugal. The President took the occasion to say: "The democratic reconstruction of the world will not have been completely or adequately obtained until women are admitted to the suffrage. As for America it is my earnest hope that the Senate of the United States will give an unmistakable answer by pa.s.sing the federal amendment before the end of this session."
Meanwhile four more Democratic Senators pledged their support to the amendment. Influenced by the President"s declaration of support, and by widespread demands from their const.i.tuents, Senators Phelan of California, King of Utah, Gerry of Rhode Island, and Culberson of Texas abandoned the ranks of the opposition.
During this same period the Republican side of the Senate gave five more Republican Senators to the amendment. They were Senators Mcc.u.mber of North Dakota, Kellogg of Minnesota, Harding of Ohio, Page of Vermont, and Sutherland of
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West Virginia. All of these men except Senator Mcc.u.mber[1] were won through the pressure from Republican Party leaders.
This gain of nine recruits reduced to two the number of votes to be won.
When at the end of seven months from the time the amendment had pa.s.sed the House, we still lacked these two votes, and the President gave no a.s.surance that he would put forth sufficient effort to secure them, we were compelled to renew our attacks upon the President.
[1]Senator Mcc.u.mber, though opposed, was compelled to support the measure, by the action of the N. D. legislature commanding him to do so.
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Chapter 17
New Attacks on the President
The Senate was about to recess. No a.s.surance was given by the majority that suffrage would be considered either before or after the recess. Alarmed and aroused, we decided upon a national protest in Washington August 6th, the anniversary of the birth of Inez Milholland.
The protest took the form of a meeting at the base of the Lafayette monument in the park, directly opposite the White House. Women from many states in the Union, dressed in white, hatless and coatless in the midsummer heat of Washington, marched t0 the monument carrying banners of purple, white and gold, led by a standard-bearer carrying the American flag. They made a beautiful ma.s.s of color as they grouped themselves around the statue, against the abundant green foliage of the park.
The Administration met this simple reasonable form of protest by further arrests.
Mrs. Lawrence Lewis of Philadelphia, the first speaker, began: "We are here because when our country is at war for liberty and democracy . . ." At that point she was roughly seized by a policeman and placed under arrest. The great audience stood in absolute and amazed silence.
Miss Hazel Hunkins of Montana took her place. "Here at the statue of Lafayette, who fought for the liberty of this country," she began, "and under the American flag, I am asking for . . ." She was immediately arrested.
Miss Vivian Pierce of California began: "President Wilson
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has said . . ." She was dragged from the plinth to the waiting patrol.
One after another came forward in an attempt to speak, but no one was allowed to continue. Wholesale arrests followed. Just as the women were being taken into custody, according to the New York Evening World of August 13th, "the President walked out of the northeast gate of the White House and up Pennsylvania Avenue for a conference with Director General of Railroads McAdoo. The President glanced across the street and smiled."
Before the crowd could really appreciate what had happened, forty-eight women had been hustled to the police station by the wagon load, their gay banners floating from the backs of the somber patrols. They were told that the police had arrested them under the orders of Col. C. S. Ridley, the President"s military aide, and a.s.sistant to the Chief Engineer attached to the War Department. All were released on bail and ordered to appear in court the following day.
When they appeared they were informed by the Government"s attorney that he would have to postpone the trial until the following Tuesday so that he might examine witnesses to see "what offense, if any, the women would be charged with."
"I cannot go on with this case," he said, "I have had no orders.
There are no precedents for cases like these . . . ."
The women demanded that their cases be dismissed, or else a charge made against them. They were merely told to return on the appointed day. Such was the indignation aroused against the Administration for taking this action that Senator Curtis of Kansas, Republican whip, could say publicly:
"The truth of this statement is made evident by the admission of the court that the forty-eight suffragists are arrested upon absolutely no charges, and that these women, among them munition workers and Red Cross workers, are held in Washington until next Tuesday, under arrest, while the United
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States attorney for the District of Columbia decides for what offense, "if any," they were arrested.
"The meeting was called to make a justified protest against continued blocking of the suffrage amendment by the Democratic majority in the Senate. It is well known that three-fourths of the Republican membership in the Senate are ready to vote for the amendment, but under the control of the Democratic majority the Senate has recessed for six weeks without making any provision for action on this important amendment.
"In justice to the women who have been working so hard for the amendment it should be pa.s.sed at the earliest date, and if action is not taken on it soon after the resumption of business in the Senate there is every possibility that it will not be taken during this Congress, and the hard-won victory in the House of Representatives will have been won for nothing."
When they finally came to trial ten days after their arrest, to face the charge of "holding a meeting in public grounds," and for eighteen of the defendants an additional charge of "climbing on a statue," the women answered the roll call but remained silent thereafter. The familiar farce ensued. Some were released for lack of identification. The others were sentenced to the District Jail-for ten days if they had merely a.s.sembled to hold a public meeting, for fifteen days if they had also "climbed on a statue"
The Administration evidently hoped by lighter sentences to avoid a hunger strike by the prisoners.
The women were taken immediately to a building, formerly used as a man"s workhouse, situated in the swamps of the District prison grounds. This building, which had been declared unfit for human habitation by a committee appointed under President Roosevelt in 1909, and which had been uninhabited ever since, was now reopened, nine years later, to receive twenty-six women who had attempted to hold a meeting in a public park in Washington. The women protested in a
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body and demanded to be treated as political prisoners. This being refused, all save two very elderly women, too frail to do so, went on hunger strike at once.
This last lodgment was the worst. Hideous aspects which had not been encountered in the workhouse and jail proper were encountered here. The cells, damp and cold, were below the level of the upper door and entirely below the high windows. The doors of the cell were partly of solid steel with only a small section of grating, so that a very tiny amount of light penetrated the cells. The wash basins were small and unsightly; the toilet open, with no pretense of covering. The cots were of iron, without any spring, and with only a thin straw pallet to lie upon. The heating facilities were antiquated and the place was always cold.
So frightful were the nauseating odors which permeated the place, and so terrible was the drinking water from the disused pipes, that one prisoner after another became violently ill.
"I can hardly describe that atmosphere," said Mrs. W. D. Ascough, of Connecticut. "It was a deadly sort of smell, insidious and revolting. It oppressed and stifled us. There was no escape."
As a kind of relief from these revolting odors, they took their straw pallets from the cells to the floor outside. They were ordered back to their cells but refused in a body to go. They preferred the stone floors to the vile odors within, which kept them nauseated.
Conditions were so shocking that Senators began to visit their const.i.tuents in this terrible hole. Many of them protested to the authorities. Protests came in from the country, too.
At the end of the fifth day the Administration succ.u.mbed to the hunger strike and released the prisoners, trembling with weakness, some of them with chills and some of them in a high
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fever, scarcely able even to walk to the ambulance or motor car.
We had won from the Administration, however, a concession to our protest. Prior to the release of the prisoners we had announced that in spite of the previous arrests a second protest meeting would be held on the same spot. A permit to hold this second protest meeting was granted us.