Recorded at | March 04, 2019 |
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Event | TED-Ed |
Duration (min:sec) | 04:34 |
Video Type | TED-Ed Original |
Words per minute | 179.21 medium |
Readability (FK) | 38.07 very difficult |
Speaker | Michelle Mehrtens |
Official TED page for this talk
Synopsis
On March 3, 1913, after months of strategic planning and controversy, thousands of women gathered in Washington D.C. for the Women's Suffrage Parade -- the first mass protest for a woman's right to vote. Michelle Mehrtens details how the march rejuvenated the fight for the 19th amendment. [Directed by WOW-HOW Studio, narrated by Christina Greer, music by Bamm Bamm Wolfgang].
1 | 00:06 | On March 3, 1913, protesters parted for the woman in white: dressed in a flowing cape and sitting astride a white horse, the activist Inez Milholland was hard to miss. | ||
2 | 00:19 | She was riding at the helm of the Women’s Suffrage Parade- the first mass protest for a woman’s right to vote on a national scale. | ||
3 | 00:26 | After months of strategic planning and controversy, thousands of women gathered in Washington D.C. | ||
4 | 00:32 | Here, they called for a constitutional amendment granting them the right to vote. | ||
5 | 00:37 | By 1913, women’s rights activists had been campaigning for decades. | ||
6 | 00:42 | As a disenfranchised group, women had no voice in the laws that affected their– or anyone else’s– lives. | ||
7 | 00:48 | However, they were struggling to secure broader support for political equality. | ||
8 | 00:53 | They’d achieved no major victories since 1896, when Utah and Idaho enfranchised women. | ||
9 | 01:00 | That brought the total number of states which recognized a women’s right to vote to four. | ||
10 | 01:05 | A new, media-savvy spirit arrived in the form of Alice Paul. | ||
11 | 01:09 | She was inspired by the British suffragettes, who went on hunger strikes and endured imprisonment in the early 1900s. | ||
12 | 01:16 | Rather than conduct costly campaigns on a state-by-state basis, Paul sought the long-lasting impact of a constitutional amendment, which would protect women’s voting rights nationwide. | ||
13 | 01:27 | As a member of the National American Women Suffrage Association, Paul proposed a massive pageant to whip up support and rejuvenate the movement. | ||
14 | 01:35 | Washington authorities initially rejected her plan- and then tried to relegate the march to side streets. | ||
15 | 01:41 | But Paul got those decisions overturned and confirmed a parade for the day before the presidential inauguration of Woodrow Wilson. | ||
16 | 01:48 | This would maximize media coverage and grab the attention of the crowds who would be in town. | ||
17 | 01:53 | However, in planning the parade, Paul mainly focused on appealing to white women from all backgrounds, including those who were racist. | ||
18 | 02:01 | She actively discouraged African American activists and organizations from participating- and stated that those who did so should march in the back. | ||
19 | 02:09 | But black women would not be made invisible in a national movement they helped shape. | ||
20 | 02:14 | On the day of the march, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, a ground-breaking investigative journalist and anti-lynching advocate, refused to move to the back and proudly marched under the Illinois banner. | ||
21 | 02:25 | The co-founder of the NAACP, Mary Church Terrell, joined the parade with the 22 founders of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, an organization created by female students from Howard University. | ||
22 | 02:37 | In these ways and more, black women persevered despite deep hostility from white women in the movement, and at great political and physical risk. | ||
23 | 02:46 | On the day of the parade, suffragists assembled to create a powerful exhibition. | ||
24 | 02:50 | The surging sections of the procession included international suffragists, artists, performers and business-owners. | ||
25 | 02:57 | Floats came in the form of golden chariots; an enormous Liberty Bell; and a map of enfranchised countries. | ||
26 | 03:04 | On the steps of the Treasury Building, performers acted out the historical achievements of women to a live orchestra. | ||
27 | 03:10 | The marchers carried on even as a mob blocked the route, hurling insults and spitting at women, tossing cigars, and physically assaulting participants. | ||
28 | 03:20 | The police did not intervene, and in the end, over 100 women were hospitalized. | ||
29 | 03:25 | Their mistreatment, widely reported throughout the country, catapulted the parade into the public eye— and garnered suffragists greater sympathy. | ||
30 | 03:33 | National newspapers lambasted the police, and Congressional hearings investigated their actions during the parade. | ||
31 | 03:39 | After the protest, the "Women’s Journal" declared, “Washington has been disgraced. Equal suffrage has scored a great victory." | ||
32 | 03:47 | In this way, the march initiated a surge of support for women’s voting rights that endured in the coming years. | ||
33 | 03:53 | Suffragists kept up steady pressure on their representatives, attended rallies, and petitioned the White House. | ||
34 | 03:59 | Inez Milholland, the woman on the white horse, campaigned constantly throughout the United States, despite suffering from chronic health problems. | ||
35 | 04:07 | She did not live to see her efforts come to fruition. | ||
36 | 04:10 | In 1916, she collapsed while giving a suffrage speech and died soon after. | ||
37 | 04:16 | According to popular reports, her last words were, “Mr. President, how long must women wait for liberty?” | ||
38 | 04:23 | Though full voting inclusion would take decades, in 1920, Congress ratified the 19th amendment, finally granting women the right to vote. |