Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 6.djvu/525

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HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

OHIO 509 in justice be made. Elizabeth J. Hauser from her childhood days until the Federal Amendment was ratified gave her life to woman's enfranchisement. Painstaking, fearless, unselfish and able, she labored cheerfully, not caring for praise or credit for the things she accomplished. A good executive, organizer, legis- lative worker, speaker and writer, she was a power in the counsels of the suffragists. To her more than to any other woman do Ohio women owe a debt of gratitude. 1 From the first gathering of Ohio suffragists in 1850 until Tennessee spoke the last word in 1920, few years passed when some suffrage measure was not asked for and few Legislatures went out of existence without having considered some legisla- tion referring to women. In 1894 a law gave them the right to vote for members of the boards of education. In 1904 and 1905, the Legislature was asked to submit to the voters an amendment to the State constitution giving full suffrage to women but the resolution was not reported out of the committees. In 1908 it was reported but no vote was taken. In 1910 it was defeated on the floor. This was the experience for years. Periodically attempts had been made to revise the State con- stitution of 1851 without success but the Legislature of 1910 pro- vided for submitting to the voters the question of calling a convention, which was carried in the fall of that year. The ention was to be non-partisan. The suffragists interviewed the delegates on putting woman suffrage in the new con- stitution and the poll was complete when the convention opened. The moment the president was chosen, the suffrage leaders asked for a friendly committee and from that time to the very last mo- ment they were at work. The proposition for a woman suffrage e was introduced Jan. 22, 1912; a pro-hearing was held February 8; an anti-hearing followed by a public meeting was 1 The executive officers who finished the work of the State Association were as fol- lows: Honorary president, Mr*. Francct M. Casement, Paincsville; preaident, Mrs. Warren; first, second and third vice-presidents, Zara du Pont, Cleveland; Dora Sandoe Bachnmn, Columbus; Mrs. J. C. Wallace, Cincinnati; corresponding secretary, Mrs. K s. Lima; recording M prel .1 Brandenburg. Oxford; treas- M.irt Deming, Warren; member of the National Executive Committee, Mrs. O. visson, Dayton. Chairmen: OrRaTii/ati-n Committee. Kli/.ihcth J. Hausrr. Girard; Finance, Miss Annie McCully. Dayton; Industrial, Rose Moriarty. Cleveland; Enroll- ment, Mrs. C. H. Simonds, Conneaut; member Executive Committee at Large, Mrs. Mal- colm McBride. Cleveland.