Contents
Collection Overview
Biographical Note
Scope and Contents of the Collection
Organization of the Collection
Search Terms
SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL (1880-1958)
SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE (1892-1947)
SERIES III. WRITINGS (1902-44)
SERIES IV. SUBJECT FILES (1914-34)
SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL (1880-1958)
SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE (1892-1947)
SERIES III. WRITINGS (1902-44)
SERIES IV. SUBJECT FILES (1914-34)
OVERSIZE MATERIALS
|
Carrie Chapman Catt Papers, 1880-1958
Finding AidFinding aid prepared by Burd Schlessinger.Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.2003
| | | | | Creator: | Catt, Carrie Chapman, 1859-1947 | | Title: | Carrie Chapman Catt Papers | | Dates: | 1880-1958 | | Abstract: | Suffragist, president, National American Women Suffrage Association, and pacifist. Papers relate primarily to Catt's public life, primarily her work as president of both the National American Woman Suffrage Association and the International Woman Suffrage Alliance. There is a significant amount of material pertaining to her peace activities. There is also a rich collection of photographs, including many of the Women's Land Army, created in Great Britain during World War II to aid in the war effort. | | Extent: | 4 boxes(1.75 linear ft.) | | Language: | English. | | Identification: | MS 31 |
"One of longshore girls driving an auto truck."
Photo by Underwood and Underwood, 1917Carrie Lane Chapman Catt was born on January 9, 1859 in
Ripon, Wisconsin, the second of three children of Lucius Lane
and Maria Clinton. When Carrie was seven years old the family
moved to Charles City, Iowa, where she spent the rest of her
childhood. She taught at a country school until she saved
enough money to pay for college, and entered Iowa State
College from which she graduated in three years instead of
the usual four. In 1880, following her graduation, she
studied law before becoming principal of the high school in
Mason City, Iowa. She later became the first female
superintendent of the district. In 1885, Catt married Leo Chapman, editor-owner of the
Mason City Republican, which she helped him manage. Following
his death in 1886, she was employed in the newspaper business
in San Francisco, where she became increasingly aware of the
inequalities facing women in the business and industrial
arenas. Leaving San Francisco less than a year later, she
returned to Iowa where she began lecturing on the status of
women in the United States. Catt was convinced that women's
inequality was based on their lack of political power, and
she focused her efforts on women's suffrage. She joined the
Iowa Woman Suffrage Association and was elected State
Organizer in 1887. In 1890 she was invited to address the
convention of the National American Woman Suffrage
Association (NAWSA) in Washington, D.C., where she met
important suffrage activists, among them Susan B. Anthony,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Julia Ward Howe. Following the
convention, she married George W. Catt, a successful
hydraulic engineer. When Susan B. Anthony retired as
president of NAWSA in 1900, she named Catt her successor.
Catt used her position to forge new alliances with women
across the world, calling an international suffrage
conference in 1902. The conference was attended by
representatives from nine countries and led to the founding
of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance. By the time
Catt retired as president of NAWSA twenty-one years later,
forty countries had branches of the International Woman
Suffrage Alliance and twenty of these had enfranchised women
fully. After 1904, when she was forced to step down from the
NAWSA presidency because of her husband's poor health, Catt
turned her attention to achieving suffrage in New York State,
which she felt was critical to passage of a federal suffrage
amendment. Due largely to her efforts, which included
consolidating disparate city groups into the Woman Suffrage
Party (1910), and organizing and chairing the Empire State
Campaign (1913-14), in 1917 the New York State Legislature
finally passed a referendum granting women the right to
vote. From this point, the struggle for national women's
suffrage became more intense and Catt was an increasingly
charismatic symbol of the movement. During World War One she
was asked to take on the presidency of NAWSA once again, in
part to facilitate keeping the idea of women's suffrage in
the forefront of American politics. As a member of the
Woman's Division of the Council for National Defense, she was
able to push Congress to submit the Nineteenth Amendment in
June of 1919, and on August 26, 1920, the federal amendment
granting women's suffrage was signed into law. After suffrage
was won, Catt founded the National League of Women Voters to
help newly-enfranchised women navigate the election
process. Throughout the rest of her life, Catt worked tirelessly
for pacifism, disarmament, and the peaceful settlement of
international disputes, most notably by attempting to create
a common international program of peace. In 1925, she invited
international women's organizations to work together to form
a disarmament program at the First Conference on the Cause
and Cure of War in Washington, D.C. At this conference, a
permanent Committee on the Cause and Cure of War was formed,
comprised of the chief officers of the member organizations.
Catt served as chairman until 1933, when she retired. The
committee specialized in "marathon round tables" for the
study of international conflicts. In addition to being a prolific writer of editorials,
speeches and pamphlets on the women's movement, she
collaborated with Nettie Rogers Shuler in writing Woman
Suffrage and Politics (1923) and on her own wrote a book, Why
Wars Must Cease (1935). Catt was given honorary doctorates from the University of
Wyoming, Iowa State College, Smith College, and Moravian
College for Women. In 1936, during her fiftieth anniversary
celebration as a suffragist and pacifist, she was escorted to
the White House by the presidents of several national women's
organizations where President and Mrs. Roosevelt received
her. In 1940, Catt organized the last event of her career, the
Woman's Centennial Conference in New York, which celebrated
the first one hundred years of the feminist movement in the
United States. Carrie Chapman Catt died at home in New
Rochelle, New York on March 9, 1947 at age 88. Carrie Chapman
Catt Papers 3 Return to the Table of Contents
The Carrie Chapman Catt Papers date from 1880 to 1958 and
consist of 1.75 linear feet of material relating primarily to
her public life. Types of material include correspondence,
speeches, pamphlets, photographs, reports, journal and
newspaper articles, and political cartoons. The bulk of the
papers surround Catt's work as president of both the National
American Woman Suffrage Association and the International
Woman Suffrage Alliance. There is also a significant amount
of material pertaining to her peace activities, including the
National Committee on the Cause and Cure of War. Major topics
include federal- and state-level suffrage for women, the
peaceful settlement of international disputes, and building
an international network promoting women's equality. The
collection is compelling as a record of the lengthy struggle
for women's suffrage in the United States, and the powerful
network of women's organizations that sprang out of that
struggle. Catt published many short pamphlets describing her
vision of feminism and women's suffrage that may be of
particular interest to scholars. The papers also contain a
rich collection of photographs, including many of the Women's
Land Army, created in Great Britain during World War II to
aid in the war effort. Most women lived at home and were
transported each day to farms, where they hoed, weeded,
thinned, and harvested crops of all kinds; many supervised
youth platoons, especially teachers out of school for the
summer. A few worked year round, especially on poultry and
dairy farms, while others worked in canneries or were leaders
for recruiting other women. Return to the Table of Contents
Return to the Table of Contents
This collection is organized into four series: Return to the Table of Contents
SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL
(1880-1958) .75 linear feetThis series includes several biographical sketches as
well as clippings about Catt's political activities,
including women's suffrage and pacifism; her obituaries;
information regarding the Carrie Chapman Catt memorial
fund; and personal photographs. SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE
(1892-1947) .5 linear feetCorrespondence comprises roughly a quarter of the
collection. Of particular interest to scholars may be
Catt's involvement in political machinations surrounding
the naming of a new police chief in Washington, D.C in
1919. In addition, there is correspondence with state
senators and representatives regarding support for a
federal amendment granting women's suffrage; with
President Woodrow Wilson; with colleagues within the
National American Woman Suffrage Association; and
regarding her peace activism. This series offers insight
into the skilled political organization that was
required, and achieved in large measure by Catt, in order
for the women's suffrage movement to be successful. SERIES III. WRITINGS
(1902-44) .5 linear feetCatt's writings are extensive and include pamphlets,
articles, brochures and speeches written on behalf of the
National American Woman Suffrage Movement, the National
League of Women Voters, the International Alliance of
Women for Suffrage and Equal Citizenship, and the
National Committee on the Cause and Cure of War. Also
included are speeches promoting the adoption of a federal
women's suffrage amendment; memoranda regarding charges
that Catt had "communist sympathies"; and the Carrie
Chapman Catt Citizenship Course, a year-long segment
appearing in The Woman Citizen, designed to educate women
voters. SERIES IV. SUBJECT FILES
(1914-34) .5 linear feetThese files are comprised of a collection of
photographs documenting the Women's Land Army, a
collection of suffrage cartoons, and miscellaneous
writings and reports on subjects and activities
pertaining to women's suffrage. The photographs are
arranged in two folders with copies appearing first and
originals in the second folder. Similarly, the cartoons
are arranged in five folders; dated copies appear first,
followed by dated originals. Undated copies are arranged
in alphabetical order by title or by first word of text.
Writings include the Report of the Eighth Conference for
the International Woman Suffrage Alliance; miscellaneous
writings on women's suffrage, including an article
appearing in The Woman Citizen; and a program of the
Women's Centennial Congress.
SERIES I. BIOGRAPHICAL MATERIAL
(1880-1958) Box | Folder |
| 1 | 1 | Biographical sketch: articles and clippings,
n.d. |
| 4 | Peace activism,
1918-45, n.d. |
| 5 | Women's suffrage,
1915-34, n.d. |
| 6 | Memorials,
1941-58, n.d. |
| 7 | Memorial Fund,
1948-58, n.d. |
| 8 | Photocopies and duplicates,
1890-1938, n.d. |
| 9 | Originals,
1880-1938, n.d. |
| 10 | Book: Carrie Chapman Catt by Mary Grey Peck,
1944 |
|
| Clippings and poster,
1923, 1939, n.d. |
SERIES II. CORRESPONDENCE
(1892-1947) Box | Folder |
| 2 | 1 | A-Z,
1892-1947 |
| 2 | Brown, Gertrude F.,
1916-46, n.d. |
| 3 | Fast, Louise K.,
1934-43 |
| 4 | National American Woman Suffrage
Association,
1920-47 |
| 5 | Park, Maud Wood,
1918-44 |
| 6 | Wilson, Woodrow and Cabinet members,
1919-20 |
| 7 | Shuler, Marjorie,
1918-20 |
| 8 | U.S. Delegates to U.N. Conference,
1945 |
| 9 | U.S. Senators and Representatives,
1918-20 |
Box | Folder |
| 2 | 10 | A-Z,
1918-47, n.d. |
| 13 | Shuler, Marjorie,
1918-19, n.d. |
| 14 | White, Ruth,
1918, n.d. |
| 15 | Wilson, Woodrow,
1917-20 |
| 16 | U.S. Senators and Representatives,
1918-19 |
| 17 | Willard, Mabel,
1918-19, n.d. |
| 18 | Telegrams to and from Catt,
1918-20 |
SERIES III. WRITINGS
(1902-44) Box |
|
| 2 |
| Book: Woman Suffrage and Politics, by Carrie
Chapman Catt and Nettie Rogers Shuler,
1926 |
Box | Folder |
| 3 | 1-2 | Pamphlets and articles: NAWSA and others,
1908-43, n.d. |
Box | Folder |
| 3 | 3-4 | General,
1921-44, n.d. |
| 5-6 | "The Cause and Cure of War,"
1921-39, n.d. |
| 7 | Federal Amendment for Women's Suffrage,
1904-19, n.d. |
| 8 | League of Women Voters,
1920-30 |
| 10 | International Woman Suffrage Alliance,
1908-23 |
| 11 | Confidential memos re: charges of communist
sympathies,
1924 |
| 12-19 | Carrie Chapman Catt Citizenship Course, The
Woman Citizen,
3 Apr 1920-23 Apr 1921 |
SERIES IV. SUBJECT FILES
(1914-34)
| 6 | International Woman Suffrage Alliance:
Report of Eighth Congress,
1920 |
| 7 | Miscellaneous notes,
1917-18, n.d. |
|
| Women's Land Army: photographs |
Box | Folder |
| 4 | 8 | Photocopies,
1917-18, n.d. |
| 9-9a | Originals,
1917-18, n.d. |
| 10 | Women's Centennial Congress: program,
mission, and clippings,
1940 |
|
| Poster: Omaha League of Women Voters,
4 Dec 1923 |
|
| Clipping: New York Herald Tribune,
15 Jan 1929 |
|
| Article: New York Times Magazine,
7 Jun 1934 |
|