New York City s Suffragist Commissioner:

Similar documents
- Ladies Who Launch -

Hillary rallies women's support

Guide to the Dorothy Eisenberg Papers

Kate F. O Connor Suffragist Businesswoman Activist

Living the Volunteer. Spirit!

Theodore Roosevelt Leads America Into the 20th Century

THE VOTERS OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK BOROUGHS OF MANHATTAN, THE BRONX, BROOKLYN, QUEENS AND STATEN ISLAND

Aim: To become familiar with several major figures in New York history.

(I told you, the native country does not have a monopoly of the trade.)

First Woman Senator: Cairine Reay Mackay Wilson ( )

We are now going to present the Boston Bar Association's first Lifetime. Achievement Award to John J. Curtin, Jr., the ultimate Citizen Lawyer.

But through the fog of economic struggle and the distant smoke of world war, a new hero rises. His name is Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

From Prosperity to Depression: From Prosperity to Depression:

NICOLE A. GORDON. PREVIOUS The Marshall Project EMPLOYMENT Executive Director Apr. 1-Sept. 30, 2014

December 17, Please accept my application for the interim Commission vacancy in Seat 1.

The Economy and the United States Government s-1930 s

Name Date MOD. fireside chat informal in which FDR. FDIC Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; government agency that. and generate power

Larry. Lawrence P. "Larry" Simon, Jr.

OUR PLANET IN OUR HANDS

Release after August 13, 2007 Contact: Randall R. Morton President. Gloria Steinem Leads Fall Season Which Includes James Hansen and Ken Burns

Early life:

Mary Grace Canfield ( ) Papers, Doc 419 Ms Size B, Ms Size C

Census Response Rate, 1970 to 1990, and Projected Response Rate in 2000

The 2020 Census: Preparing for the Road Ahead

AFSCME Local 2627 NYC Electronic Data Processing Personnel General Membership Meeting Minutes May 19,2009

The Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute

Patent Masters Symposium

Katharine D. Kane, 78; Boston s first female deputy mayor

Tiffany D. Gehrke. Associate. Tel

IN MEMORY OF. Shirley Mount Hufstedler. U.S. Secretary of Education

ANTELOPE VALLEY WATERMASTER LANDOWNER REPRESENTATIVE NOMINATIONS CANDIDATE QUALIFICATIONS FROM NOMINATION FORM

Corporate Social Responsibility: Historical Perspective

M E M O R A N D U M. Tampa Connection Class and Board Members. Brian Holliday, Erin McKenny, Rick Garrett, and Amanda Edwards

IN MEMORIAM GIDEON S. IVES ( ) RAMSEY COUNTY DISTRICT COURT RAMSEY COUNTY BAR ASSOCIATION APRIL 7, 1928

Election Notice. Notice of Election and Ballots for FINRA Small Firm NAC Member Seat. October 16, Ballots Due: November 15, 2018

Obscure Objects: Ruth Law s World War I Liberty Bond Leaflet

Robert D. Luskin. Washington, D.C. Practice Areas. Admissions. Education. Partner, Litigation Department

Theodore Roosevelt. Bryan Gilbert

By : Ms. Susan M. Pojer Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

Nicole Austin-Hillery is the first Director and Counsel of the Brennan Center s Washington, D.C. office, which she opened in March 2008.

Theodore Roosevelt. 1. Theodore Roosevelt ( ) a. Childhood

William Hodson. Memorial. for. Hennepin County Bar Association District Court Minneapolis, Minnesota Saturday, February 27, 1943

Anonymous registration: Supporting survivors of domestic abuse to register to vote

Kathleen Straus. 3 linear feet (3 SB) , bulk

VICTORIA WOODHULL. Woodhull, died on June 10, 1927, at Norton Park in Bredon's Norton, Worcestershire, near Tewkesbury, England, United Kingdom.

Prior Employ, United States Department of Agriculture Analyst, Division of Program Surveys (Public Opinion Surveys)

A Guide to the Harold E. Stassen Papers

THE NEW YORK BAR FOUNDATION 2016 The Honorable Judith S. Kaye Commercial and Federal Litigation Scholarship

Edward D. Re Papers CMS.118

CFC ). $20 $ (1973) 12 ( CWRU

Maiden Names: Unlocking the mystery of the Mrs. Jim Lawson Professional Genealogist

UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION Washington, D.C FORM 8-K

Judge Patricia L. West

Featuring Author Bryan Miller

THE STATE BAR OF CALIFORNIA

Attorney Business Plan. Sample 3

2016 Election Impact on Cherokee County Voter Registration

Elena R. Baca. Los Angeles. Orange County. Practice Areas. Admissions. Languages. Education

Finding Aid to The HistoryMakers Video Oral History with Joyce F. Brown

David M. Wirtz. Focus Areas. Overview

Alison N. Davis. Focus Areas. Overview

Instituto Laboral de la Raza 2018 National Labor-Community Awards

Bios. Portfolio Presentation Professors Ralph da Costa Nunez. William B. Eimicke. Steven A. Cohen. Charis Varnum.

SAN FRANCISCO MUNICIPAL TRANSPORTATION AGENCY

Dori K. Stibolt Partner

Stephanie Resnick Partner

19 TH CENTURY U.S. HISTORY TOPIC: GILDED AGE/PROGRESSIVE ERA HIST 457/557 WINTER 2017 MW, 2:00-3:20

B U R F O R D QUARTERLY

American political culture has long been a man's world.

Board Member Profile AEU Board of Directors

S0371 Hickey, Margaret A. ( ) Addenda, Folders, 249 Photographs, 1 Videotape

Patrick Miles Jr. Announces Congressional Run in MI-3 1 message. Pat Miles for Congress

Auburn Montgomery and the Montgomery Area Committee of 100 present. a. At the bottom of this section - please replace the Montgomery Chamber

Pamela S.C. Reynolds. Focus Areas. Overview

PRE-ALGEBRA. by Hope Martin

MINUTES LENOIR COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS. March 17, 2014

Can You Change This 5 Banknote? July 06, 2013 London, UK

The invention of new machines in Great Britain led to the beginning of the Industrial

James Zartman Papers on the Illinois Civil Rights Rally JZPICRR.KOEZ Finding aid prepared by Katie Obriot and Elise Zerega

BROWARD COUNTY PBA DAILY CLIPS

The F.B.I. Files of Richard T. Gosser By Timothy Messer-Kruse, October 1, 2002

RI President Ian Riseley

The Evolving Health Policy Landscape: What s in Store for 2018

UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI. Official Proceedings of the. Three Hundred and Twenty Eighth Meeting of the Board of Trustees. (A Special Meeting)

Nomination Letters to the Council on Foreign Relations Eric R. Braverman, MD

CHAPTER 37 PRESENTATION. Scarlett Bermudez Jocelyn Avella Bridgett Veliz Katherine Hernandez

Al Gore's mother, Pauline, dies at 92

SUMMARY OF MINUTES. Roosevelt Gardens Park

BOARD OF TRUSTEES MONROE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE MONROE, MICHIGAN (734) , Ext. 4311

A GUID CAUSE... THE WOMEN S SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT IN SCOTLAND

A. Philip Randolph. James Robinson, MA

Danney Goble, Professor of Classics and Letters, University of Oklahoma

( July 8, October 19, 1957 )

RUTGERS CONTACT: CLIFF

The Ad Hoc Inspector General Selection Committee is comprised of the following individuals including myself:

Make an Executive Decision to Fight Cancer.

Busting Graft and Boosting Budgets: How Oversight Authorities Can Expand Their Arsenals through Asset Forfeiture and Other Tools

HISTORY OF THE CALIFORNIA INTERSCHOLASTIC FEDERATION SOUTHERN SECTION (CIF-SS) THOMAS E. BYRNES

LILLIAN SHERWOOD COLLECTION. Papers, (Predominantly, ) 2 Linear Feet

CITY OF LOS ANGELES CALIFORNIA ER!C GARCETTI MAYOR. September 11, 2013

Transcription:

New York City s Suffragist Commissioner: 1914 1915 Correction's Katharine Bement Davis A Mini-History About the First Woman to Head A Major NYC Municipal Agency By Thomas C. McCarthy Director of Editorial/Communication Services Department of Correction 60 Hudson Street, New York, N.Y. 10013 Copyright 1997 by Thomas C. McCarthy and the New York City Department of Correction. All rights reserved.

KBD Chapter Pages KBD 1 Commissioner Becomes Suffragist Star -- 3 to 7 Appointment as first woman to hold city hall cabinet-level office propels Davis into woman suffrage spotlight. What was her background? KBD 2 Teaches 10 Years to Earn Vassar Entry $ -- 8 to 9 KBD teaches school for a decade (1880-1890) to earn her way into Vassar. KBD 3 At 30, This College Junior a Senior -- 10 to 11 Sews own clothes; works as astronomy aide to make ends meet. Tops class. KBD 4 Sets Up Model Home at World s Fair -- 11 to 15 KBD supervises model workingman s home at 1893 Chicago worlds fair. KBD 5 Heads Philadelphia Settlement, Aids DuBois -- 15 to 17 Settlement head worker Davis helps DuBois' pioneering urban social research. KBD 6 1st Female Poli-Eco Fellow Ph. D at U. of Chicago -- 18 to 21 U. of Chicago s first female Fellow in poli-economy first such to earn a Ph. D. KBD 7 Progressive Penology Movement -- 21 to 25 Progressive penology movement leads to establishment of Bedford reformatory. KBD 8 Bedford's First Superintendent -- 25 to 29 Josephine Shaw Lowell encourages Davis to be its first superintendent in 1901. KBD 9 JDR Jr. Funds Inmate Evaluation Lab -- 30 to 35 Davis plans, Rockefeller Jr. underwrites scientific lab to evaluate inmates. KBD 10 Davis Organizes Quake Victims' Self-Help -- 35 KBD, on vacation in Sicily when '08 quake hits, organizes self-help relief work. KBD 11 City Service -- 1914 & 1915: Correction -- 36 to 41 "Entire new order" at Department, marking emergence modern management. KBD 12 Cuts Drug Trafficking, Quells Rioting -- 41 to 45 Davis cuts jail drug trafficking, combats corruption, quells riot with courage. KBD 13 The Lady Was a Scrapper -- 45 to 50 Proves scrapper with critics. Stands strong against inmate racial segregation. KBD 14 City Service -- 1916 & 1917: Parole Panel -- 50 to 54 Davis creates, chairs City Parole Commission, the nation s first such. KBD 15 Pioneers Sex Surveys, Retires -- 55 to 67 Davis heads Rockefeller Bureau of Social Hygiene (1918-1928). KBD 16 Asilomar and Georgian Bay -- 67 to 77 Sisters buy islands in Georgian Bay. Later, live together at YW's Asilomar. Appreciations & Acknowledgments -- 78 to 84 Page 2 Copyright 1997 by Thomas C. McCarthy and the New York City Department of Correction. All rights reserved.

KBD 1: Commissioner Becomes Suffragist 'Star' Katharine Bement Davis appointment as New York City Correction Commissioner on Jan. 1, 1914, made news across the country and around the world. For the first time in the city s history a woman had been named to run a major municipal agency. A uniformed force, at that! Davis had become quite possibly the country s highest ranking female municipal agency executive in terms of department size, status and powers. She had charge of 5,500 inmates in nine city prisons and jails operated by 650 uniformed and civilian employees with a $2 million annual budget. Setting: Suffrage Struggle Her elevation to that position was a breathtaking development in the midst of the suffrage struggle then taking place. That issue framed public discussion of her appointment despite Mayor John Purroy Mitchel s disclaimer that he had named her because she has the training, the experience and point of view that I desire for the Commissioner of Correction. The experience he cited only heightened the gender focus: Davis 13 years as superintendent at the state s Bedford Hills reformatory for women. Under her, it had gained national and international recognition for penal reforms. The Brooklyn Eagle hailed the appointment of a prison executive who has conspicuously made good. But the paper felt obliged to dismiss the notion that the move was a chivalric tribute to women s interest in city government. The New York Times editorial voiced the feeling among those familiar with the work of the department that a woman who undertakes it will have need of all the courage and firmness and sound judgment that are a man s part and that are the part of few women. Spokeswomen for the national and state anti-suffrage associations applauded Davis appointment. They argued it demonstrated voting rights were not necessary in order to have qualified women in high government positions. The Antis statements ignored the well-known fact that Teddy Roosevelt s pro-suffrage Progressive Party helped mount the successful 1913 mayoral can- New York City's Suffragist Commissioner: Correction's Katharine Bement Davis Page 3

didacy of Mitchel. Since suffragists support, albeit nonvoting, had helped elect him mayor, his appointing a woman to some post deep within the administration, while noteworthy, would hardly have been surprising. What astounded Mitchel s friends, foes and observers was the then-extraordinarily high level of the post he chose as well as the extraordinary woman with high credentials he picked to fill it. Newspapers harped upon the gender gap in reporting Davis first day on the job. One spotlighted the irony that she, a nonvoter, swore in a male voter as her deputy, Burdette G. Lewis. Another teased about whether she would introduce flowers and curtains into the department s dingy offices on East 20th street. She declined to comment negatively on the headquarters obvious and widely-known shabbiness. Instead she spoke in positive terms about planning the move into a suite of offices in then new Municipal Building about to open. Asked, Davis readily acknowledged being a third generation believer in woman s suffrage. Maternal grandmother Rhoda Denison Bement used to tell Katharine about having participated in pre-civil War abolitionist and temperance activities, and about attending the Women s Convention of 1848 in the Wesleyan Chapel at Seneca Falls, N.Y. The site is now a national women s history shrine as the birthplace of the Women s Rights Movement that next year marks its 150th anniversary. There Elizabeth Cady Stanton s call for woman s suffrage was adopted, but only after a strong support from black civil rights activist Frederick Douglass. Katharine s mother, born Frances Freeman Bement, was 10 years old when the women s rights convention was held in her home town. Frances was the last of eight children born to Rhoda and Jeremy Bement in that Finger Lakes community. Katharine was proud that she had been given the Bement family name as her own second or middle name. She never dropped it or Page 4 New York City's Suffragist Commissioner: Correction's Katharine Bement Davis

reduced it to a middle initial but always spelled it out in her large, sprawling signature. Any official agency letterhead of her own always included the fully-spelled Bement (believed derived from Beaumont ). Indeed, research indicates that only once she allowed it to be initialized on her stationery. That was part of a three-initial monogram on her personal stationery in retirement. Occasionally, when the printing of a document that included her name was not carried out under her direct control, her middle name might wind up reduced to an initial to conserve space. Sometimes her first name came out as Catherine. More often Katharine became Katherine, an e wrongly replacing the second a. 1st Woman for Statewide Office on Major Ticket Davis said that her situation at Bedford Hills had left her little opportunity to be active in the suffrage cause. That changed from Day One as Commissioner. The Woman Suffrage Party invited her to be a guest of honor at a New Year s reception in its Manhattan headquarters, and she accepted. Carrie Chapman Catt, the movement s national president, recognized Davis had what today would be called star quality. Catt called her a superwoman. Soon Davis was putting in a full day as Commissioner and then appearing in the evening as a featured speaker at suffrage meetings or as a member of a committee organizing suffragist action. On weekends, she would join other women marching in parades or holding rallies for the right to vote. She became a national vice president in the movement, the suffrage party s borough leader in Manhattan, and the suffragists Progressive candidate with the mayor s blessing for delegate-at-large to a State Constitutional Convention. Thus, Davis appears to have become the first of her gender ever to run for statewide office in New York on a major party ticket before women had gained the right to vote in state or national elections. Having outpolled the Republican presidential ticket nationally and elected a New York City mayor, the Progressive Party was a major party in New York State back then. Its 1914 statewide slate consisted of 15 at-large delegate candidates, including Katharine, and nine candidates for top state office. Its candidate for a seat on the state s highest bench, the Court of Appeals, won: Samuel Seabury whose later investigations of KBD 1: Commissioner Becomes Suffragist 'Star' Page 5

city government would lead to the election of fusion reform Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia. Also on that 1914 Progressive ticket were gubernatorial candidate Frederick M. Davenport, later four times elected to Congress, and U.S. Senate candidate Bainbridge Colby, later U.S. Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson. At a Cooper Union rally for the entire statewide ticket, Davis was introduced by Colonel Roosevelt himself. In affectionate deference to his own preference, New York newspapers regularly referred to Teddy Roosevelt as Col. Roosevelt, an allusion to his earlier Rough Rider days. Readers knew the Colonel was the former President. The ticket lineup appeared on the back page of a four-page campaign piece promoting Davis candidacy, complete with a hand pointing to the Davis name on the list. The opening phrase of the Davis campaign bio on the inside two pages declared: Katharine Bement Davis Nominated by the Progressive Party at the request of the Women s Temporary Committee of the State of New York for Representation in the Constitutional Convention. The non-partisan committee was chaired by Henry Street Settlement founder and leader in public health nursing, Lillian D. Wald. The suffragists had mounted Davis candidacy to spotlight the denial of voting rights to women. They also promoted other female candidates for the Constitutional Convention but these were either with minor parties and/or for district representation. Davis was the only female candidate for statewide delegate at large on a major party ticket. Helps Found Women s City Club Correction Commissioner Davis, undismayed by not winning election (that had not been the prime purpose), joined other forward-looking leaders of New York s woman suffrage movement founding in July, 1915 an organization planning ahead to when the vote would be won. That organization remains vibrant to this day: the Women s City Club of New York, whose initial purpose was to prepare women to take an active, informed role in municipal government as voters once that franchise was won. Other early club leaders included Eleanor Roosevelt, Progressive political strategist Belle Moskowitz and Frances Perkins who would at the U.S. Department of Labor during Franklin D. Roosevelt s Presidential administration become on the federal level what Davis had been on the New York City level the Page 6 New York City's Suffragist Commissioner: Correction's Katharine Bement Davis

first woman member of the Cabinet. Both Moskowitz and Perkins were married to members of Mayor Mitchel s administration. In keeping with its broad mandate, the founding members also focused the club s energies on improving city government and public welfare. One of the projects in which Davis, the Women s City Club and other leading women s organizations were involved was Women s Court. That was the name given to the place and process in which women arrested for prostitution and other vice-related activities were charged, arraigned and adjudicated. Through the efforts of Davis, the Women s City Club, and others, various procedural reforms and improvements in conditions were undertaken. Most proceedings were transferred from night to day sessions. That ended the previous practice of on-the-town, all-night revelers dropping into court to see the parades of arrested streetwalkers. The physical accommodations were upgraded. Segregation of first timers from hardened veterans was arranged. Various probation and social uplift services were offered. Early League of Women Voters Leader Katharine was among those suffragists who eventually succeeded in gaining the key breakthrough that signaled inevitable passage for the federal amendment New York State enfranchisement of women in 1917. By that time, she had become chairperson of the City Parole Commission. When passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920 successfully ended the national movement for suffrage, Davis (then general secretary of the Rockefeller-funded Bureau of Social Hygiene) was among those who helped Catt launch the National American Woman Suffrage Associations s successor organization: the League of Women Voters. Katharine became the League s social hygiene committee chairwoman and a district leader. In 1922, a national poll conducted by the LWV named Davis among the 12 greatest living American women. The suffrage struggle had served to spotlight Davis appointment, and she put her resulting high visibility at the service of that same cause. Katharine fully played the high-profile part that the larger historical drama had opened up for her when she stepped upon the stage of municipal government. But how did she come to be in that theater of action in the first place? KBD 1: Commissioner Becomes Suffragist 'Star' Page 7