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Click each illustration
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By
1920, the clothes and hairstyles of fashionable women reflected
the increased freedom of women's lives.

The
vote and changing times brought new responsibilities for homemakers
as well as working women.

In November 1919, Holland's magazine published this humorous
celebration of a new voter.

Jessie
Daniel Ames reported in 1923 on the first four years of the
League of Women Voters.
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The
League of Women Voters
With the ratification of the Nineteenth
Amendment, the Texas Equal Suffrage League happily convened
in October 1919 and reorganized into the Texas League of Women
Voters. The League took on the task of researching issues and
candidates and providing citizenship education and support for
new voters across the state. Jessie Daniel Ames was elected
president of the organization and served until 1923.
In its early years, the League of Women
Voters published a monthly newsletter, conducted citizenship
schools, held poll tax and get-out-the-vote campaigns, and published
voting calendars, interviews with candidates, and citizenship
booklets. The League established a policy of providing objective,
nonpartisan advice, but it was active in projects of the Joint
Legislative Council (JLC), a lobby group for women's welfare.
As part of the JLC, the League endorsed measures such as a minimum
wage for women, better maternity and infant care, a ban on child
labor, jury service for women, prison reform, and improved rural
education. The League also promoted the participation of women
in all levels of politics.
As the years went by, the League of Women
Voters continued to be an active organization. It played a key
role in securing the secret ballot for Texans in 1949 and finally
helped win passage of a constitutional amendment allowing women
to serve on juries in 1954. Over the years, the League worked
for the establishment of family courts, the elimination of legal
discrimination against women, the revision of the state constitution,
abolition of the poll tax, reform of the voter-registration
laws, and better procedures for the selection of judges.
Today, the League continues its work,
publishing the Voters Digest to inform voters about upcoming
elections and the Texas Government Handbook for use in schools.
The Petticoat Lobby
The suffragists had long promised Texas
that there would be big changes in the state once women had
the vote. Now, with the vote won, the former suffrage activists
aimed to make good on their words. They formed the Joint Legislative
Council to lobby for causes of particular interest to women.
The Joint Legislative Council, headed by Jane Y. McCallum, represented
the lobbying interests for the Texas Federation of Women's Clubs,
the Texas Mother's Congress (later the Parent-Teacher Association),
the Women's Christian Temperance Union, the Graduate Nurses
Association, and the League of Women Voters.
The group was dubbed the "Petticoat Lobby"
by the male legislators, who were still shocked to find themselves
approached by genteel but assertive women. The JLC was particularly
effective in the legislative session of 1923. Their activism,
and the women's vote that backed it up, led to significant reforms.
The legislators found that they now had to pay attention to
issues that were of concern to their female constituents.
In 1923, the women successfully persuaded
the Legislature to participate in a federal program for women's
and infant health (something that states' rights advocates opposed).
They secured funding for a study on how to improve Texas schools.
They successfully pushed for passage of laws controlling the
disposal of contraband whiskey. And they achieved several significant
prison reforms, from more accountability for prison management
to improved conditions for prisoners.
In the 1925 session, the JLC obtained
better funding for rural schools, stronger child labor laws,
continued funding for the mother-infant health care program,
prison consolidation, and funding for a girls' correctional
facility. In 1927, they helped persuade the legislature to establish
a state board of education, an appointed prison board, and a
paid prison manager, and again renewed funding for the mother-infant
program.
By 1929, burnout and changing times were
taking their toll on the JLC. There was no longer consensus
among the women on prohibition, which was proving to be a failed
experiment. The Mother's Congress pulled out to focus on a more
limited agenda, as did the Texas Federation of Women's Clubs,
which wanted to return to being primarily a social organization.
Although the 1929 session saw successful passage of health measures
promoted by the graduate nurses, the JLC had lost the common
voice that had given it power in the early 1920s, and the organization
disbanded. Its legacy was permanent change in state policy on
education, prisons, and health care.
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