Advertisement

Elizabeth Hauser

Advertisement

Elizabeth Hauser

Birth
Girard, Trumbull County, Ohio, USA
Death
11 Nov 1958 (aged 85)
Burial
Girard, Trumbull County, Ohio, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Leader and suffragette. She had over a decade of writing experience for the Warren Tribune Chronicle and other papers which won her a job as secretary to Tom L. Johnson and editor of his autobiography, My Story. Hauser came to Cleveland in 1910 and was organizer and director of the Cuyahoga County Women's Suffrage Assoc. To increase the acceptability of supporting suffrage, Hauser wooed socially prominent women to attend lectures and luncheons, and allow their names to be used in conjunction with suffrage activities. The feminists collected 15,000 county signatures to present at the 1912 Ohio Constitutional Convention, which voted 76-34 in favor of submitting Amendment 23 for women's suffrage to a special election on 3 Sept. 1912. The Cuyahoga County Women's Assoc., which became the Cuyahoga County Women's Suffrage party, with the organizational framework of wards and precincts, built strong grassroots support that brought out the vote in the 1912 election. Though Amendment 23 lost, the machinery was in place for further campaigns. Hauser battled antisuffragists, financial difficulties, and uninformed attitudes with lectures, debates, bake sales, rallies, whistlestops, suffrage suppers, and pageants. When suffrage passed, Hauser and other former suffrage leaders formed the League of Women Voters of Cleveland to continue politically educating women, in which Hauser became a national officer. She never married and had no children.
Leader and suffragette. She had over a decade of writing experience for the Warren Tribune Chronicle and other papers which won her a job as secretary to Tom L. Johnson and editor of his autobiography, My Story. Hauser came to Cleveland in 1910 and was organizer and director of the Cuyahoga County Women's Suffrage Assoc. To increase the acceptability of supporting suffrage, Hauser wooed socially prominent women to attend lectures and luncheons, and allow their names to be used in conjunction with suffrage activities. The feminists collected 15,000 county signatures to present at the 1912 Ohio Constitutional Convention, which voted 76-34 in favor of submitting Amendment 23 for women's suffrage to a special election on 3 Sept. 1912. The Cuyahoga County Women's Assoc., which became the Cuyahoga County Women's Suffrage party, with the organizational framework of wards and precincts, built strong grassroots support that brought out the vote in the 1912 election. Though Amendment 23 lost, the machinery was in place for further campaigns. Hauser battled antisuffragists, financial difficulties, and uninformed attitudes with lectures, debates, bake sales, rallies, whistlestops, suffrage suppers, and pageants. When suffrage passed, Hauser and other former suffrage leaders formed the League of Women Voters of Cleveland to continue politically educating women, in which Hauser became a national officer. She never married and had no children.


Sponsored by Ancestry

Advertisement

  • Created by: Glendora
  • Added: Apr 26, 2011
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/68964646/elizabeth-hauser: accessed ), memorial page for Elizabeth Hauser (16 Mar 1873–11 Nov 1958), Find a Grave Memorial ID 68964646, citing Girard Liberty Union Cemetery, Girard, Trumbull County, Ohio, USA; Maintained by Glendora (contributor 46931045).