Showing posts with label suffrage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label suffrage. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Additional Resources Added to ExploreUK

Online and open access to archival resources is more important now than ever in light of the COVID-19 pandemic and racial unrest across the United States and beyond. With that in mind, SCRC is happy to announce the following collections are available on ExploreUK.

Norman Family papers

The Norman family papers (dated 1787, 1877-1899; 0.2 cubic feet; 2 folders) consist of a mathematics copybook written by Reuben Norman for his son Caleb Norman. The copybook contains significant handwritten marginalia from Caleb as well as many others. The collection also includes several letters from the late nineteenth century, including one written by L.C. Norman, president of the Old McBrayer Distilling Company in 1899.


Cassius M. Clay journal

The Cassius M. Clay journal and papers (dated 1826-1941, undated; 0.25 cubic feet; 1 box, 2 folders) primarily comprises a journal kept by abolitionist Cassius M. Clay to document financial and business transactions.

Jewish Federation of the Bluegrass records bulletins and newspapers

The Jewish Federation of the Bluegrass records (dated 1939-2015, bulk 1977-2011; 6.07 cubic feet and 13.7 gigabytes; 11 boxes, 2 items, and 14,228 digital files) contain administrative records, publications, bulletins, financial records, photographs, meeting minutes, committee records, ledger books, and digital files documenting the community events, activities, and operation of the Jewish Federation of the Bluegrass. The bulletins and newspapers have been digitized

Richard B. Isenhour architectural drawings

The Richard B. Isenhour architectural drawings (dated 1952-1989; 4 cubic feet; 14 folders) comprise design drawings for 80 residences and one medical building designed by architect Richard B. Isenhour, with most of the properties in Lexington, Kentucky, but also including structures in South Carolina, Florida, and North Carolina from 1952 to 1989.

Kentucky Negro Education Association journals

The Kentucky Negro Education Association journals (dated 1916-1952, 68 volumes) include proceedings of the organization's meetings and official publications. The organization was formed when State Superintendent of Public Instruction H. A. Henderson in 1877 when he gathered 45 Negro educators and trustees to form the State Association of Colored Teachers. In 1913 it was renamed the Kentucky Negro Educational Association (KNEA). This representative body of Kentucky's Negro educators was an influential lobbying group for education issues. Annual conferences were held in Louisville, KY. In response to desegregation, the organization was renamed the Kentucky Teachers Association, though it was still referred to in general conversation as KNEA. In 1956, KNEA was subsumed into the formerly all white Kentucky Education Association. KNEA was the predecessor to present day organizations such as the Kentucky Association of Blacks in Higher Education. 

Laura Clay papers

The Laura Clay papers (dated 1819-1959, bulk 1906-1920; 13.63 cubic feet; 34 boxes, 2 folders, 3 items) consists of correspondence, pamphlets, periodicals, organizational records, petitions, scrapbooks, broadsides, programs, legal documents, and suffrage pins and ribbons, which document the career of Kentucky suffragist Laura Clay. These are in addition to the Laura Clay photographs

WAVE television Louisville, Kentucky busing films

WAVE-TV Louisville news coverage of the 1975 federal court order to racially integrate the Jefferson County Public Schools through busing. This court order was supported and protested through a number of public demonstrations and rallies on both sides of the debate. These are the edited news footage packages that were shown during the nightly reporting of the events and issues around desegregation of the Louisville, Kentucky public school system beginning in July and running through December of 1975.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Votes for Women

August 26 marks the 88th anniversary of the 1920 passage of the 19th amendment giving women the right to vote. In Kentucky, the name Laura Clay (1849-1941) is synonymous with women’s suffrage. Born to politician Cassius Clay and Mary Jane Warfield Clay, Laura was educated at Sayre Institute in Lexington, Kentucky, and observed her mother running the daily operations of the family’s 300 acre estate, White Hall. When her parents divorced in 1878, Laura’s mother was left destitute and homeless due to laws refusing women’s claims to property. Clay credited this as the turning point which led to her decision to fight for gender equality.

Working with Susan B. Anthony to organize suffragists in the state, Clay co-founded the Kentucky Equal Rights Association in 1888 and served as president until 1912. She was active in championing state legislation which led to increased age of consent, the right of women to enroll in formerly male-only institutions, women’s rights to make and sign binding contracts, and the right of women to control real estate. Clay was opposed to the ratification of the 19th amendment however, because she firmly believed in state’s rights and felt that the decision giving women the right to vote should have been made at the state, rather than federal, level.
After ratification, Clay became a founder of the Democratic Women’s Club of Kentucky, became the first woman to receive a vote for the presidential nomination in 1920, and ran unsuccessfully for Kentucky Senate in 1923. She was active in speaking out and writing letters on contemporary equality issues until her death in 1941.

Photos: Laura Clay and fellow suffragists marching for the Kentucky Equal Rights Association at the Democratic National Convention in St. Louis (top). Kentucky Governor Laffoon handing the gavel to Clay to ratify the 21st Amendment (Prohibition), November 27, 1933 (bottom).

For more information on Laura Clay, see the Laura Clay Photographic collection, and Laura Clay: Early Kentucky Suffragist.
-- JC
 
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