Her Hat Was in the Ring

How Women Won the Right to Run for Office in the United States

Jill Norgren author Wendy E Chmielewski author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:New York University Press

Publishing:9th Sep '28

£26.99

This title is due to be published on 9th September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Her Hat Was in the Ring cover

Reveals the untold story of over 6,000 women who ran for office between 1850-1920, expanding our understanding of women's fight for full political citizenship beyond suffrage

Her Hat Was in the Ring details the fascinating story of the thousands of women who ran for elective office in the United States between 1850 and 1920. Contrary to popular belief, women's right to vote and the right to hold elective office weren't always tied to one another. Whether women could become candidates, and for which offices, was determined by each state. For several decades after 1850, women ran for local and some state offices without themselves having the right to vote, motivated by the desire to advance women's rights and serve their communities as well as personal ambition.

Drawing on newspapers, state government reports, historical and biographical archives, and other resources, historians Wendy E. Chmielewski and Jill Norgren trace the legal, social, and cultural shifts across the country that made it possible for women to gain election to political office. This history is told through the stories of the trailblazing women candidates who ran in thousands of elective campaigns. Chmielewski and Norgren examine how these women were received in their communities, in male-dominated political parties and legislatures, and what administrative and policy contributions they made once elected.

This book expands our understanding of American women's demand for full citizenship, a struggle that included the successful battle for the right to elective office. At once comprehensive and deeply compelling, Her Hat Was in the Ring illuminates the revolutionary efforts of these candidates throughout this virtually unknown, yet fascinating chapter in American history.

"A highly readable study about the inspiring women who paved the way for female political leadership in America." - Kirkus Reviews

"An extremely well-written, well-researched, and impressive account about the thousands of women who ran for public office before the passage of the 19th amendment. The topic has been touched upon only tangentially in the past, and, in this essential study, the writers enable us to see how important it ultimately is to our understanding of the history of suffrage and of women's rights in America." - Kenneth Florey, author of Secrets of the Suffragists: Murder, Martyrdom, and the Occult on the Movement's Fringes

ISBN: 9781479847082

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

336 pages