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10,000,000 Women Voters

November 22, 1922 — US Senate, Washington DC

 

Mr. President, in my very remarkable campaign in Georgia, which, contrary to precedent, all came along after I was selected, one of the very amusing things that came to me by mail was a cartoon from San Antonio, Tex. The cartoon represented the United States in session. The seats seemed to be fully occupied, and there appeared in the picture the figure of a woman who had evidently entered without sending in her card. The gentlemen in the Senate took the situation variously. Some seemed to be a little bit hysterical, but most of them occupied their time looking at the ceiling. Over the cartoon was written the wonderful words: “Will they ask the lady to take a chair?” I want to return my thanks to-day for the beautiful, hospitable welcome that you have accorded the lady when you gave her a chair.
 
I also want to return thanks to the noble men of Georgia. Georgia was very slow in her promises with reference to woman suffrage. She has been rapid to perform, for Georgia is the first State in the Federal Union composed of the 48 States, where one chivalric governor went to the front and said:  “Send that old lady there and let her look at the Senate for even day.”
 
The Senator elect from Georgia, Mr. George, said, “She shall have her day there,” and I want to thank him in their presence. He is a worthy successor. I want to plead for your gracious attention to him. He has been most chivalric. The sitting Senator from Georgia [Mr. Harris] has been most obliging. Indeed, I feel that I am the happiest woman in the United States. I am at home in the Senate for a day. I appreciate the wonderful hospitality and beautiful attention thus accorded to me.
 
I want to say further that I commend to your attention the 10,000,000 women voters who are watching this incident. It is a romantic incident, Senators, but it is also a historical event. If Lady Astor, from the State of Virginia, can go to London and be accepted as a member of the British House of Commons, you can take this remnant of the old South that has never flickered in her patriotism to her country and be very well assured that she is not going to discredit her commission.
 
Let me say, Mr. President, that when the women of the country come in and sit with you, though there may be but very few in the next few years, I pledge you that you will get ability, you will get integrity of purpose, you will get exalted patriotism, and you will get unstinted usefulness.
 
Mr. President and Senators, I thank you very much for this hearing.

 

 

Source: Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the Third Session of the Sixty-Seventh Congress of the United States of America (Washington, DC: Government Printing Office), 1922.