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VOTES FOR WOMEN

Program
National Votes for Women Trail
Subject
Event, Site
Location
100 School St, Patagonia, AZ 85624, USA
Lat/Long
31.539422, -110.749447
Grant Recipient
National Collaborative for Women's History Sites
Historic Marker

VOTES FOR WOMEN

Inscription

VOTES FOR WOMEN
ARIZONA WOMEN GAINED VOTING
RIGHTS IN 1912. THIS SCHOOL
WAS 1915 VOTING LOCATION FOR
REGISTERED VOTERS, INCLUDING
MARY KANE & AMALIA VALENZUELA.
WILLIAM G. POMEROY FOUNDATION 2020

In November of 1912 Arizona made history by becoming one of only a few states in the U.S. to pass a suffrage amendment to the state constitution. It reads as follows:

The rights of the United States to vote and hold office shall not be denied or abridged by the state, or any political division or municipality thereof, on account of sex, and the right to register, to vote and to hold office under any law now in effect, or which may hereafter be enacted, is hereby extended to, and conferred upon males and females alike.

This new amendment provided women in Arizona the right to vote and to hold public office. Not surprisingly, women across the state were eager to exercise this new freedom and registered to vote. In 1915 the Patagonia public school house served as a voting location for many citizens including Mexican American women like Mary Kane and Amalia Valenzuela.  Only a short time later, women across the United States were give the right to right to vote with the passage and subsequent ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment August 18, 1920.