翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Kentucky Derby Festival
・ Kentucky Derby Museum
・ Kentucky Derby Open
・ Kentucky Derby top four finishers
・ Kentucky Derby Trophy
・ Kentucky Down Under
・ Kentucky Downs
・ Kentucky Drillers
・ Kentucky Education Association
・ Kentucky Educational Television
・ Kentucky elections, 2010
・ Kentucky elections, 2011
・ Kentucky elections, 2015
・ Kentucky Electrical Lamp Company
・ Kentucky Employers' Mutual Insurance
Kentucky Equal Rights Association
・ Kentucky Equality Federation
・ Kentucky Equality Federation v. Beshear
・ Kentucky Exposition Center
・ Kentucky Fairness Alliance
・ Kentucky Farm Bureau
・ Kentucky Fight
・ Kentucky Flat, California
・ Kentucky Folk Art Center
・ Kentucky Foundation for Women
・ Kentucky Fried Chicken murders
・ Kentucky Fried Cruelty
・ Kentucky Futurity
・ Kentucky Gambler
・ Kentucky Gazette


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Kentucky Equal Rights Association : ウィキペディア英語版
Kentucky Equal Rights Association

Kentucky Equal Rights Association (KERA) was the first permanent statewide women's rights organization in Kentucky. Founded in November 1888, the KERA voted in 1920 to transmute itself into the (Kentucky League of Women Voters ) to continue its many and diverse progressive efforts on behalf of women's rights.
Inspired by Lucy Stone during the national meeting of the American Woman Suffrage Association in Louisville in 1881, a group of suffragists formed the Kentucky Woman Suffrage Association, the first statewide suffrage organization in the South. Laura Clay served as president with affiliate groups in Louisville, Lexington and Richmond. Laura's older sister, Mary Barr Clay (vice-president for both Elizabeth Cady Stanton's National Woman Suffrage Association as well as of Stone's American Woman Suffrage Association) hosted Susan B. Anthony in Richmond in 1879 to speak on the need for economic protections for women. She then founded the Madison County Equal Rights Association, the state's first permanent women's rights association. Soon afterward, Mary B. Clay invited Lucy Stone to stay at her mother Mary Jane Warfield Clay's house in Lexington, and Stone mentored the creation of the Fayette County Equal Suffrage Association (later the Fayette County Equal Rights Association).
In November 1888, Lucy Stone invited Laura Clay to present a paper at the AWSA convention in Cincinnati. Clay agreed and invited all the Kentucky suffragists to join her there to organize a new statewide association. On November 22, 1888, delegates from Fayette and Kenton counties joined the four daughters of the former abolitionist Cassius M. Clay – Anne, Sally, Mary and Laura – to create the Kentucky Equal Rights Association (KERA). Though Cassius Clay strongly condemned the woman suffrage movement on moral, political and scientific grounds, his daughters led the movement for women's right to vote as well as for legal, educational and industrial rights for women.
The KERA adopted the Fayette County Equal Rights Association's broad platform of reform rather than focusing only on women's voting rights. The founding officers were: president, Laura Clay; vice presidents, Ellen Battelle Dietrick and MaryB. Clay; corresponding secretary, Eugenia B. Farmer; recording secretary, Anna M. Deane; and treasurer. Isabella H. Shepard. The leadership with only 66 members quickly organized campaigns with lectures and lobbying, writing petitions, newspaper columns and pamphlets, as well as organizing affiliate chapters around the state. They also encouraged women to enroll in institutions of higher education, hoping to achieve absolute equality in every profession. In 1890 a KERA petition presented to the Kentucky legislature was supported by 10,000 signatures, and by 1895 KERA membership rose to 400 members.
==Economic protection==
The KERA organized several campaigns to change the laws regarding women's financial dependency and economic rights. In 1894 Governor John Y. Brown signed the Married Woman's Property Act, spearheaded by Josephine K. Henry. A school suffrage act which gave all women in second class cities in Kentucky, specifically in Lexington, Newport and Covington, the right to vote in local school board elections and educational matters also passed. This law was rescinded in 1902 after it became clear that the organizational efforts by African-American women had a large impact in election results. Women consigned to asylums in the state gained strong advocates when, by 1898, the Kentucky legislators agreed with KERA that all state asylums should have women physicians.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Kentucky Equal Rights Association」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.