释义 |
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{{Infobox person | name = Grace Belden Wilbur Trout | image = Grace Wilbur Trout.jpg | image_size = | caption = Suffragist | birth_date = {{birth date|1864|3|18}} | birth_place = Maquoketa, Iowa | death_date = {{death date and age|1955|10|21|1864|3|18}} | death_place = Jacksonville, Florida | occupation = Women's rights activist | spouse = George William Trout | resting_place = Evergreen Cemetery Jacksonville, Florida | children = Thomas Wilbur Trout Philip Wilbur Trout }}Grace Belden Wilbur Trout (March 18, 1864 – October 21, 1955) was an American suffragist who was president of the Chicago Political Equality League. She was instrumental in getting the Illinois legislature to pass a law allowing women to vote in local and national elections. BiographyTrout was born on March 18, 1864 in Maquoketa, Iowa. She married George William Trout and had four children and had one son die in 1912 at the age of 21.[1] Trout became president of the Chicago Political Equality League in 1910, founded in 1894.[2] The league published pamphlets and circulated petitions to lobby the state legislature to grant women voting rights.[3] In 1910, Trout and other activists such as Catherine Waugh McCulloch made speaking tours of Illinois arguing for suffrage. Two years later, at the annual convention of the Illinois Equal Suffrage Association (IESA) on October 1–2, 1912, Trout was elected president of that association. She changed the IESA's tactics, setting new goals such as creating more local organizations and lobbying individual legislators to support suffrage.[4] A partial suffrage bill was introduced in 1913, permitting women to vote "for Presidential electors and for all local offices not specifically named in the Illinois Constitution", but not for state representatives, Congressional representatives, or governor.name="sorenson" /> Trout mobilized a public show of support and the resulting bill was passed on June 11 (83 votes for, 58 votes against) and signed by Governor Dunne on June 26, 1913.name="sorenson" /> Efforts to repeal or weaken the law in 1915 failed, in part due to the IESA's opposition.[5] When African-American Ida B. Wells wanted to march in a March 3, 1913 demonstration in Washington DC, Trout demanded that segregation be preserved to avoid offending Southern marchers who might boycott the event, and therefore all the black suffragists would have to march in their own group, not with their respective state delegations. While Trout was personally opposed to such exclusion, she was more concerned with avoiding the potential boycott.[2] In 1921 Trout moved to Jacksonville, Florida and became the first president of the Planning and Advisory Board and president of the Jacksonville Garden Club. She resided at an estate called Marabanong.[6] Trout died on October 21, 1955 in Jacksonville, Florida and was buried in Evergreen Cemetery in Jacksonville, Florida.[7] Published works- {{cite book|author=Grace Wilbur Trout|title=A Mormon wife|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1iYwAAAAYAAJ&pg=PP1|accessdate=17 February 2013|year=1912|publisher=Charles H. Kerr}}
- [https://www.jstor.org/stable/40194491 "Side Lights on Illinois Suffrage History"], Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, Vol. 13, No. 2 (Jul., 1920), pp. 145–179.
References1. ^Reeves, Winona Evans, [https://archive.org/details/bluebookofiowawo00reev "The Blue Book of Iowa Women"], Missouri Printing and Publishing Co., 1914, p. 295 2. ^1 McMurry, Linda O., "To Keep the Waters Troubled: The Life of Ida B. Wells", Oxford University Press, 1998, pages 304-306. 3. ^"Chicago Political Equality League", in the Encyclopedia of Chicago, Newberry Library (2005). 4. ^ {{dead link|date=January 2019}} 5. ^{{cite web|url=http://digital.lib.uiowa.edu/cdm/ref/collection/tc/id/16281|title=Grace Wilbur Trout :: Traveling Culture - Circuit Chautauqua in the Twentieth Century|website=Digital.lib.uiowa.edu|accessdate=5 January 2019}} 6. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.jaxhistory.org/gingerbread-extravaganza/|title=Gingerbread Extravaganza|website=Jaxhistory.org|accessdate=5 January 2019}} 7. ^{{cite web|last=Johnson|first=Marilynn|title=Grace Belden Wilbur Trout|url=https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/30003588|website=Findagrave.co9m|accessdate=10 February 2013}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trout, Grace Wilbur}} 8 : 1864 births|1955 deaths|American civil rights activists|American women's rights activists|American feminists|American suffragists|People from Maquoketa, Iowa|People from Jacksonville, Florida |