[On January 12th, 1932, Hattie Caraway became the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate. So for the 90th anniversary of that historic occasion, this week I’ll AmericanStudy Caraway and a handful of other political women—share your thoughts and your own nominees for an egalitarian crowd-sourced weekend post, please!]
On one
particularly interesting detail from each of Caraway’s
three Senate campaigns.
1)
1932: In December 1931 Caraway was appointed to
serve the final year of her late husband Thaddeus
Caraway’s Senate term, a practice
that had gone on for nearly a decade by that time. Caraway then won a
special election 90
years ago today, making her the first woman formally elected to the Senate.
But it was her announcement that she would run in the 1932
general election for Arkansas Senator that represented a truly original and
bold step, and she was able to win that controversial and groundbreaking election
thanks in part to the efforts of a Senator from a neighboring state, Louisiana’s
Huey Long. It was apparently Long’s idea to plant crying babies (who would
then be effectively quieted) in the crowd at Caraway rallies, a unique way to
acknowledge her gender while implying her ability to transcend any gender
stereotypes—as she certainly did in willing the 1932 election.
2)
1938: During her first term Caraway was a
dedicated supporter of Roosevelt’s New Deal legislation, as well as a committed
advocate for farmers and flood control and, unfortunately, a telling early 20th
century Southern Democrat (she took part in a filibuster
of a 1938 anti-lynching bill). She was also known as “Silent Hattie,” as she
generally refrained from speaking on the Senate floor. But if critics thought
her silence meant she wouldn’t run for reelection, they were mistaken; as was
her 1938 primary opponent, Representative John
Little McClellan, in his sexist campaign
slogan “Arkansas Needs Another Man in the Senate!” The primary was tight
but Caraway triumphed and then easily won
the general election, becoming the first woman to be reelected to the
Senate in the process.
3)
1944: Caraway sought reelection again in 1944
but placed 4th in the Democratic primary, ending her Senate career.
Part of that was due to a crowded field of compelling candidates, led by the winner
and next Arkansas Senator, a young up-and-coming Congressman named J.
William Fulbright. But part was due to her two boldest Senatorial stances:
her 1943
co-sponsorship of the Equal Rights Amendment, making her the first woman to
do so; and her 1944 co-sponsorship of the Servicemen’s
Readjustment Act (the G.I. Bill), which despite its eventual popularity was
at the time
quite divisive as it was seen by many as socialist. Those stands may well
have cost Caraway her chance at a third term, but they also reflected an
important step for this groundbreaking Senator, as she fully embraced her role
and voice and contributed meaningfully to these important and ongoing efforts.
Next political
woman tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other political women or moments you’d highlight?
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