THE WOMEN OF 1916
An historic display at the Christopher Hawken House and Museum
Nineteen-sixteen was a presidential election year just like 2016. It was a year charged with emotion, controversy and women’s issues—just like this year. Women were not allowed to vote in many states and that included the State of Missouri. To add salt to the wound the National Democratic Convention was held in St Louis on June 14, 15, 16, in the old Coliseum on Locust Street. The City was filled with politicians, the press, suffragists from all over the country. Hotels and restaurants were booked solid, the streets jammed with traffic.
Democrat President Woodrow Wilson was running for re-election. He was not supportive of allowing women to achieve the vote nor discussing a Constitutional Amendment allowing women the right to vote. So, St Louis that June was the perfect stage upon which suffragists could and did stage a gigantic demonstration known as The Golden Lane.
Each room of Hawken House has mannequins dressed in authentic 1916 attire and placards discussing a suffragist’s issue. In addition, on the lower level of the Hawken House is a display of late 19th Century, early 20th Century political buttons and memorabilia.
Press release with more info about the exhibit
Location of Hawken House in Webster Groves
Address: 1155 S Rock Hill Rd, St. Louis, MO 63119
Phone: (314) 968-1857
About the Hawken House
Archival footage from the 1916 Democratic Convention in St. Louis, MO
See photo of the women suffragists protesting silently at the convention
Caption reads:
See Fox 2 News feature on the Hawken House exhibit with Jane Porchey, the president of the Webster Groves Historical Society, discussing all that the museum includes.
See STLToday feature on the convention