Harriet Taylor Upton | |
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Born |
Harriet Taylor December 17, 1853 Ravenna, Ohio |
Died | November 2, 1945 Pasadena, California |
(aged 91)
Occupation | Suffragist, women's rights advocate |
Signature | |
Harriet Taylor Upton (December 17, 1853 — November 2, 1945) was an American political activist and author. Upton is best remembered as a leading Ohio state and national figure in the struggle for women's right to vote and as the first woman to become a vice chairman of the Republican National Committee.
Harriet Taylor was born December 17, 1853 in Ravenna, Ohio, the daughter of Ezra Taylor, an Ohio judge. In 1861 the Taylor family moved to Warren, Ohio, and it was there that Harriet attended school. Her formal education was limited to the public schools of Warren.
Taylor married George W. Upton, an attorney, in 1884. Their marriage would last for 39 years.
In 1880 Harriet Taylor Upton's father was elected as a member of the United States Congress as a Republican from Ohio, succeeding President James Garfield in the position. This entrance into the world of high politics provided Harriet with an opportunity to meet leading political leaders of the day, including Susan B. Anthony — the person who brought Upton into the movement to win the right to vote for women.
Upton was a key organizer and the first president of the Suffrage Association of Warren. She was also a member of the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) from 1890. In 1891, Upton hosted a conclave of women seeking equal rights with men, Ohio Women in Convention, in her home.
In 1894 Upton was elected as the treasurer of the NWSA, the leading national woman suffrage organization. She brought the headquarters of that organization home to Warren, Ohio from 1903 to 1910, the end of her tenure in that position. Additionally, Upton served as president of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association from 1899 to 1908 and again from 1911 to 1920.
In 1920 Harriet Taylor Upton was elected Vice Chairman of the Executive Committee of the Republican National Committee. She was the first woman to serve on that highest national body of Republican Party politics. She stepped down from this position in June 1924 in an attempt to follow her father into the halls of Congress, running unsuccessfully in the August Republican primary election in the Ohio 19th District for the House of Representatives.