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Mary Barr Clay

Mary Barr Clay
Mary Barr Clay
Mary Barr Clay, photo from Elizabeth Cady Stanton, et al, eds. "History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. III," 1886: 816
Born (1839-10-02)October 2, 1839
Lexington, Kentucky
Died October 12, 1924(1924-10-12) (aged 85)
Richmond, Kentucky
Nationality American
Other names Mrs. J. Frank Herrick
Occupation suffragist and farmer
Known for leader of the American women's suffrage movement
Spouse(s)

John Francis "Frank" Herrick

(married 1860; divorced 1872)

John Francis "Frank" Herrick

Mary Barr Clay (October 2, 1839 – October 12, 1924) was a leader of the American women's suffrage movement. She also was known as Mary B. Clay and Mrs. J. Frank Herrick.

The elder daughter of Cassius Marcellus Clay and his wife Mary Jane Warfield, Mary Barr Clay was born on October 2, 1839, in Lexington, Kentucky. Clay married John Francis “Frank” Herrick, of Cleveland, Ohio, on October 3, 1866. The couple had three sons: Cassius Clay Herrick (July 17, 1867 - March 1935); Francis Warfield (February 9, 1869 - May 16, 1919); and, Green (August 11, 1872 - 1948?). They divorced in 1872. She then dropped the Herrick name and took back her surname of Clay; she changed the last names of her two youngest children to Clay also.

In 1878, Clay’s parents also divorced, leaving her mother Mary Jane Clay homeless after she had managed White Hall, the family estate, for 45 years. This inequality galvanized Clay into joining the women’s rights movement, and she soon brought her three younger sisters with her. Laura Clay, the youngest, also became very active in the movement.

In May 1879, Mary B. Clay went to St. Louis, Missouri to attend the tenth anniversary of the National Woman Suffrage Association. She soon became a Kentucky delegate for that organization, serving as a vice-president. She was already a Vice President for the American Woman Suffrage Association. There she met Susan B. Anthony and arranged for the suffrage leader to speak in Richmond, Kentucky. Returning home she organized the Fayette County Equal Suffrage Association in 1879. The next year, she created the Madison County Equal Rights Association. While living in Ann Arbor, Michigan, to educate her two younger sons, she organized a suffrage club there. She became president pro tem of the convention in Flint for the Michigan State Suffrage Association.She also edited a column in the Ann Arbor "Register and spoke before the senior law class of the University of Michigan on the "Constitutional Right of Women to Vote." She submitted the Kentucky report in Volume 3 of the History of Woman Suffrage: 1876-1885.


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