Showing posts with label Equal Rights Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equal Rights Party. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Charles Stuart Welles



Painting by Welles entitled Lady from the late 1800s

Charles Stuart Welles, February 22, 1848 (London, Ont.) - February 5, 1927 (Little Brickhill, England)

VP candidate for Equal Rights Party (1888)

Running mate with nominee: Belva Lockwood (1830-1917)
Popular vote: 0 (0%)    
Electoral vote: 0/401

The campaign:

Welles was a last-minute replacement for running mate after the original choice and appropriately named peace activist Alfred H. Love declined the position.

None of the votes for the Equal Rights Party appear to be recorded.

Election history: none.

Other occupations: Physician, author, novelist, first Secretary of the American Embassy in London

Buried: Mursley, Buckinghamshire, England

Notes:
Also known as Charles Stewart Welles, or Charles S. Wells.
Frequently confused with Charles Stuart Faucheraud Weld.
Married to Ella Miles, the niece of Victoria Woodhull.
Worked at New York PolyClinic.
Educated at Dartmouth.
Born to American parents in Canada while his father was in railroad construction.
Moved to England in 1898 to be the physician for the American Embassy.
Descendant of Connecticut Colony Gov. Thomas Welles, distant cousin to Sec. of Navy Gideon
 Welles.
"Dabbled in poetry, painting, and hypnotism."
Worked in the American Embassy in London under Edwards Pierrepont, 1876, returned to America
   to be part of the Hayes campaign.

Sunday, May 26, 2019

Marietta Lizzie Bell Stow




Marietta Lizzie Bell Stow, 1830? (New York State) – December 27, 1902 (Oakland, Calif.)

VP candidate for Equal Rights Party (aka National Equal Rights Party) (1884)
VP candidate for National Woman Suffragists' Party (1892)

Running mate with nominee 1884: Belva Ann Lockwood (1830-1917)
Running mate with nominee 1892: Victoria Woodhull-Martin (1838-1927)

Popular vote 1884: 4194 (0.04%)
Popular vote 1892: 0 (0%)
                     
Electoral vote 1884: 0/401
Electoral vote 1892: 0/444

The campaign 1884:

This is the first presidential campaign in American history with two women on the ticket, and the first where a female is running for Vice-President.

The Equality Party Platform called for, among others things, equal rights for all Americans regardless of race, gender, or place of birth. The language was anti-alcohol but stopped short of prohibition. They called for an end to Indian reservations on humane grounds. And they urged a stronger civil service policy.

Stow was not exactly on board with the Party on a couple issues. She was caught up in the anti-Chinese racist hysteria of the 1880s and she took a libertarian view toward alcohol.

Groups of men would appear at Equality Party campaign events dressed in "Mother Hubbard" attire in order to mock the female candidates.

The Equality Party received over 4000 votes from eight states. Lockwood petitioned Congress after the election to look into what she charged was voter fraud in some jurisdictions and that her popular vote was actually much higher.

The campaign 1892:

The National Woman Suffragists' Nominating Convention selected Victoria Woodhull-Martin and Marietta Stow on Sept. 21, 1892. Since Woodhull-Martin was actually a resident of England by this time in her life, it is no wonder the 1892 campaign didn't really go anywhere.

Election history:
1880 - San Francisco School Director (Calif.) (Greenback Party) - defeated
1882 - Governor of California (Women's Independent Political Party) - defeated

Other occupations: teacher, President of San Francisco Women's Suffrage Association 1869, author, newspaper publisher, editor, lecturer.

Buried: ?

Notes:
Formed the Women's Independent Political Party in 1881.
Became an activist to revise probate law in favor of gender equality after the death of her husband
   Joseph Washington Stow on Aug. 11, 1874.
"Bell" was the surname of her first (apparently divorced) husband, Ezekial F. Bell. Their son Frank
 Arthur Bell died at age four May 18, 1855 from scarlet fever.
Born Marietta Lois Beers daughter of Wakeman Beers and Lois (Louise) Wood.
Died from breast cancer.
Stow convinced Lockwood to accept the nomination for President.
Was raised in the Cleveland, Ohio area.
Attended Oberlin College with her sisters Harriet and Salome where they were known as "The Three Graces."
Earliest person to run for third party Vice-President twice.
Massachusetts has also been given as her birthplace.
Co-editor of a quarterly entitled Frolic. "Mrs. Marietta L. Stow, who has just started a paper in Oakland, Cal., is nearly sixty years old, and she gives this breezy sketch of herself: "She set every type in this number of Frolic, took and corrected all the proof, and locked up the forms ready for the pressman. She never had but twenty minutes instruction in printing, and that after she was fifty years of age, and none in proof-reading, as the many typographical errors will bear witness. After celebrating her sixtieth birthday she will set type in the morning, swing on the gate, play games, and ride on her tricycle in the afternoon, and 'laugh and grow fat' in the evening. She only weighs 200 pounds now, and never had the toothache."

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Frederick Douglass








Frederick Douglass, ca. February 1818 (Cordova, Md.) – February 20, 1895 (Washington, DC)

VP candidate for Equal Rights Party (aka People's Party aka Cosmo-Political Party aka National Radical Reformers) (1872)

Running mate with nominee: Victoria Woodhull (1838-1927)
Popular vote: 0 (0%)            
Electoral vote: 0/352

The campaign:

Our brief thumbnail format cannot really give justice to just how far ahead of their time and how visionary both names on this ticket were. Even after a century and a half these two seem so modern. 

The fact that Woodhull was female and had an African-American running mate stirred up so much controversy that little notice was paid to her age-- she was too young to be President according to the requirements of the Constitution.

Douglass had no role in the campaign. He was nominated without his permission, did not participate in any electioneering for Woodhull, and apparently never made any public statement regarding being a VP candidate. On the contrary, he did some campaigning for Grant and was a presidential elector at large for New York for the Republicans.

The Woodhull/Douglass ticket did not appear on any official ballots but no doubt they did receive a number of write-in votes.

Election history:
1888 - Nomination for US President (Republican) - defeated

Other occupations: slave, preacher, abolitionist, author, newspaper publisher, human rights activist, US Ambassador to Haiti 1889-1891, US Marshal for Washington DC, Recorder of Deeds for Washington DC

Buried: Mount Hope Cemetery (Rochester, NY)

Notes:

Douglass quotes--

"I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of others, rather than to be false, and to incur my own abhorrence."

"I am a Republican, a black, dyed in the wool Republican, and I never intend to belong to any other party than the party of freedom and progress."

"Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground."

"No man can put a chain about the ankle of his fellow man without at last finding the other end fastened about his own neck."

"The great fact underlying the claim for universal suffrage is that every man is himself and belongs to himself, and represents his own individuality, not only in form and features, but in thought and feeling. And the same is true of woman. She is herself, and can be nobody else than herself. Her selfhood is as perfect and as absolute as is the selfhood of man."

"Whatever the future may have in store for us, one thing is certain; this new revolution in human thought will never go backward. When a great truth once gets abroad in the world, no power on earth can imprison it, or prescribe its limits, or suppress it. It is bound to go on till it becomes the thought of the world. Such a truth is woman’s right to equal liberty with man. She was born with it. It was hers before she comprehended it. It is inscribed upon all the powers and faculties of her soul, and no custom, law, or usage can ever destroy it. Now that it has got fairly fixed in the minds of the few, it is bound to become fixed in the minds of the many, and be supported at last by a great cloud of witnesses, which no man can number and no power can withstand."