List of Missouri suffragists
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of Missouri suffragists, suffrage groups and others associated with the cause of women's suffrage in Missouri.
![]() |
Groups

- Carthage Equal Suffrage Association, formed in 1897.[1]
- Columbia Equal Suffrage Association.[2]
- Equal Suffrage Association of Kansas City, led by Kersey Coates and formed in 1892.[3][4]
- Federated Colored Women's Clubs.[5]
- Jackson County Suffrage Association, formed in 1918.[6]
- Kansas City Woman Suffrage Association, formed in 1911.[7]
- Kansas City Woman's League, formed in 1914.[8]
- Marysville Ladies Marching Band.[9]
- Missouri Equal Suffrage Association (MESA) formed in 1895.[10]
- Political Equality Club of Warrensburg, formed in 1911.[11]
- St. Louis Business Women's Suffrage League, formed in 1912.[12]
- St. Louis County Equal Suffrage Association, formed in 1870.[13]
- St. Louis Equal Suffrage League, formed in 1910.[14]
- Wednesday Club, formed in 1890 by Kate Chopin and Charlotte Eliot.[15]
- Woman Suffrage Association of Missouri, formed in St. Louis in May 1867.[16]
Suffragists

- Penelope Allen (St. Louis).[16]
- Libbie C. Anthony (Jefferson City).[17]
- Annie White Baxter (Jasper County).[18]
- Emily Newell Blair (Jasper County).[19]
- Martha H. Brinkerhoff.[20]
- Margaret Burke (St. Louis).[12]
- Marie Ruoff Byrum (Hannibal).[21]
- Julia Shipley Carroll (St. Louis)
- Anna Clapp (St. Louis).[2]
- Sarah Chandler Coates (Kansas City).[22]
- Myrtle Foster Cook (Kansas City).[23]
- Adaline Couzins (St. Louis).[24]
- Phoebe Couzins (St. Louis).[2]
- Phoebe Jane Ess (Kansas City).[2]
- Edna Gellhorn (St. Louis).[25]
- Lucretia Hall (St. Louis).[16]
- Ella Harrison (Carthage).[26][27]
- Rosa Russell Ingels (Columbia).[28]
- Victoria Clay Haley (St. Louis).[5]
- Rebecca Hazard (St. Louis).[16]
- Virginia Hedges (Warrensburg).[29]
- Ida Joyce Jackson (Jefferson City).[30]
- Frances C. Jenkins (Kansas City)[31]
- Addie M. Johnson.[32]
- Marguerite Martyn (St. Louis).[14]
- Helen Guthrie Miller (Columbia).[2]
- Francis Minor (St. Louis).[33]
- Virginia Minor (St. Louis).[16]
- Jessie Moller (St. Louis).[12]
- Ella Moffatt.[34]
- Luella Wilcox St. Clair Moss (Columbia).[2]
- Alma Nash (Marysville).[9]
- Kate Richards O'Hare (St. Louis).[35]
- Barbara Blackman O'Neil (St. Louis).[2]
- Mary Whitney Phelps.[36]
- Florence Wyman Richardson (St. Louis).[2]
- Cecilia Razovsky (St. Louis).[12]
- Alma Gibson Robb (St. Louis).[12]
- Charlotte Rumbold (St. Louis).[12]
- Laura Runyon (Warrensburg).[37]
- Mary Semple Scott (St. Louis).[38]
- Martha Taaffe (Jasper County).[26]
- Genevieve Tierney (St. Louis).[12]
- Alice Curtice Moyer Wing (St. Louis).[39]
- Victoria Conkling Whitney (St. Louis).[1]
- Fannie C. Williams (St. Louis).[40]
Politicians supporting women's suffrage
Publications
- The Missouri Woman.[43]
Places
Suffragists who campaigned in Missouri

- Jane Addams.[28]
- Susan B. Anthony.[46]
- Ethel Arnold.[2]
- Florence Balgarnie.[22]
- Henry Blackwell.[32]
- Mary C. C. Bradford.[32]
- Madeline McDowell Breckenridge.[28]
- Mary Waldo Calkins.[34]
- Carrie Chapman Catt.[2]
- Marion Cole.[47]
- Hannah Cutler.[48]
- Dorothy Dix.[28]
- Margaret Foley.[49]
- Clara C. Hoffman.[22]
- Julia Ward Howe.[46]
- Mary Seymour Howell.[22]
- Laura M. Johns.[50]
- Mary Livermore.[51]
- Anne Henrietta Martin.[28]
- Lucia Ames Mead.[52]
- Lena Morrow.[34]
- Emmeline Pankhurst, invited.[2][52]
- Sylvia Pankhurst.[37]
- Frances Squire Potter.[52]
- Anna Howard Shaw.[2]
- Anna R. Simmons.[32]
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton.[2]
- Lucy Stone.[53]
- Charles Burlingame Waite.[47]
See also
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.