This is a list of Missouri suffragists, suffrage groups and others associated with the cause of women's suffrage in Missouri. This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (September 2020) Groups St. Louis Equal Suffrage League traveling across Missouri in 1916 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 Phoebe W. Couzins 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 B. Gratz Brown.[41] Perl Decker (Joplin).[42] Publications The Missouri Woman.[43] Places St. Louis Mercantile Library.[44][45] Suffragists who campaigned in Missouri Marthasville, Missouri suffrage meeting in 1914 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 Timeline of women's suffrage in Missouri Women's suffrage in Missouri Women's suffrage in the United States References [1]Morris 1930, p. 79. [2]"Missouri Women: Suffrage to Statecraft". University of Missouri. Retrieved 2020-09-21. [3]Van Es 2014, p. 26-27. [4]McBride 1920, p. 320. [5]Shea, Neil (2017). "Biographical Sketch of Victoria Clay Haley". Biographical Database of Black Women Suffragists – via Alexander Street. [6]McBride 1920, p. 324. [7]McBride 1920, p. 321. [8]McBride 1920, p. 322. [9]"Alma Nash & Her Band". Missouri Women. 2010-11-16. Retrieved 2020-09-21. [10]Morris 1930, p. 77. [11]Runyon 1920, p. 380. [12]Weigle, Florence E. (1920). "St. Louis Business Women's Suffrage League". The Missouri Historical Review. 14 (3–4): 384. [13]"Woman Suffrage Call". The Missouri Republican. 1870-05-27. p. 2. Retrieved 2020-09-24 – via Newspapers.com. [14]O'Neil, Tim (7 June 2016). "Events will remember suffragists who lined Locust Street in demonstration 100 years ago". STLtoday.com. Retrieved 2020-09-23. [15]Van Es 2014, p. 26. [16]"Woman Suffrage Association of Missouri Formed". St. Louis Historic Preservation. Retrieved 2020-09-21. [17]"Biographical Sketch of Libbie (Libby) C. Anthony". Alexander Street. Retrieved 2023-03-23. [18]Van Es 2014, p. 28. [19]Van Es 2014, p. 21. [20]Noun, Louise R. (1969). Strong-Minded Women: The Emergence of the Woman Suffrage Movement in Iowa. Ames, Iowa: The Iowa State University PRess. p. 97. ISBN 0813816025. [21]O'Connor, Candace (1994). "Women Who Led the Way". Missouri Almanac, 1993-94. Retrieved 2020-09-24. [22]Anthony 1902, p. 790. [23]Yunker, Jordan; Fabbri, Lia (2017). "Biographical Sketch of Myrtle Foster Cook, 1870-1951". Biographical Database of Black Woman Suffragists – via Alexander Street. [24]Van Es 2014, p. 24. [25]"Missouri and the 19th Amendment". U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-09-21. [26]Van Es 2014, p. 2. [27]Morris 1930, p. 78. [28]Ingels 1920, p. 382. [29]Morris 1930, p. 76. [30]Lopez, Noah (2020). "Biographical Sketch of Ida Joyce Jackson". Biographical Database of Black Women Suffragists – via Alexander Street. [31]"END TO MRS. FRANCES JENKINS". The Kansas City Star. 14 December 1915. p. 9. Retrieved 15 October 2022 – via Newspapers.com. [32]Anthony 1902, p. 791. [33]Anderson, Caiti (2016-04-22). "Minor v. Happersett: The Supreme Court and Women's Suffrage". State of Elections. Retrieved 2020-09-21. [34]Anthony 1902, p. 792. [35]Van Es 2014, p. 29. [36]"Two Opposing Conventions in Conclave this Morning". Chicago Evening Post. 1869-02-11. p. 4. Retrieved 2020-10-26 – via Newspapers.com. [37]Atkinson 1920, p. 302. [38]Scott 1920, p. 374. [39]"Alice Curtice Moyer Wing and Woman Suffrage in the Ozarks, 1916-1919". Missouri Women. 2018-12-23. Retrieved 2020-09-22. [40]Jones, Martha S. (2020-08-07). "For Black women, the 19th Amendment didn't end their fight to vote". National Geographic. Archived from the original on August 9, 2020. Retrieved 2020-09-26. [41]Morris 1930, p. 68. [42]Van Es 2014, p. 58. [43]Driscoll, Carol (July 2020). "Emily Newell Blair: Missouri's Suffragette". Missouri Life. 47 (5): 40–43 – via EBSCOhost. [44]"Woman Suffrage". The Missouri Republican. 1869-10-08. p. 2. Retrieved 2020-09-24 – via Newspapers.com. [45]"Female Suffrage Movement Organized for Missouri". Lancaster Excelsior. 1867-06-15. p. 2. Retrieved 2020-09-24 – via Newspapers.com. [46]"Virginia Minor". Historic Missourians - The State Historical Society of Missouri. Retrieved 2020-09-21. [47]Fordyce 1920, p. 290. [48]O'Neil, Tim (19 November 2011). "A Look Back • Suffragists meet in St. Louis in 1872". STLtoday.com. Retrieved 2020-09-21. [49]"Foley, Margaret, 1875-1957. Papers of Margaret Foley, 1847-1968". Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America. Retrieved 7 August 2024. [50]"Salinan part of Kansas Museum of History exhibit". Salina Post. 2020-03-11. Retrieved 2024-09-15. [51]"Lecture by Mrs. Mary A. Livermore". The Missouri Republican. 1871-02-04. p. 2. Retrieved 2020-09-24 – via Newspapers.com. [52]Atkinson 1920, p. 301. [53]Cooperman, Jeannette (2020-04-28). "St. Louis suffragists played a key role in advocating for the 19th Amendment 100 years ago". St. Louis Magazine. Retrieved 2020-09-21. Sources Anthony, Susan B. (1902). Anthony, Susan B.; Harper, Ida Husted (eds.). The History of Woman Suffrage. Vol. 4. Indianapolis: The Hollenbeck Press. Atkinson, Florence (1920). "'Middle Ages' of Equal Suffrage in Missouri". The Missouri Historical Review. 14 (3–4): 299–306. Fordyce, Christine Orrick (1920). "Early Beginnings". The Missouri Historical Review. 14 (3–4): 288–299. Ingels, Rosa Russell (1920). "Woman Suffrage in Columbia". The Missouri Historical Review. 14 (3–4): 381–383. McBride, Mrs. Thomas (1920). "The Part of the Kansas City Equal Suffrage League in the Campaign for Equal Suffrage". The Missouri Historical Review. 14 (3–4): 320–327. Morris, Monia Cook (October 1930). "The History of Woman Suffrage in Missouri, 1867-1901". Missouri Historical Review. 25 (1): 67–82. Runyon, Laura L. (1920). "Woman Suffrage in Warrensburg". The Missouri Historical Review. 14 (3–4): 380–381. Scott, Mary Semple (1920). "The Missouri Woman". The Missouri Historical Review. 14 (3–4): 372–377. Van Es, Mark A. (April 2014). Peculiar History of Women's Suffrage in Jasper County, Missouri (Master of Arts thesis). Pittsburg State University. Wikiwand - on Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.