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A Golden State Suffrage Celebration” Sat 11/9 at the California Museum

Listen: Amanda Meeker, Executive Director of the California Museum

“California Votes for Women: A Golden State Suffrage Celebration” on Sat., Nov. 9 at the California Museum

Day of festivities marking the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment’s ratification in California includes free admission plus special activities honoring women’s suffrage from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

First Partner Jennifer Siebel Newsom will host the special event “California Votes for Women: A Golden State Suffrage Centennial Celebration” at the California Museum Saturday, Nov. 9, 2019. Marking the 100th anniversary of the 19th Amendment’s California passage, the event features free or reduced admission and special activities honoring women’s right to vote from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

“As a member of the national Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission, I’m thrilled to commemorate the state’s ratification of the 19th Amendment with the California Museum,” said First Partner Siebel Newsom. “The centennial gives us the opportunity to celebrate the brave suffragists on whose shoulders we stand, and to carry the spirit of the movement forward by fighting for the equality of all women across this state.”

The Nov. 9 event also kicks off the California Museum’s series of programs celebrating women in 2020. Created in partnership with First Partner Siebel Newsom, programming includes two new exhibitions currently in development highlighting the past, present and future of California women. The first explores California women whose achievements have helped create a more equitable society. Titled “California Women Inspire,” the new installation will open during Women’s History Month in March 2020. Next, a new temporary exhibition chronicling the history of women’s suffrage in California will open to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the passage of the 19th Amendment’s in August 2020.

Admission to “California Votes for Women” Saturday, Nov. 9, 2029, is free for the first 500 to claim a ticket athttps://CAVoteforWomen.Eventbrite.com or $5 when free tickets sell out. Both free and $5 tickets provide entry to view all current exhibits plus pop-up displays by the National Archives and the California State Archives. Visitors may also enjoy presentations on the history of women’s suffrage by Ida B. Wells’ great-granddaughter Michelle Duster, historian Robert P.J. Cooney, Jr. and children’s book author Laura Atkins; a screening of the 1917 suffrage film “Mothers of Men” shot on location in Northern California; appearances by suffrage reenactors; adding to a community quilt saluting African American suffragists and more from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The achievement of women’s suffrage through the 19th Amendment was the single largest extension of voting rights in American history. The movement persisted for more than 70 years and multiple generations of American women, whose tireless activism laid the foundation for the continued fight for women’s equality today. Although California was the 18th state to ratify the 19th Amendment on Nov. 1, 1919, the state first granted women the right to vote in 1911 through the passage of Proposition 4. The initiative passed by just 3,587 votes — a margin equivalent to a single vote in each precinct. However, Proposition 4 reenergized suffragists and spurred renewed efforts across the nation, which led to the 19th Amendment’s passage in 1920.

For more information on the event or a list of activities, visithttps://www.californiamuseum.org/cavotesforwomen.

Amanda Meeker

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