In this petition to Congress, Amelia Bloomer requests that Congress grant her either relief from taxation or from her political disabilities. This petition was submitted to Congress as part of a petition drive organized by the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) calling for a constitutional amendment guaranteeing women’s right to vote. The petition closely follows a template provided by NWSA (for example, the Petition of Clemence Lozier).
NWSA encouraged women to personalize their messages to Congress by including their own reasons for desiring the vote. In her petition, Bloomer asserts that she endures taxation without representation: she pays taxes on property she owns and but cannot vote for her representative in Congress.
Bloomer was a temperance and women's rights advocate who also published The Lily, the first newspaper for women. She is also remembered as an advocate for changing the way women dressed, popularizing an outfit consisting of pantalones worn under a shorter dress, later called bloomers. At the time of this petition drive, she was a vice president of the NWSA. Amelia Bloomer’s petition was introduced in House of Representatives and referred to to the Committee on the Judiciary on January 15, 1878.
On January 10, 1878 Senator Aaron Sargent first introduced the joint resolution for an amendment to the Constitution that would ultimately extend the right to vote to women as the 19th Amendment, 42 years later. Petitions like Amelia Bloomer’s show how women acted to bring about change through their decades-long fight for the right to vote.Rights: Public Domain, Free of Known Copyright Restrictions. Learn more on our privacy and legal page.