Virtual exhibit launched to commemorate history of women鈥檚 suffrage in Arkansas
During an event at the state Capitol, Gov. Asa Hutchinson proclaimed Feb. 7 鈥淲omen鈥檚 Primary Suffrage Centennial Day.鈥
A virtual exhibit by the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Center for Arkansas History and Culture showcases the history of the women鈥檚 suffrage movement in Arkansas.
The exhibit debuted during an event at the state Capitol during which Gov. Asa Hutchinson proclaimed Feb. 7 鈥淲omen鈥檚 Primary Suffrage Centennial Day.鈥The day marked 100 years since Arkansas gave women the right to vote in primary elections 鈥 three years before the United States passed the 19th Amendment, which established that right throughout the country. Arkansas was the first southern state to ratify the amendment. Representatives Charlotte Douglas (R-Alma), Vivian Flowers (D-Pine Bluff), and Deborah Ferguson (D-West Memphis) also gave remarks during the event, which kicked off three years of activities celebrating women鈥檚 suffrage. 听Participants wore suffragist-style clothing and gathered on the steps of the Capitol building to recreate a photo taken on Feb. 7, 1917, with then-Gov. Charles Brough to celebrate women鈥檚 primary suffrage rights in Arkansas.The virtual exhibit, 鈥淎rkansas Women鈥檚 Suffrage Centennial,鈥 features historic documents and photographs as well as essays and critiques on various aspects of women鈥檚 suffrage. Additionally, the virtual exhibit includes lesson plans and educational materials for teachers.听
AJ Walker completed a service learning appointment with the Center for Arkansas History and Culture and conducted research on Florence Cotnam, an Arkansas suffragist. Photo by Lonnie Timmons III/糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Communications.
鈥淐reating this virtual exhibit will give the world access to important resources and scholarly perspective on this critical leap in Arkansas’s long history of civil rights struggles,鈥 said Chad Garret, director of technology and digital initiatives for 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Collections and Archives. 鈥淭he fact that it’s online means that anyone can access valuable information on the struggle Arkansas’s women endured to access their right to vote and be full participants in our democracy.鈥The virtual exhibit is supported by a grant from the and the Department of Arkansas Heritage.The project steering committee includes representatives from the Arkansas Secretary of State鈥檚 office, the Arkansas State Archives, the Arkansas Women鈥檚 History Institute, the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, theCenter for Arkansas History and Culture, the Old State House Museum, and the MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military History.
For more information and to view the exhibit, visit the.In the upper right photo, attendees celebrate听鈥淲omen鈥檚 Primary Suffrage Centennial Day” Feb. 7 at the state Capitol. Photo by Lonnie Timmons III/糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock Communications.