
Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress, serving two
separate terms. She injected the first woman's voice into national political
debates. A committed pacifist, Rankin was the only member of Congress to oppose
entry of the United States into both World Wars.
Rankin, a lifelong Montana resident, was active in the woman suffrage movement
in the West, and campaigned for election to Congress after her state gave women
the right to vote. In Congress she sponsored legislation to provide federal
voting rights and health services to women. Her anti-war vote in 1917 cost her
her office, and she devoted much of the remainder of her life to pacifist
causes. She held leadership roles in the Women's Inter-national League for Peace
and Freedom and other groups. In 1940 she ran again for Congress on an
isolationist platform and in 1941 was the sole Member to oppose the declaration
of war on Japan. She later traveled extensively, studying with Ghandi, among
others. She was, at age 86, a proud marcher in the Jeannette Rankin Brigade in
the March on Washington to oppose the Vietnam War.
Additional Resources:Josephson,
Hannah.Jeannette Rankin, First Lady in Congress: A Biography.
Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1974.
Smith, Norma. Jeannette Rankin, America's Conscience. Falcon Publishing
Company, August 2002.
Block, Judy Rachel. The First Woman in Congress: Jeannette Rankin. Silver
Burdett Pr., 1978.
Jeannette Rankin: Activist for World Peace, Women's Rights, and Democratic
Government. An Oral History conducted by Maka Chall and Hannah Josephson.
University of California, Berkeley.
Papers 1879-1976. Radcliffe College, The Arthur & Elizabeth Schesinger Library
on the History of Women in America. Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Papers 1936-1950. Montana Historical Society, Library and Archives Department.
Helena, Montana.