Skip to Content

Elmira College

  • Sign in to your Merit page
« Back to Recent News

Honoring National Women's Equality Day

Elmira, NY (08/27/2018) — Yesterday, August 26 marked the annual observation of National Women's Equality Day. In 1973, Congress designated that August 26 would, from then on, be a day to celebrate the passage of the 19th Amendment, giving women equal rights to vote.

Elmira College was founded in 1855 - a time when ideas about human rights and opportunity permeated much of the thinking in Upstate New York. The College was the first college founded to offer women a course of study equal in rigor to the top men's colleges of the time, and has a rich history in connection to women's rights and women's suffrage.

Documentented in the writings of Elmira College publications, Sybil, The Lepidotus, and the Elmira College Weekly, the women of EC held women's rights dear to their hearts. Letters, stories and pictures portraying the fight for women's rights were distributed across campus, while suffragist events were held on campus.

In October of 1915, the women of Elmira College held their own suffrage night, drumming up support across campus and the outside community. Modeled after the Seneca Falls convention, the students discussed and pushed their agenda to enlighten and generate support for the cause. Their efforts continued for years, until the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920.

In addition to supporting suffrage efforts, the College was home to important suffrage figures including graduates Mary Grey Peck, a secretary of leading suffragist Carrie Chapman Catt, and Alice Robertson (pictured on the right in the photo above), the first-elected congresswoman after the passage of the 19th amendment.

Today, National Women's Equality Day continues in the same spirit as our suffragist alumnae, and we celebrate the continued efforts to ensure women's equality.

View the digital archive of Elmira College's connection to the women's rights movement online.

Media Attachments

In addition to supporting suffrage efforts, the College was home to important suffrage figures including graduate Alice Robertson (pictured on the right in the photo above), the first-elected congresswoman after the passage of the 19th amendment.

Elmira College

Jennifer L. Swain, 607-735-1894, jswain@elmira.edu

Share this Story

  • Print
  • Email

Recent News

  • Elmira College Presents Term III Musical on May 19 and 20
  • Elmira College extends program expertise into career-focused programs
  • Students Are Soaring Into Leadership Thanks To New 10-Week Program
  • Elmira College Launches A New Website
  • Elmira College Again Ranks High In Multiple U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges Lists
  • New Sustainability Leaders Strive To Make Elmira College Better And Better
  • Elmira College Launches New Type Of Academic Support Program
  • Melissa Conroy Featured In Upcoming George Waters Gallery Exhibition
  • Washington Monthly Ranks Elmira College in Top 20
  • Elmira College Receives Grant from The Mildred Faulkner Truman Foundation
… View all recent news
Copyright © 2025 Merit Pages, Inc. • All Rights Reserved. • Terms of Service • Privacy Policy • Opt Out