
State legislature identification card, Betty Jean Clark Papers, Box 3, Folder IA Leg. campaign 1978-79
Campaign flag, Sonja Larsen Papers, Box 1, Flag
Women’s fight for political equality in the United States dates back to the birth of the nation itself. From the beginning, women activists understood that they could not claim their rights—economic and social as well as political—without the ballot.
The struggle for women’s suffrage was long and contentious. The last generation of suffragists, those who celebrated the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, rejoiced at their gains but soon found that getting the vote was simply the first step toward equal political participation. Prior to the mid-twentieth century, few women won elective office to state or national legislatures or executive positions. Instead, women reformers focused on grassroots organizing and political education. The 1960’s witnessed a new chapter in the women’s rights movement and with it, women activists’ renewed interest in electoral politics. In Iowa, women began to chip away at the male dominance of the state House and Senate. Early women legislators faced patronizing attitudes, derision, and even hostility from their male counterparts. They nevertheless persevered, laying the groundwork for those who followed in greater and greater numbers.
Over the past several decades, Iowa women lawmakers have crafted bills and worked to pass legislation that benefitted not only women but all Iowans. Today, the proportion of Iowa’s female legislators remains lower than women’s share of the state’s population. But if history is any indicator, Iowa women will continue to work toward political equality, establishing their own legacy while building on the work of those who came before.
Women’s Movement Timeline

1846
Iowa Achieves Statehood
1848
Seneca Falls, New York, Meeting on Women’s Rights
1850
First National Women’s Rights Convention in Worcester, Massachusetts
1855
Amelia Jenks Bloomer Moves to Iowa, Bringing Her “Reform Dress” (Bloomers) and Speaking Publicly for Women’s Rights
1861-65
Civil War
1869
Arabella Mansfield Admitted to the Iowa Bar, Becoming the First Female Lawyer in the U.S.
1869
National Woman Suffrage Association and American Woman Suffrage Association Organized
1870
Iowa Woman Suffrage Association Organized
1874
Women’s Christian Temperance Union Founded
1877
End of Reconstruction
1890
National American Woman Suffrage Association Organized
1896
National Association of Colored Women Established
1896
Plessy v. Ferguson
1902
Iowa Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs Established
1908
Suffrage Parade in Boone, Iowa, One of the First in the Nation
1914-18
World War I
1916
National Woman’s Party Founded
1920
League of Women Voters Founded
1920
Nineteenth Amendment Ratified
1925
Iowa Constitution Amended to Allow Women Legislators
1929
Stock Market Crashes
1935
National Council of Negro Women Organized
1939-45
World War II
1947-49
Edna Griffin Organizes Katz Drug Store Desegregation Movement in Des Moines
1950-53
Korean War
1961
President Kennedy Establishes the President’s Commission on the Status of Women
1963
Betty Friedan Publishes “The Feminine Mystique”
1963
March on Washington
1964
Civil Rights Act
1964
Gulf of Tonkin Incident Led to Escalation of U.S. Military Involvement in Vietnam
1965
Voting Rights Act
1966
National Organization for Women Founded
1968
Fair Housing Act
1972
Congress Passes Equal Rights Amendment for Ratification
1972
Title IX Enacted
1973
Roe v. Wade
1975
Fall of Saigon Ends Vietnam War
1978
Pregnancy Discrimination Act
1990-91
Gulf War
1991
Anita Hill Testifies in Clarence Thomas Supreme Court Nomination Hearings
1992
“Year of the Woman:” Record Number of Women Elected to Congress
1994
Violence Against Women Act
2003-11
Iraq War
2013
Ban Against Women in Military Combat Positions Removed
2017
Women’s March
2018
Record Number of Women Elected to the U.S. House of Representatives