Film Screening: “Citizens at Last” Texas Women Fight for the Vote
1938 Lohmans Crossing
Lakeway TX 78734
“With what high hopes and enthusiasms women stepped forth into a world in which they were citizens at last! ” – Texas Suffragist, Jane Y McCallum
About the Documentary:
Citizens at Last follows the early days of organizing, explores the strategic role Texas suffragists played in the national movement, and exposes the pro-Jim Crow policies of the anti-suffragists who stood in their way. Like all the former Confederate states, Texas saw women’s suffrage as a threat to white male supremacy. Because of Texans such as Minnie Fisher Cunningham, Annette Finnigan, Marianna Folsom, Jovita Idar, and Maude Sampson, Texas became the first state in the South and the ninth in the nation to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment. But it was a segregated victory. While white suffragists celebrated in major American capitols, African American women were left without the vote in Jim Crow Texas, and Tejanas were ruled by the South Texas bosses. Exasperated but undaunted, African American women and Tejanas continued their fight for equal voting rights until long after 1920. Citizens at Last elucidates the crucial role Texas women played in the long struggle for equal voting rights.