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Tuesday, April 4, 2017

Jeannette Rankin: Bright Star in the Big Sky, by Mary Barmeyer O'Brien -- Day 75




Jeannette Rankin was the first woman elected to Congress when she became a U.S. Representative from Montana in 1916, having campaigned hard, far and wide in that big state. Her colleagues in the House applauded her on her first day. On her sixth day in office she, along with forty-nine other lawmakers, bravely voted “No” to President Woodrow Wilson’s request for support in entering World War I, a vote consistent with her lifelong pacifist beliefs but ultimately costing her reelection to a next term. Her Montana girlhood had called for resourcefulness and hard work; she also inherited from her father “an easy, cordial way with others” and independent thinking, personal characteristics she carried with her all her life. While preparing for a career in social work after graduating from college in 1902, she became aware of Washington State’s campaign for woman suffrage and worked tirelessly for the cause. Moving back to Montana, she championed woman suffrage for the next four years and was rewarded when it passed in her home state in 1914. After her term in Congress, her years were filled with work for social welfare and peace. A founder of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, she was, by the 1930s, recognized nationally as a pacifist leader, speaking before Congress and elsewhere. Reelected to the House of Representatives in 1940, she was not the only congresswoman this time, but she was the only person who voted against the United States’ entry into World War II after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. In the years following, Rankin traveled widely, mostly to India as she studied closely the life and work of Mahatma Gandhi. In 1968 she mobilized women’s peace groups to march in Washington, D.C., as the Jeannette Rankin Peace Brigade in opposition to the Vietnam War, the largest march by women since the Woman Suffrage Parade of 1913. Said Rankin: “Wouldn’t it be too bad if we left this world and hadn’t done all we could for peace?” Her statue stands in the U.S. Capitol inscribed with the words: “I cannot vote for war.” Mary Barmeyer O’Brien’s biography Jeannette Rankin: Bright Star in the Big Sky, with a forward by Montana First Lady Lisa Bullock, is amply illustrated with archival photos and is a fine introduction to a principled woman. Ages 9 to adult.