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Added on February 21, 2026
An eyewitness account of Jessie Haver Butler, a suffragist on the front lines of the women’s movement in 1920—with Alice Paul and Carrie Chapman Catt. During her long life devoted to women’s rights, Jessie lectured alongside George Bernard Shaw, Eleanor Roosevelt, Gloria Steinem and Marlo Thomas.Jessie escaped a childhood of unthinkable tragedies on a Colorado cattle ranch and went on to attend Smith College, which propelled her into the center of the fight for the rights of women.Inspired by meeting Susan B. Anthony at age ten, she later worked side by side with Alice Paul and Carrie Chapman Catt. When women won the right to vote on August 18, 1920, Jessie became the first official woman lobbyist at the Capitol in Washington, D. C. She also helped establish the Pulitzer School of Journalism and set the first minimum wage for women.Jessie went on to live in London, where she shared the podium with George Bernard Shaw, attended parties with Emily Pankhurst, influenced Queen Mary, and met her lifelong friend, Lady Astor. Jessie later taught women the art of public speaking. She wrote Time to Speak Up and lectured alongside Eleanor Roosevelt, Gloria Steinem, and Marlo Thomas. She spoke out for women’s rights throughout her life and well into her nineties.This timely memoir takes us back to the suffrage movement and the struggles that followed and includes unpublished letters from historical figures, as well as never-before-seen photographs. Jessie Haver Butler was an extraordinary woman, who lived her life with a spirit of adventure and open-mindedness. She was a mother, wife, and active community member, and her story weaves these threads together to complete her compelling journey—from cowgirl to Congress.
Born in 1886, Jessie Haver Butler was ahead of her time. This is her memoir taken from her own words by her granddaughter. Jessie was a suffragist and the first woman lobbyist. She was ambitious and persistent. She had no desire to get married and, instead, started a cooperative living arrangement with friends, one of whom she eventually married. He joined government service, and they lived in London for 8 years. Jessie always managed to find interesting and influential friends, including George
This was somewhat of a random book I selected to read. I hadn't studied much about this period of history. This ended up being an enchanting view into the life of a fascinating woman. She betters herself through education and persistence. There is an odd romance and a villainous hypnotic mother-in-law. The story goes from the US, to England and back again. She takes us through World War I, the Great Depression, and World War II. While I don't agree with her politics, I am thankful for the peek i
The content of this book is fascinating and informative, but the writing lacks depth and imagination. The author wrote the book as closely as she could to her Grandmother’s recorded and written versions of her life, so this may be why it read the way it did. Can’t say it was a great book, but I learned a great deal about women’s struggle for emancipation under the law.

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