Key Points:
§ In 1919 the U. S. Congress passed the nineteenth amendment giving women the right to vote. But the battle wasn’t over. The amendment still had to be ratified by three-fourths of the states. And there remained strong pockets of opposition, primarily in the South.§ The president at the time was - Woodrow Wilson
§ The state that found itself the “pivotal battleground of the nation” was Tennessee
§ One representative in particular was a wild card — Harry Burn, a twenty-four year old from a rural mountain district. Tucked in his pocket was a letter from his mother, insisting that he “be a good boy” and vote in favor of the amendment.
Harry’s mother, Febb King Ensminger Burn, carved a place for herself in history right alongside her son’s.
Here is the Mary Poppins clip (Sister Suffragett) followed by the Engine's transcript in its entirety:
Following an arduous, decades long effort by suffragists, in 1919 the U. S. Congress passed the nineteenth amendment giving women the right to vote. But the battle wasn’t over. The amendment still had to be ratified by three-fourths of the states. And there remained strong pockets of opposition, primarily in the South.

So President Woodrow Wilson convinced the governors of North Carolina and Tennessee to call special legislative sessions. The North Carolinian legislature voted down the amendment. That left things in the hands of Tennessee’s legislators. Unwillingly, Tennessee found itself the “pivotal battleground of the nation.”
The outcome was uncertain. Twelve years earlier, Tennessee’s governor had proclaimed “Let the women pray and the men vote,” a sentiment that still resonated with many Tennesseans.
Suffragists and anti-suffragists came pouring into Tennessee to influence the outcome. Political chicanery abounded. In spite of prohibition, liquor flowed freely as legislators met in closed door sessions with lobbyists on both sides. Suffragists from out of state asked officials to enforce prohibition laws. It didn’t happen. “In Tennessee,” the suffragists were informed, “whiskey and legislation go hand in hand.”
When the state legislature finally convened, the amendment quickly passed the Senate. But the House was another matter. Both sides had counted votes, but with so much back room dealing no one was sure of the outcome.


I’m Andy Boyd at the University of Houston, where we’re interested in the way inventive minds work.
Notes and references:
For a related episode, see AMERICAN WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE AND ALICE PAUL.
Special thanks to Professor Landon Storrs of the University of Houston Department of History for research materials used in preparing this episode.
A. Sims. “Armageddon in Tennessee: The Final Battle Over the Nineteenth Amendment.” In: One Woman, One Vote: Rediscovering the Woman Suffrage Movement. M. S. Wheeler, ed. Troutdale, Oregon: NewSage Press, 1995.
The “help us to win the vote” picture is from the Library of Congress. The newspaper clipping and text of Ms. Burn’s letter to her son are taken from the Tennessee State Libraries Web site.
cross posted @ Homeschooling Notebook:
http://homeschoolingnotebook.blogspot.com/2011/01/like-mother-like-son-episode-2675.html
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