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Saturday, April 26, 2014

Women's Suffrage Struggle

On April 21, 1920 in Montpelier, Vermont, four hundred women gathered in the pouring rain to support the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote. To show the intensity of the situation, they marched silently down State Street and into the State House where a large room had been set aside for their meeting with the governor. Rain dripping from their clothes, one by one, 14 speakers tried to convince the governor at the time, Percival Clement, to call a special session of the Vermont Legislature to ratify the woman suffrage amendment. There needed to be 36 states to vote in favor of the amendment to make the ratification process complete, and as of then, there were 35. The women of Vermont wanted their state to be the one to make it complete, adorning cards, posters and banners with the slogan "Make Vermont the Perfect 36".

Despite the pressure from the women, important institutions such as the state Supreme Court and the national Republican Party and important figures like ex-President Taft and presidential candidate Warren G. Harding, Governor Clement refused to call the special session. He labeled the amendment an infringement on the rights guaranteed by the State constitution. Although he said this, there were rumors he had refused because of pressure from the liquor interests in Vermont and elsewhere to deny women the vote. Either way, Tennessee ended up being the 36th state to vote in favor for the amendment.

It wasn't until February 1921 that the Vermont Legislature endorsed the woman suffrage amendment. By that time, the women of Vermont had already cast their votes in the presidential election and helped James Hartness become the new governor of the Green Mountain State because if he had been governor in 1920, he would have done anything to aid the suffragists.

The march of the women in 1920 had been planned and carried out by the Vermont Equal Suffrage Association, whose president, Dr. Marion Horton would come to be one of the twelve woman delegates from the National American Woman Suffrage Association to attend the International Woman Suffrage Alliance Congress in Geneva, Switzerland.

Although the march didn't have much of an affect on making Vermont the "Perfect 36", it did show Vermont how persistent and dedicated the women were, and helped them make the decision to vote for James Hartness who helped aid the women's rights movement.

Andrea Mead Lawrence

Born on April 19, 1932 in Rutland, Vermont, Andrea, born Andrea Bario Mead learned to ski at a very young age. Her parents owned and managed a ski resort at Pico Peak, Vermont and introduced her to skiing when she was three-years-old. She was a fast learner and her skills increased rapidly. When she was 15, she qualified for the 1948 Winter Games in Moritz, Switzerland. However, she didn't fare as well as she had hoped, placing 8th in the slalom, 21st in the Alpine combined, and 35th in the downhill. But since she now had the experience of being in the games, she won first place at the U.S. national championships in slalom, downhill, and combined. She then went on to win 10 international events and had two well-earned victories at the 1952 Olympics in Oslo. She was also the team captain of the Olympic team.

In 1951, she married fellow U.S. Ski Team member David J. Lawrence in Switzerland and had 3 children before the 1956 Olympic Games in Italy. Unfortunately, she only placed 4th in the slalom portion of the games and didn't place well in the downhill and combined. But in 1958, she was inducted into the National Ski Hall of Fame and carried the torch at the 1960 Games in Squaw Valley, California.  Sometime in the 1960's, Andrea and her family moved to Aspen, Colorado where she became a member of the town's planning board. Before divorcing her husband in 1967, she had two more children. Now with five young children and very little income, she moved her children and herself to Mammoth Lakes, California near Mammoth Mountain.

After retiring from competitive skiing, Andrea taught skiing and became active in environmental politics. She fought against development at Mammoth Mountain ski area and was elected as a Mono County supervisor in 1982 and served them for 16 years. In 2003, she established the Andrea Lawrence Institute for Mountains and Rivers, which was a non-profit organization committed to conservation, specifically in the Sierra Nevada mountains. Andrea was diagnosed with leiomyosarcoma in 2000 so upon her death on March 30, 2009, her organization was absorbed into another environmental nonprofit organization.


On April 19, 2010, a peak in Mono County was renamed Mt. Andrea Lawrence in her memory and on January 10, 2013, President Obama signed into law the Mt. Andrea Lawrence Designation Act Of 2011, naming a peak near Donahue Pass on the John Muir Trail "Mt. Andrea Lawrence". Andrea was also inducted into the Vermont Sports Hall of Fame as the class of 2012. On November 8, 2013, two non-profit Vermont organizations opened a new multi-use adaptive sports and youth skiing center at Andrea's home mountain of Pico Peak, Vermont. The now 'Andrea Mead Lawrence Lodge' at Pico serves as the permanent home and base camp for any non-profit missions of Vermont Adaptive Ski and Sports and the Pico Ski Education Foundation.

Not only is Andrea known for her one-time wonder feats at the 1952 Olympics, but also for her environmental good works that have inspired many.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Ann Story

Born Hannah Reynolds, Ann Story and her husband grew up in Connecticut, like most Vermont settlers did back then. They bought land in Salisbury, Vermont and in 1774, the Story family moved up to Rutland, Vermont while Amos and their thirteen-year-old son Solomon, went up to the property in Salisbury. Amos and Solomon cleared land for a farm and started working on a log hose that would eventually be the family's home. Unfortunately for the Story family, Amos died in the spring of 1775 while cutting down a tree, so Ann moved up to Salisbury with her five children. Fortunately, the cabin Amos and Solomon had been working on was finished when Amos died, so they moved into the house, planted crops, and fished and shot game for food.

The Revolutionary War began in early 1775 and many settlers left their farms in Vermont, but Ann and her family stayed. But by 1776, their cabin was burned down by Native Americans who were allied with the British army. Ann and her children rebuilt the house and this time, added a trap door so that is the raiders came back, the could escape through it. The tunnel led to a cave nearby, which became the family's hiding spot. Because her house was near Otter Creek, an important route between Lake Champlain and the Green Mountains, Ann became a spy for the Green Mountain Boys. She kept them informed about traffic on the creek and events in the woods.
Nobody knows what Ann looked like, but this is an artist's depiction
of what she might have looked like, defending her home. 

A Tory spy who supported the British, Ezekiel Jenny found the Story's hiding spot, so he tried to get information about the Green Mountain Boys from her, but even when he threatened to shoot her, she gave him nothing. He then left, without harming anybody. Ann immediately had her son Solomon send the Boys a letter telling them of Ezekiel's whereabouts. With the help of Solomon, the Boys tracked him and many other spies, captured them, and sent them to prison at Fort Ticonderoga. Ann's actions that day saved her family and Vermont, because if she had given information or not told the Green Mountain Boys about the spy, the Boys wouldn't have had the advantage.

After the battle of Saratoga in October 1777, the Story's home was no longer behind enemy lines, as it had been for the past year. She and her sons continued to help the Green Mountain Boys and expand their farm, and eventually, in 1791, Vermont became a state. The next year, in 1792, Ann married her long-time neighbor Benjamin Smalley who died in 1808, leaving Ann in great debt. In 1812, Ann then married Stephen Goodrich. They lived on his farm in Middlebury until she died on April 5, 1817 at the age of eighty-two.

Ann planned to move to Vermont to create a better life for her family, not become a hero. Her story has lasted all these years because her bravery, courage and resourcefulness made a difference. Both to her family and to the development of our lovely state, Vermont.