(center) and other women's rights leaders. Shaw sits to Anthony's immediate right. presiding, London 1909. Top row from left:
Thora Daugaard (Denmark), Louise Qvam (Norway),
Aletta Jacobs (Netherlands),
Annie Furuhjelm (Finland), Madame Mirowitch (Russia),
Käthe Schirmacher (Germany), Madame Honneger, unidentified. Bottom left: Unidentified,
Anna Bugge (Sweden), Anna Howard Shaw (USA),
Millicent Fawcett (Presiding, England),
Carrie Chapman Catt (USA), F. M. Qvam (Norway),
Anita Augspurg (Germany).
Joint effort with Susan B. Anthony Beginning in 1886, Shaw served as the chair of the Franchise Department of
Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). Her task was "to work for woman suffrage and then to use the ballot to gain 'home protection' and temperance legislation." However, her focus on temperance subsided as she became more heavily involved in the suffrage movement by lecturing for the Massachusetts Suffrage Association and later the
American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA). Shaw first met Susan B. Anthony in 1887. In 1888, Shaw attended the first meeting of the
International Council of Women.
Susan B. Anthony encouraged her to join the
National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA). Having agreed, Shaw played a key role when the two suffrage associations merged when she "helped to persuade the AWSA to merge with Anthony's and
Elizabeth Cady Stanton's NWSA, creating for the first time in two decades a semblance of organizational unity within the [suffrage] movement." Beginning in 1904 and for the next eleven years, Shaw was the president of NAWSA. Under her leadership, NAWSA continued to "lobby for a national constitutional amendment granting women the right to vote."
Resignation from NAWSA presidency During the early 20th century,
Alice Paul and
Lucy Burns,
NAWSA members, began employing militant techniques (e.g., picketing the White House during World War I) to fight for women's suffrage. They, like other members, were inspired by the success of the militant suffragettes in England. As president of NAWSA, Shaw was pressured to support these tactics. Nevertheless, Shaw maintained that she was "unalterably opposed to militancy, believing nothing of permanent value has ever been secured by it that could not have been more easily obtained by peaceful methods." She remained aligned with Anthony's philosophy against militant tactics. In 1915, she resigned as NAWSA president and was replaced by her ally
Carrie Chapman Catt. ==Later years and death==