On March 9, 1947, Catt died of a heart attack in her home in
New Rochelle, New York. She was buried at
Woodlawn Cemetery in
The Bronx, New York City. alongside her longtime companion,
Mary Garrett Hay, a fellow New York state suffragist, with whom she lived for more than 20 years. African American suffragist Mary Church Terrell memorialized Catt in a telegram: "The whole world has lost a great, good, and gifted woman who, for many years, pleaded with it to deal justly with all human beings without regard to sex, race, or religion. Personally, I have lost a dear friend who for forty years has encouraged me by writing and speaking both publicly and privately." At her funeral, the Reverend Walter Van Kirk praised "the dignity and prestige with which she invested the womanhood of American and of every land."
Honors of 1948,
Seneca Falls Convention titled
100 Years of Progress of Women: 1848–1948. From left to right,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Carrie Chapman Catt,
Lucretia Mott. Catt attained recognition for her work both during and after her lifetime. In 1921, Catt became the first woman to receive an honorary doctorate from the University of Wyoming. In 1923, Catt was named one of the "12 Greatest Living American Women" by the League of Women Voters and in 1925, she received an honorary doctor of laws degree from Smith College. In 1926, she was featured on the cover of
Time magazine and, in 1930, she received the Pictorial Review Award for her international disarmament work. In 1933, Catt received the American Hebrew Medal; in 1935, the Turkish government issued a stamp to honor her work, and in 1936, she was honored by President Franklin Roosevelt at the White House for her peace activism. In 1940, Catt received an honorary doctor of laws degree from Moravian College for Women, the American Women's Association's "Woman of the Year Award, and named her one of the ten most important women of the century, The League of Women Voters often honors Catt as its founder. In 1929, the League placed bronze tablets honoring her contributions to suffrage throughout the country. In the 1959, this fund was used to sponsor a "Government in Action" program at Syracuse University. A number of Leagues around the country present awards named for their founder. These include: • The Ames/Story County (Iowa) League has bestowed its Carrie Chapman Catt Award, which recognizes a member's contribution to the community, since 1993. • The League of Women Voters of Iowa also bestows a Carrie Chapman Catt Award annually, recognizing the significant accomplishments of one of its members. • Since 1997, the League of Women Voters of Saratoga County (New York) has recognized a member each year with their Carrie Chapman Catt Award for outstanding and long-standing service to the League. • The League of Women Voters of Dane County, which includes Catt's birthplace of Ripon, Wisconsin, instituted its Carrie Chapman Catt Award in 2005 • The League of Women Voters of Lake Forest/Lake Bluff (Illinois) has presented its Carrie Chapman Catt Award since 2013. In 1992, the Charles City, Iowa school district named its alternative high school "Carrie Lane High School" in honor of Catt. In 2019, Iowa Secretary of State Paul Pate announced the Carrie Chapman Catt Award, which it awards to every Iowa high school that registers to vote at least 90 percent of its eligible student body. Finally, Catt was posthumously named a "Valiant Woman of the Vote" by the
National Women's History Alliance in 2020.
Museum, Monuments, and Historical Markers Catt's childhood home in Charles City, Iowa has been restored, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and is now a museum dedicated to her life and legacy as well as the history of the women's suffrage movement. It is managed by the nonprofit organization, the National Nineteenth Amendment Society. In 2020 it was added as a site on the National Women's Suffrage Trail. The marker was dedicated in 2021. On August 26, 2016 (
Women's Equality Day), a monument commissioned by Tennessee Suffrage Monument, Inc. and sculpted by
Alan LeQuire was unveiled in
Centennial Park in Nashville, featuring depictions of Catt,
Anne Dallas Dudley,
Abby Crawford Milton,
Juno Frankie Pierce, and
Sue Shelton White. Catt is one of three suffragists memorialized with a statue at the Turning Point Suffrage Memorial in Lorton, Virginia, which was dedicated on May 16, 2021. Catt is also honored in the following historical markers: • Charlestown, IN: Marker to honor
Mary Garrett Hay, which mentions also mentions Catt, dedicated in October 2021. • Flint, Michigan's Sitdowners Memorial Park: Plaque dedicated to Catt. • Huntsville, AL: Mentioned on a marker memorializing suffragist Alberta Chapman Taylor. • Iowa Welcome Center on Interstate 35: Historical marker erected by the Iowa Department of Transportation and the Iowa State Historical Society, dedicated in 1977. • Louisville, KY: Marker at the First Unitarian Church, which mentions that Carrie Chapman Catt and Susan B. Anthony spoke there on their 1895 Southern Tour. • Memphis, TN: Markers memorializing suffragist Lide Smith Meriwether, which mentions that she traveled with Catt and Anthony; suffragist Mary Church Terrell, founder of the
National Association of Colored Women; and Joseph Hanover, one of Catt's allies on the Tennessee state legislature in 1920. All three were erected by the Memphis Suffrage Monument Committee in 2022. • Ripon, WI: Catt's birthplace, erected by the Wisconsin Historical Society in 1977.
Women's voting rights As President of the nation's largest women's suffrage organization when the 19th Amendment was ratified, women's voting rights are part of Catt's legacy. The 19th Amendment enfranchised approximately 27 million American women. The amendment extended to women of all races who were not disenfranchised for other reasons. It remains the largest single extension of suffrage in American history. This included three million African American women of voting age, approximately 500,000 of whom lived in the 34 states outside the Deep South. By 1960, the last Census before the Voting Rights Act was passed, more than two million African American women in these 34 states were enfranchised. In addition, some African American women living in the South were able to register and vote in 1920. According to historian Roslyn Terborg-Penn, "...Black female participation in the elective process during 1920 was extensive enough to occasion a prediction from Georgia State Representative Thomas M. Bell that the Nineteenth Amendment would destroy white supremacy in Georgia since the amendment had enfranchised enough women." In South Carolina, African American women "apparently took the white male registrars by surprise, and no plan to disqualify them was in effect. Many Black women reported to the registrar's office, but the only discrimination was that whites were registered first." The 19th Amendment did not prohibit other forms of discrimination against women voters. For instance, no women were allowed to vote in Georgia or Mississippi in 1920 because state legislatures were not called into special session to pass the enabling legislation. Similarly, by the end of the decade, African American women in the South were again disenfranchised by discriminatory laws and practices. Puerto Rican women were not fully enfranchised until 1935. Likewise, Native American women who did not renounce their tribal citizenship were not eligible to vote in 1920 and Chinese American women were not eligible to vote because of the
Chinese Exclusion Act, which kept Chinese Americans from becoming citizens. This law was in place until 1943. Finally, women of color, especially African American women, continued to experience discrimination until the
24th Amendment, which prohibited poll taxes, and
Voting Rights Act were enacted in 1964 and 1965, respectively. Women's voter turnout was approximately 38 percent in 1920, compared to over 65 percent for men. Women's voter turnout rates lagged behind men's, but gradually rose over time. Women became the numerical majority of voters in 1968 and began to vote at higher rates than men in 1980. By 2016, women's voter turnout was 63 percent compared to 53 percent for men, a difference of 10 million voters. Also starting in 1980, men and women's vote choices began to diverge, with women being more likely to vote for Democratic candidates and to express support for the Democratic Party. This gender gap is now a durable fixture in American politics, present at the presidential level and in many down ballot races. The largest gender gap was in 2020 with a 12 percentage point advantage to the Democratic nominee,
Joe Biden. The smallest was four percentage points in 1992, when the Democratic nominee Bill Clinton faced
President George H. W. Bush (R) and Independent
Ross Perot.
At Iowa State University In 1921, Catt became the first woman to deliver a commencement address at
Iowa State University when she also received an honorary doctor of laws degree. She was invited to speak again in 1930 When George Catt died in 1905, he left a donation to Iowa State in his will. However, New York state attorneys determined that the donation was not permissible, since under New York law, bequests could only be awarded to an individual or an incorporated entity. Iowa State, at the time, did not qualify. Consequently, Catt signed over $100,000 in bonds ($ in dollars) to the university to honor George Catt's wishes. The George W. Catt Endowment continues to award scholarships to several students in different fields of study each year. Selection is based on academic achievement and financial need. A few years after her husband's death, Catt donated another $22,500 to Iowa State and in 1926, donated $6,000 to her sorority, Pi Beta Phi, equivalent to $ in dollars. She also left her personal library of over 1,000 volumes, many on the subject of peace, to the university, along with some furniture and other personal belongings. at
Iowa State University from the south Iowa State University named a street, Carrie Lane Court, in Catt's honor. As early as 1974, the Government of the Student Body passed a resolution requesting that the new physical education building be named for Catt. The naming committee chair opposed the idea, stating he did not want a "Catt House" on campus. In 1990, the university announced that it was renaming the Old Botany Building as Carrie Chapman
Catt Hall and the building was dedicated in 1995 after a $5 million renovation. Naming the building after Catt engendered controversy, with some in the university community objecting to the naming because they said Catt was a racist. In March 2021, the university announced the formation of the Committee on the Consideration of Removing Names from University Property that was considering the renaming of Carrie Chapman Catt Hall. On August 31, 2023, the Committee issued its draft report and initial vote. The committee initially recommended retaining the name of the building. After a sixty-day public comment period, university president
Wendy Wintersteen formally accepted the recommendation that the name of Carrie Chapman Catt Hall not be changed. In 1992, Iowa State University established the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics. The Catt Center conducts research on women in politics, with a special emphasis on Iowa, and promotes civic engagement on campus and in the community. The Catt Center instituted its Carrie Chapman Catt Prize for Research on Women and Politics in 1995 and in 2006 the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences added the Carrie Chapman Catt Public Engagement Award to its roster of alumni awards.
Nineteenth Amendment centennial 2020 marked the 100th anniversary of the
League of Women Voters and the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The League – which includes the national organization founded by Catt on February 14, 1920, as well as more than 700 state and local leagues throughout the United States – is a respected, nonpartisan political organization that continues to educate citizens on key issues of the day and advocates for expansion of access to the ballot for all U.S. citizens. As part of the centennial celebration of the Nineteenth Amendment in 2020, Catt was featured in newspaper and magazine articles; recent books, such as Elaine Weiss's ''The Woman's Hour: The Great Fight to Win the Vote
(2018), which is being made into a film with Hillary Rodham Clinton as the executive producer; the PBS American Experience two-part documentary The Vote
; and the Iowa PBS documentary, Carrie Chapman Catt: Warrior for Women.'' == Personal life ==