Siegfried was a feminist. Initially the focus of her energies was on education provision for girls in
Le Havre, the major port city of which her husband served as the mayor (1870-1873 and 1878-1886). There was an apprenticeship college and, in 1880, a primary school. Then, in 1885, she was involved in setting up one of the first girls' secondary schools (
lycées de fille). Soon after her husband was elected to
the Chambre des députés (parliament) in
1885 the couple moved to
Paris, setting up home initially in a centrally positioned apartment at
6 rond-point des Champs-Elyses and moving after ten years, to what became the family home at
226 boulevard Saint-Germain in the city's fashionable
Left Bank district. Julie Siegfried now engaged actively in various feminist organisations and actions. She took part in the conferences at
Versailles that were arranged by
Sarah Monod and was involved with the journal, "La Femme". She worked with the
Union française pour le suffrage des femmes(UFSF / ''"French Union for Women's Suffrage") and, most prominently, with the
Conseil National des femmes françaises (CNFF/ literally, "National Council of French Women"'') of which she served as president between January 1913 She became vice-president of the
International Council of Women, of which the CNFF is the
French branch. She also presided over the "League for Moral Education". But her most important role involved her CNFF work. The CNFF was the largest feminist organisation in France, with 21,000 members in 1900 and almost 100,000 in 1914. Its objectives included the provision of support, hygiene improvements, women's education and work for women. But its strongest advocacy concerned votes for women. In this campaign Julie Siegfried was strongly backed by her husband. Jules Siegfried and her parliamentary colleagues managed to have the necessary motion tabled and positively received in the
National Assembly (lower house of parliament) in 1909, but there was no vote: at this stage, and for many more years even after the necessary legislation had been passed by the lower house in 1919, women's suffrage was blocked by the
Senate (upper house). of Julie Siegfried with her husband, 1921 ==Celebration==