Voting in
South Saint Paul, Minnesota as Marguerite Newburgh on August 27, 1920, Newburgh became the first woman to vote in the United States after women were granted the right to vote by the August 26, 1920 certification of the recently ratified
Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which had been passed in 1919. The first person in the line of voters at Saint Paul's city hall that day, she participated in a special election related to a proposed $85,000 water bond to fund the creation of a new, second water well for her community. Describing herself as a progressive
Republican, Newburgh was employed at the time as a
stenographer for the city engineer's office in South St. Paul. She voted in favor of the bond measure, stating: "I believe in public ownership of necessary public utilities.... I got up at 5:15 a.m. today and hurried down to the polling place of the First precinct, in the city hall. I had to wait until the booth opened at 6 o'clock. And I marked my ballot for the water works bond issue so that our city can have a fine public owned water works system." ==Marriage and family==