In 1893, the Maynards served as pastors of the Unitarian Church in
Reno, Nevada. While living in Reno, Tupper Maynard taught religious courses at the
University of Nevada, established a choir, and administered to patients at the Hospital for the Care of the Indigent Insane. Her services at the hospital led to an appointment by the
Nevada governor to attend the Congress of the National Prison Association (now known as the
American Correctional Association). She continued providing twice-weekly lectures and numerous socialist-themed lectures. Her topics included property rights, prison reform, government involvement in religious education, and women's and children's rights. While living in Reno, she began to write extensively on the women's suffrage movement. She addressed the
Nevada State Assembly on February 11, 1895, on
women's suffrage. Although the assembly rejected a women's suffrage bill soon after her speech, lawmakers later revived the amendment and the
Nevada State Senate and Assembly ultimately passed it. Shortly after her landmark speech to the Assembly, Tupper Maynard provided pastoral care for Alice Hartley, who had been arrested on murder charges. She had killed her lover, Reno banker M.D. Foley, after he abandoned her and their baby. Most of Tupper Maynard's congregation and the local community objected to Tupper Maynard’s attention to Hartley, asserting that her actions condoned murder and the woman’s lifestyle as a "fallen woman". Tupper Maynard's colleagues from other faiths criticized her for appearing to sympathize with a criminal. ==Utah and Colorado==