Planning committee Olympia Brown, who had recently become one of the first ordained woman ministers, initiated the proposal for a
New England women's suffrage organization. She hoped to create an association that would limit its activity to a campaign for women's suffrage, believing that campaigning for suffrage for both women and African Americans, as the
American Equal Rights Association had done, would cause women's suffrage to be overshadowed. She sought to create an organization that would, in her own words, campaign on a "clear-cut, separate and single question." On the advice of
Abby Kelley Foster, she announced a meeting in Boston in May 1868 to discuss her proposal and succeeded in gathering a hall full of people. The meeting established a planning committee chaired by
Caroline Severance. Brown found herself and her single-issue approach sidelined by the planners of the new organization. Seeking to counter the initiatives of
Susan B. Anthony and
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, the committee launched an organization that supported suffrage for both blacks and women and was willing for black men to achieve suffrage first. In addition to Brown and Severance, key figures in the planning for the new organization included
John Neal, Abby Kelley Foster, her husband
Stephen Symonds Foster, and
Thomas Wentworth Higginson, many of whom had been important figures in the abolitionist movement.
Lucy Stone, a pioneering worker for women's rights who later became a leading figure in the new organization, had not yet moved to Boston from New Jersey and was not deeply involved in its planning. She attended the founding convention, however and was elected to the new organization's executive committee.
Founding convention The New England Woman Suffrage Association (NEWSA) was formed on November 19, 1868, during the second and last day of a regional women's rights convention in Boston, Massachusetts, where the new organization was to be headquartered. Instead of distancing itself from the Republican Party, as Anthony and Stanton were doing, the planners for the NEWSA convention worked to attract Republican support and seated leading Republican politicians, including a U.S. senator, on the speaker's platform. At the time of the NEWSA convention, Congress was considering the proposed
Fifteenth Amendment, which would prohibit the denial of suffrage because of race but would not, as many women suffragists had hoped, also prohibit the denial of suffrage because of sex. (The amendment was approved by Congress in February 1869 and ratified by the states in 1870.) At the convention, Francis Bird, one of the most powerful politicians in Massachusetts, said, "Negro suffrage, being a paramount question, would have to be settled before woman suffrage could receive the attention it deserved." Amid increasing confidence that the Fifteenth Amendment was assured of passage, Lucy Stone, a future president of the NEWSA, showed her preference for enfranchising both women and black men by unexpectedly introducing a resolution calling for the Republican Party to "drop its watchword of 'Manhood Suffrage'" and support
universal suffrage instead. Despite opposition by
Frederick Douglass,
William Lloyd Garrison and
Frances Harper, Stone convinced the meeting to approve the resolution. Two months later, however, when the Fifteenth Amendment was in danger of becoming stalled in Congress, Stone backed away from that position and declared that "Woman must wait for the Negro." The NEWSA supported the Fifteenth Amendment, believing that achieving suffrage for all men would be a step toward suffrage for women. The wing of the women's movement associated with the NEWSA expected the Republican Party to push for women's suffrage after the Fifteenth Amendment was ratified (an expectation that was not realized).
Julia Ward Howe, author of "
The Battle Hymn of the Republic," was elected as the NEWSA's first president. A member of a prominent family, she had recently been convinced to join the women's suffrage movement by Higginson and Stone. During the convention, Howe said she would not demand suffrage for women until it was achieved for blacks.
Activities State affiliates of the NEWSA were formed in most New England states. In January 1869, supporters of the NEWSA began publishing a newspaper called the ''Woman's Advocate'' from the office of the
American Anti-Slavery Society. Although the NEWSA waited until suffrage for blacks was assured before it began campaigning for women's suffrage at the national level, it pressed at an early stage for laws that would enfranchise women in the District of Columbia and the federal territories. Another of its early initiatives was the collection of 8000 signatures on petitions to the Massachusetts legislature in 1869 in support of women's suffrage in that state, which led to the practice of annual public hearings on that question in the state legislature. The NEWSA's work in subsequent years included fund-raising bazaars, lectures, petitions and legislative hearings. The split in the women's movement was formalized in May 1869 when Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton created the
National Woman Suffrage Association to represent their wing. The executive committee of the NEWSA responded by laying the groundwork for a rival organization called the
American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA), which was founded in November 1869.
Henry Ward Beecher, a prominent minister, agreed to become the first president of the AWSA, but NEWSA leaders Lucy Stone and Julia Ward Howe played key roles both in the formation of the AWSA and in its leadership in subsequent years. Julia Ward Howe served as president of the NEWSA until 1877. Lucy Stone was elected president that year and served until her death in 1893. Howe was again elected president in 1893 and served until her death in 1910.
Alice Stone Blackwell, Lucy Stone's daughter, was president from 1911 until the organization ceased to exist in 1920. When the
Nineteenth Amendment, which secured suffrage for women, was ratified in 1920, the NEWSA simply ceased to function rather than formally dissolving. ==See also==