SSWSA utilized a local-level suffrage, much like the AWSA’s strategy. Like conservative Southern Democrats at the time, the SSWSA felt that black voters were a source of corruption and saw black disenfranchisement as a positive. The SSWSA, specifically Gordon, paralleled their beliefs to the
United Daughters of the Confederacy. Formed in 1894, the United Daughters of the Confederacy was a group championing the Lost Cause, or that the Confederate fight was a just one. They worked to commemorate fallen Confederate soldiers with statues, romanticizing the era of slavery and continuing white supremacy. Membership numbers of the SSWSA were never recorded. The organization’s
New Southern Citizen was a monthly publication updating members on SSWSA’s progress; it was published from October 1914 to 1917. The
New Southern Citizen famously said that "like a searchlight, the great white rays of Liberty are turned on one state after another." In a local Tennessee newspaper, the
Bristol Herald Courier, the
New Southern Citizen is mentioned as reporting on the "state rights" stance of Congressmen who voted against a federal suffrage amendment. The SSWSA perceived its greatest victory to be the 1916 Democratic primary, claiming that its “
states' rights suffrage” had been included in the party platform. Monetary funds for the organization, which were estimated at $6,000 a year, were donated anonymously. Later, it was revealed that these donations came from
Alva Belmont (previously a Vanderbilt), who once donated to the CU (Congressional Union). The CU, later named the
National Woman’s Party, was the militant, feminist break-off from NAWSA, started by
Alice Paul. Its belief in a federal amendment ideologically opposed SSWSA's state rights approach. Nevertheless, Belmont donated to both. Known for her philanthropy towards African Americans in New York, Belmont also wrote to Laura Clay saying that she understood the SSWSA’s “eternal vigilance [on the race problem] in the southern suffrage movement”. == Tension and division ==