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Women’s Suffrage Monument Taking Shape As Organizers Try To Decide Where To Put It

Artist Alan LeQuire has sent three of the figures to the foundry, while still sculpting images of Chattanooga suffragist Abby Crawford Milton (left) and Sue Shelton White, a Jackson native who was imprisoned for rallying outside the White House.
Nina Cardona
/
WPLN
Artist Alan LeQuire has sent three of the figures to the foundry, while still sculpting images of Chattanooga suffragist Abby Crawford Milton (left) and Sue Shelton White, a Jackson native who was imprisoned for rallying outside the White House.

A memorial to the women who fought for the vote in Tennessee nearly a hundred years ago will get an unveiling of sorts this week. The monument has been four years in the making, and its final home still hasn’t been determined.

In 1920, by a margin of just one vote, this state’s legislature became the linchpin to ratifying the 19th amendment. Paula Casey puts it succinctly: “All American women vote today thanks to Tennessee.”

By the centennial anniversary of that vote, Casey hopes to have statues of suffragist leaders in major cities across the state. She’s in charge of the efforts to raise money and find locations for the monuments.

The centerpiece is the one intended for Nashville. It depicts five key leaders in bronze: Nashvillians Anne Dallas Dudley and Frankie Pierce; Jackson's Sue Shelton White; and Abby Crawford of Chattanooga, all marching alongside Carrie Milton Chapman, a national leader in the movement who spent the summer of 1920 in Nashville, helping persuade legislators to vote for ratification.

A small model of the design shows how the five figures will fit together, holding signs that read "Votes for Women" and holding on to each other in solidarity.
Credit Nina Cardona / WPLN
/
WPLN
A small model of the design shows how the five figures will fit together, holding signs that read "Votes for Women" and holding on to each other in solidarity.

“All of them have sort of a determined look about them. They look strong and they sort of have their eyes on the horizon.” Sculptor Alan LeQuire says that forward gaze is a particularly important detail because, as he puts it, "what they did they did for subsequent generations of women.”

Images on the base will honor those later generations, specifically Jane Eskind — who was the first woman to win a statewide election — and the first two women to reach the top levels of leadership in the legislature: Lois DeBerry and Beth Harwell.

The state had designated a place for the monument in the shadow of the state capitol. But the group paying for the statue instead decided to pursue another location, likely either in Centennial Park — where Nashville suffragist Anne Dallas Dudley led marches — or near the Hermitage Hotel, where the pro-suffrage movement organized its efforts in 1920.

At a private event Wednesday, donors will get their first look at the first two bronzes back from the foundry and the rest of the monument in various stages of completion. LeQuire expects to finish the statues in the spring.

Copyright 2015 WPLN News

Nina Cardona has been WPLN’s All Things Considered host since 2004. As a reporter, she’s spent a night on the streets with mayoral candidates and the homeless, kneeled on a wooden deck to capture the sound of a champion buckdancer's feet, and delved into Nashville's Civil War and Civil Rights history.