Catharine Waugh McCulloch

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Catharine Waugh McCulloch
Catharine Waugh McCulloch
Born
Catharine Gouger Waugh

(1862-06-04)June 4, 1862
New York state
DiedApril 20, 1945(1945-04-20) (aged 82)
Alma materRockford Female Seminary
Union College of Law
Occupation(s)Attorney, Suffragist
Spouse
Frank Hawthorn McCulloch
(m. 1890)

Catharine Gouger Waugh McCulloch (June 4, 1862 – April 20, 1945) was an American lawyer, suffragist, and reformer. She actively lobbied for women's suffrage at the local, state, and national levels as a leader in the Illinois Equal Suffrage Association, Chicago Political Equality League, and National American Woman Suffrage Association. She was the first woman elected Justice of the Peace in Illinois.

Early life and education[edit]

Catharine Waugh was born in New York to Susan Gouger and Abraham Miller Waugh. She was of French and Irish ancestry. Raised in Illinois, she graduated from Rockford Female Seminary in 1882, where she wrote a thesis on women's wages and earned both a B.A. and M.A. degree.[1] Waugh then attended Chicago's Union College of Law (now Northwestern Pritzker School of Law). After graduating and passing the bar in 1886, Waugh sought employment in Chicago but faced gender discrimination. She returned to Rockford, Illinois and started her own practice.[2]

Marriage and family[edit]

In 1890, Catharine Waugh married her former law school classmate, Frank Hawthorn McCulloch. They moved to Chicago and merged practices to form the law firm of McCulloch and McCulloch. Catharine sought equality in her relationship as both a private and political arrangement. According to letters she sent to colleagues, she believed her marriage to McCulloch helped advance her career.[3] She raised four children: Hugh Waugh, Hathorn Waugh, Catharine Waugh, and Frank Waugh.[1]

Career[edit]

Catharine Waugh McCulloch, center, is flanked by Isabella W. Blaney and Frances Collins Porter, both of California, in this 1912 drawing by Marguerite Martyn. They were among the first women delegates to a Republican National Convention.

McCulloch was a member of the Equity Club, a correspondence network founded in 1887 to provide support, friendship, and advice among women lawyers across the country. In 1888, McCulloch unsuccessfully ran for state's attorney on the Prohibition party ticket.[2]

McCulloch began serving as the legislative chair of the Illinois Equal Suffrage Association in 1890. After the Illinois Supreme Court upheld a law granting women the right to vote in school district elections in 1891, McCulloch worked on a bill that would ensure women's suffrage for local and presidential elections in the state of Illinois. McCulloch and her colleagues at the Illinois Equal Suffrage Association actively lobbied for the bill from 1893 to 1913, even organizing train and automobile tours to rally suffrage supporters across the state. McCulloch's public-oriented methods of mobilizing supporters through rallies and publications reflected the style of many clubwomen, settlement-house workers, and other Progressive Era activists who sought suffrage as a means to advance other reform efforts. Her approach contrasted with that of more conservative members of the Illinois Equal Suffrage Association like Grace Wilbur Trout, who preferred more quiet and diplomatic lobbying.[4]

In 1894, McCulloch and fellow members of the Chicago Woman's Club founded the Chicago Political Equity League to campaign for municipal suffrage.[5] In addition to her suffrage work, McCulloch advocated for maternalist reform measures. For example, she championed the passage of a law in 1901 that gave women equal guardianship with their husbands over their children.[4] In 1905, she helped raise the age of consent for girls from 14 to 16 years.[1]

McCulloch was elected Justice of the Peace in Evanston, Illinois in 1907 (and re-elected in 1909), making her the first woman elected to that office in Illinois.[2] While a Justice of the Peace, she made national headlines by agreeing to conduct egalitarian marriage ceremonies in which she omitted the word "obey" from the ritualized words the woman was supposed to say; at that time, the man pledged to "love, honor and cherish" while the woman pledged to "love, honor and obey."[6]

In 1916, she was the first woman to be nominated by a major party as a presidential elector. She led the Democratic ticket statewide, winning 950,229 votes — by far the most ever won in an election by a woman to that point. But the Republican victory in Illinois prevented her from actually serving in the Electoral College.[7][8]

In 1917, she was appointed as a master in chancery of the Cook County Superior Court.[1] She became known for her advocacy in working to eliminate or modify marriage and divorce laws that discriminated against women, and she worked to create uniformity of such laws in all states.[9]

She was the legal adviser for the National American Woman Suffrage Association (which became the League of Women Voters in 1920 after passage of the 19th Amendment) and was its first vice president. She also served as the legal adviser for the National Women's Christian Temperance Union.[1]

McCulloch died of cancer in 1945 at the age of 82.[1] Catharine W. McCulloch Park in Evanston is named for her.

Publications[edit]

  • Bittenbender, Ada M. "Women in Law," in Farmer, Lydia Hoyt. The national exposition souvenir: what America owes to women Buffalo: C. W. Moulton, 1893. Pages 390–408.
  • Drysdale, William. "The Woman Lawyer," in Helps for ambitious girls New York: T. Y. Crowell & Co., c1900. Pages 180–208.
  • "Law," in Training for the professions and allied occupations: facilities available to women in the United States. New York: Bureau of Vocational Information, 1924. Pages 427–450.
  • McCulloch, Catharine Waugh. "Women as Law Clerks" manuscript. c1887. (12 pages).
  • Bureau of Vocational Information (New York). Records, 1908–1932: A Finding Aid
  • Mr. Lex, Or The Legal Status of Mother and Child. Chicago: Fleming H. Revell Company, 1899, 85 pp.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f James, Edward T.; James, Janet Wilson; Boyer, Paul S.; Radcliffe College (1971). Notable American women, 1607-1950; a biographical dictionary. Internet Archive. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
  2. ^ a b c Norgren, Jill (2010). "Ladies of Legend: The First Generation of American Women Attorneys". Journal of Supreme Court History. 35: 71–90. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5818.2010.01231.x. S2CID 144817748.
  3. ^ Drachman, Virginia (Spring 1989). ""My 'Partner' in Law and Life": Marriage in the Lives of Women Lawyers in Late 19th-and Early 20th-Century America". Law & Social Inquiry. 14 (2): 221–250. JSTOR 828594.
  4. ^ a b Wheeler, Adade Mitchell (Summer 1983). "Conflict in the Illinois Woman Suffrage Movement of 1913". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 76 (2): 95–114. JSTOR 40191741.
  5. ^ Flanagan, Maureen (2002). Seeing with Their Hearts: Chicago Women and the Vision of the Good City, 1871-1933. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691095394.
  6. ^ "She Will Omit 'Obey'". Washington Post. April 6, 1907.
  7. ^ "Woman Highly Honored". The Coats Courant. 16 November 1916. p. 4. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
  8. ^ "THOMPSON HAS HIGH VOTE". Chicago Tribune. 3 December 1916. p. 14. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
  9. ^ "Women's League Heads Plan Work of Future". Baltimore Sun. November 15, 1920.

External links[edit]