248:, a post she held for six years; she also edited the organization's publication, "Woman's Protest." She was the target of a verbal attack at a 1915 "riot" between suffrage and anti-suffrage activists in Washington DC. The same year, she spoke against suffrage in New Jersey: "The life of the average woman is not so ordered as to give her first hand knowledge of those things which are the essentials of sound government.... She is worthily employed in other departments of life, and the vote will not help her fulfill her obligations therein." She countered accusations that anti-suffrage activists were supported by "liquor interests" in the hope of preventing Prohibition. Although many historians assume that anti-suffragists had a conservative social agenda, their motivation was actually often different. Mrs. Dodge and others saw a danger in adding to the number of politically uninformed voters, which was already seen as a problem. She also believed that if women became involved in the disreputable world of partisan politics, they would lose some of their moral authority.
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A trove of Dodge's letters written in the year that
Minister Jewell and the family spent in St. Petersburg, Russia are archived in the Special Collections library at Vassar College. However the collection contains very little information about her anti-suffrage activities.
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Dodge founded the Jewell Day
Nursery in New York City in 1888 and served as the first president of the Association of Day Nurseries of New York City. In 1911, she became the founding president of the
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Josephine Jewell Dodge sponsored the
Virginia Day Nursery in New York City, a facility intended to provide child care to working mothers on the
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in 1893, and in 1895, she was founder and first president of the
Association of Day Nurseries of New York City in 1895, and part of the
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147:(February 11, 1855 â March 6, 1928) was an American educator, social reformer, and prominent anti-suffragist. She was the daughter of
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410:"Low Cut Gowns and High Morals Suffrage and Sex; Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge Tells Women Decent Dress is More Important than Votes"
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485:"Mrs. Dodge Charges A Poison-Pen Plot; Declares Suffragists, with Endless Chain Postals, Are Repeating Liquor Attacks"
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Dodge's anti-suffrage activities occupied her later career. In 1911, she helped found and became president of the
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515:"Anti-Suffrage Rose Named 'Mrs. Dodge'; Rich New Flower Graces Each Table at Brilliant Cafe Dansant and Tableaux"
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460:"Woman Suffrage Battle Opens in New Jersey As Antis Unlimber Big Guns; Monster Mass Meeting Held in Trenton"
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was named for Dodge and was grown especially to decorate tables at an anti-suffrage meeting in New York's
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Joe C. Miller: "Never a Fight of Woman
Against Man: What Textbooks Don't Say about Women's Suffrage."
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Founder of the
National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage, Pioneer in the day nursery movement
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Marshall, Murray, A. Douglas, Geoffrey, Percival, Pliny (deceased), two daughters (deceased)
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595:"Mrs Arthur M. Dodge, Former Josephine Jewell, Foe of Woman Suffrage, Dies in France"
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435:"Near Riot When Suffragists and Antis Meet at Hearing Before Democratic Committee"
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530:"A Social Event: Marriage of Miss Josephine M. Jewell and Mr. Arthur M. Dodge"
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Poverty in the United States: An
Encyclopedia of History, Politics and Policy
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Josephine Jewell married Arthur Murray Dodge in 1875. He was the son of
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Photograph of children at the Jewell Day
Nursery in New York City, 1999
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Notable
American Women, 1607â1950, A Biographical Dictionary, vol. 2
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in Edward T. James, Janet Wilson James, and Paul S. Boyer, eds.,
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No Votes for Women: The New York State Anti-Suffrage
Movement
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in 1873 to accompany her father on a diplomatic mission to
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Children and members of Jewell day Nursery, New York City
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American educator and anti-suffrage activist (1855â1928)
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Marshall Jewell and Mary Frances (nÊe Gillette) Jewell
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National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage people
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Guide to the Josephine Jewell Dodge Papers, 1873-1874
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without a degree in 1873 to accompany her father to
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332:(Harvard University Press 1971): 492-493.
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372:"The Late Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge"
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18:Josephine Marshall Jewell Dodge
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682:Female critics of feminism
299:Mary Melissa Hoadley Dodge
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570:"Notable Birthdays Today"
503:Spring 2015, p. 447-453.
55:Josephine Marshall Jewell
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657:American women educators
389:in Alice O'Connor, ed.,
181:Early life and education
573:Asheville Citizen-Times
465:(May 29, 1915): 7. via
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153:Governor of Connecticut
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36:Josephine Jewell Dodge
662:Vassar College alumni
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303:William E. Dodge, Jr.
280:Simsbury, Connecticut
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187:Hartford, Connecticut
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548:Brooklyn Daily Eagle
501:The History Teacher,
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520:(April 6, 1915): 4.
295:Grace Hoadley Dodge
122:Arthur Murray Dodge
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257:Hotel Astor
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73:Connecticut
636:Categories
370:L. P. S.,
308:References
61:1855-02-11
229:in 1898.
135:Parent(s)
284:Weatogue
127:Children
69:Hartford
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205:Career
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92:Cannes
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395:ISBN
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253:rose
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81:Died
51:Born
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.