This is a timeline of women's suffrage in Utah. Women earned the right to vote on February 12, 1870 while Utah was still a territory. The first woman to vote under equal suffrage laws was Seraph Young on February 14, 1870. During this time, suffragists in Utah continued to work with women in other states to promote women's suffrage. Women continued to vote until 1887 when the Edmunds-Tucker Act was passed. When Utah was admitted as a state in 1896, women regained the right to vote. On September 30, 1919 Utah ratifies the Nineteenth Amendment. Native American women did not have full voting rights in Utah until 1957.
19th century
1840s
1842
Female Relief Society of Nauvoo is formed.
1860s
1868
Newspaper editorial from The New York Times about giving Utah women equal suffrage is appreciated in Utah.
The Deseret News posts an editorial about the justice of women's suffrage.
1870s
1870
February 12: Utah gives women the right to vote.
February 14: First woman to vote in the United States under equal suffrage laws was Seraph Young in Salt Lake City.
1871
Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton visit Salt Lake City.
1872
The Woman's Exponent is created.
1879
Emmeline B. Wells represents Utah at the National Woman's Suffrage Convention.
1880s
1880
A case in the Supreme Court of the Territory attempts to erase the names of several women from the voter registration list, but does not succeed.
1882
In Salt Lake City, a registrar refuses to add women to the list of registered voters. The case is settled and women continue to vote.
1887
Passage of the Edmunds-Tucker Act disenfranchises Utah women.
1888
Mrs. Arthur Brown and Emily S. Richards represent Utah at the National Suffrage Convention in Washington, D.C.
September: Clara Bewick Colby and Elizabeth Lyle Saxon visit Salt Lake City to lecture on suffrage.
1889
The Utah Woman Suffrage Association is created.
1890s
1890
Maria Y. Dougall and Sarah M. Kimball are delegates to the National Suffrage Convention in Washington, D.C.
1891
February 15: Suffragists celebrated the birthday of Susan B. Anthony in Salt Lake City.
The Utah Woman Suffrage Song Book is published.
1892
July 29: Suffragists hold a rally in American Fork.
Wells travels through California and Idaho and speaks on women's suffrage.
1893
Suffragists held a garden party in Salt Lake City.
1895
February 18: Suffragists hold a convention in the Salt Lake City and County building.
1896
Utah women regained the right to vote.
Martha Hughes Cannon becomes the first woman elected to state senate.
1897
January: Wells attends the National Suffrage Convention in Des Moines, Iowa and describes suffrage efforts in Utah.
1899
Carrie Chapman Catt and Mary Garrett Hay visit Salt Lake City.
20th century
1900s
Suffragists from Utah obtain 40,000 names for a women's suffrage petition to the United States Congress.
Utah suffragists send delegates to the National Presidential Conventions.
1910s
1919
September 30: Utah ratifies the Nineteenth Amendment.
1920s
1920
February 12: Fiftieth anniversary celebration of women's suffrage in Utah.
1924
The Indian Citizenship Act gives more voting rights to Native American women.
1950s
1957
Utah repeals laws that prevent women who live on Native American reservations from voting.
See also
List of Utah suffragists
Women's suffrage in Utah
Women's suffrage in the United States
References
Sources
Anthony, Susan B. (1902). Anthony, Susan B.; Harper, Ida Husted (eds.). The History of Woman Suffrage. Vol. 4. Indianapolis: The Hollenbeck Press.
Harper, Ida Husted (1922). The History of Woman Suffrage. New York: J.J. Little & Ives Company.