Claiborne Catlin Elliman

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Claiborne Catlin Elliman
Claiborne Catlin Elliman and Linda Marston on their ride to promote a suffrage meeting in Boston
Born1880s
Alma materNew York School of Philanthropy
OccupationActivist
OrganizationNational American Woman Suffrage Association
SpouseJoseph Albert Catlin

Claiborne Catlin Elliman was a 19th to 20th-century suffragist and political leader. Elliman's main political participation during her lifetime was in the suffrage movement and she was an active member of the National American Women Suffrage Association, otherwise known as NAWSA.[1] She organized rallies, advocated for women, and spread information about suffrage throughout Massachusetts on horseback, where she lived for a large portion of her life.

Elliman was born in Baltimore, Maryland in the 1880s and she remained in Baltimore for many years before getting married at age twenty-eight. She married Joseph Albert Catlin, but he died four years after they married which left her to be a thirty-two-year-old widow.[1]

Education and employment

This is Claiborne Catlin's sash that she wore during her ride for women's suffrage.

After her husband's death, Elliman was reluctant to move back to her home so she moved to New York. There she went to the New York School of Philanthropy, a higher education institution that trained people to do social work, where she began to do settlement work.[1] Additionally, she worked with Dr. Charles Davenport studying eugenics in Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island.[1] In 1914 she got a job working at a psychological clinic at the University of Pennsylvania where she wrote an excerpt in The Psychological Clinic, Volume 8 titled, "Incorrigibility Due to Mismanagement and Misunderstanding".[1][2]

This is Claiborne Catlin's saddlebag she wore during her ride for suffrage.

Political activism

Legacy

References

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