Mary Wood Swift

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
Mary Angeline Wood

September 12, 1841
New York, U.S.
DiedApril 8, 1927(1927-04-08) (aged 85)
OccupationSuffragist
Mary Wood Swift
An older white woman with white curly hair.
Mary Wood Swift, 1902.
Born
Mary Angeline Wood

September 12, 1841
New York, U.S.
DiedApril 8, 1927(1927-04-08) (aged 85)
OccupationSuffragist
SpouseJohn Franklin Swift

Mary Wood Swift (September 12, 1841 – April 8, 1927) was an American suffragist and clubwoman, president of the National Council of Women of the United States from 1903 to 1909.

Mary Angeline Wood was born in New York, the daughter of William Graham Wood and Emily Morrell Wood.[1]

Career

Swift was president of the National Council of Women of the United States from 1903 to 1909.[2][3] In that role, she led national meetings,[4][5] and she attended International Council of Women meetings,[6] including the 1904 executive meeting in Dresden, the full congress meeting in Berlin, along with Ida Husted Harper,[7] and in 1909 in Toronto.[8]

Swift was president of the Century Club in San Francisco. She was also active in the Women's Relief Corps[9] the California Women's Suffrage Association,[1][10] the Colonial Dames of America, the Society of the Mayflower, and the national Daughters of the American Revolution.[11][12][13] "The Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution should not be devoted to ancestor-worship and to preserving history," she told the organization in a speech in 1906, "but it should bend its energies also to making history and to creating better conditions for posterity." In the same speech, she expressed opposition to immigration into the United States, and her support for Americanization and literacy programs.[14]

Personal life

References

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