In honor of her work for Women’s Suffrage, and in celebration of the ratification of the 19th Amendment in August of 1920, this month I am changing my profile picture to my beloved great-aunt and namesake, Anna Forbes Liddell. She is the beautiful, small woman waving, second from the right. No White man would rent them a car to pull their float. They borrowed a horse from a Black man. Anna Forbes helped establish the Suffrage Movement in North Carolina, and was still fiercely fighting for women’s rights before the Florida Legislature in the 1970’s, raising her small, arthritic body out of her wheelchair to advocate for ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment.
In 2016, I dreamed I saw her at the Democratic Convention. But of course. She WAS there. As was every woman in that picture and every woman on every float in the county 100 years earlier. Why did Anna Forbes work so hard, in the face of contempt, for the right to vote? Why did African Americans (and White Civil Rights advocates) die for the right to vote? You know the answer. Because it matters so much. And why did some White men work so hard to stop them from voting? Same reason. So, it’s not enough for me to honor Anna Forbes by changing my profile picture. I am dedicating this month to voter turnout and voting rights. Please join me. I will be sharing information about voter turnout and fair elections throughout the month (and beyond). You can help by sharing information, too.
1 Comment
Carolyn DuBard
8/1/2020 08:33:55 am
Mary Anna, thank you! Voting rights are as important today as they were in 1920 when your great-aunt Anna Forbes Liddell fought for her rights. And the struggle for voting rights continued through the 1960 to today.
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