Caroline Lexow Babcock
Caroline Lexow Babcock (February 5, 1882 – 1980) was an American pacifist and suffragist, co-founder of the Women's Peace Union, and Executive Secretary of the National Women's Party from 1938 to 1946.
Caroline Lexow Babcock | |
---|---|
Born | Caroline Lexow February 5, 1882 Nyack, New York |
Died | March 8, 1980 98)[1] | (aged
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Barnard College |
Occupation | Pacifist, Suffragist |
Spouse(s) | Philip Westerly Babcock
(m. 1915) |
Early life and education
Caroline Lexow was born in 1882 in Nyack, New York, the daughter of lawyer and legislator Clarence Lexow, noted for the anti-corruption Lexow Committee probe, and the former Katherine Morton. Caroline's grandfather Rudolph Lexow was a prominent German-American writer and editor.[2] Caroline Lexow attended Barnard College, graduating in 1904.[3]
Career and activism
After college Caroline Lexow became active full-time in the suffrage movement, as executive secretary assisting Harriot Stanton Blatch in running the Women's Political Union, as president of the College Equal Suffrage League of New York,[4] and as executive secretary of the National College Equal Suffrage League.[5] "On the day of my graduation," she told audiences while touring as a suffrage organizer in 1909, "I became actively interested in suffrage work and a member of the League, and I expect to devote the most of my time to the cause until it wins."[6]
In 1921, Babcock was one of the members of the Women's Peace Society who left to start the Women's Peace Union.[7] In that same year, she chaired a women's peace march in New York City.[8] Babcock and Elinor Byrns drafted a constitutional amendment calling for the power to declare or prepare for war to be removed from the powers of the U. S. Congress.[9] She included the Boy Scouts among her targets, calling scouting a "kindergarten for war."[10][11]
Caroline Lexow Babcock was on the Executive Committee and board of directors of the Birth Control Federation of America.[12]
Personal life and legacy
Caroline Lexow married Philip Westerly Babcock in 1915.[13] They had three children together, Caroline, Philip, and Katharine. Caroline Lexow Babcock died in 1980, still wearing a button supporting the Equal Rights Amendment.[14]
Caroline L. Babcock's papers are archived with those of Olive E. Hurlburt in the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at Harvard University.[15] Another significant set of Babcock's letters are in the Harriot Stanton Blatch Collection at Vassar College.[16]
There is a Caroline Lexow Babcock Award given out by the National Organization for Women.
References
- "Caroline Lexow Babcock". Find a Grave. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
- "Rudolph Lexow," New York Times (July 17, 1909).
- "Barnard College Archives, Alumnae Biographical Files inventory" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-05-31.
- Laura van Assendelft and Jeffrey D. Schultz, eds., Encyclopedia of Women in American Politics (Greenwood Publishing 1998): 17. ISBN
- Alonso, Harriet Hyman (1997). The Women's Peace Union and the Outlawry of War, 1921–1942. Syracuse University Press. p. 25. ISBN 0815604173.
- "Miss Lexow is a Real, Live Suffragette," Topeka Daily Capital (January 28, 1909): 5. via Newspapers.com
- Harriet Hyman Alonso, Peace as a Women's Issue: A History of the U. S. Movement for Peace and Women's Rights (Syracuse University Press 1993): 96. ISBN 0815602693
- "Women Parade in Demand that World Disarm," New-York Tribune (November 13, 1921): 10. via Newspapers.com .
- Harriet Hyman Alonso, The Women's Peace Union and the Outlawry of War (Syracuse University Press 1997): 95. ISBN 0815604173
- "Congress Urged to Outlaw Wars; Women Make Plea," Springfield Daily News (January 23, 1927): 1. via Newspapers.com
- "War is Ridiculed at Peace Hearing," New York Times (January 23, 1927): E8.
- Birth Control Organizations, Margaret Sanger Papers Project, New York University.
- "Caroline Lexow, Suffragist, Weds; Daughter of Late Senator Married to Philip W. Babcock at Her Home in Nyack," New York Times (January 19, 1915): 9.
- "Women of the Hudson Valley: Trailblazers," Hudson River Valley Heritage.
- "Finding aid, Papers of Caroline Lexow Babcock and Olive E. Hurlburt, 1906–1961 (Radcliffe College 1976)". Archived from the original on 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2015-05-31.
- Guide to the Harriot Stanton Blatch Papers, 1807-1936, Archives and Special Collections Library, Vassar College.
External links
- Isabelle Keating Savell, Ladies' Lib: How Rockland Women Got the Vote (Historical Society of Rockland County 1979).
- Records of the Women's Peace Union, New York Public Library Archives and Manuscripts.