Victoria Woodhull
September 23, 2012
On this date in 1838, Victoria Woodhull
was born in Ohio, the sixth of 10 children in an itinerant family. She
and her sister Tennessee Claflin first became notorious as
"clairvoyants" in a family money-making scheme. Victoria married at 14
or 15 to an alcoholic and gave birth to the first of two children in her
mid-teens, an experience that turned her into a challenger of the
sexual double standard. Shaking off her marriage and her old life,
Victoria, with her sister, took on Wall Street. Known as "The Bewitching
Brokers," the sisters became the first women to open a bank, with the
backing of admirer and railroad tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt. At the
national suffrage association in 1869, Victoria took feminists by storm
with her impassioned argument that the 14th and 15th amendments already
enfranchised women. She became the second woman in the nation, following
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, to address the House Judiciary Committee. In 1872, Victoria Woodhull became the first woman to run for president, with Frederick Douglass as her vice-president. The Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly,
a lively, muckraking, feminist newspaper which she and her sister
published for 6 years, specialized in iconoclasm, publishing the first
English translation of Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto. In 1872,
Woodhull exposed a "black collar crime," reporting the common knowledge
of the extramarital affair of the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher with Elizabeth
Tilton, the wife of his friend, Theodore Tilton. Beecher, the brother
of Harriet Beecher Stowe and the most influential preacher in the land,
got the sisters arrested under the Comstock Act for publishing
obscenity. They were jailed for weeks and forced to posted a huge bond.
After a long ordeal, they were found innocent of obscenity in 1873, and
of libel the following year. Stanton publicly stood by Woodhull and
condemned the religious hypocrisy, but most feminists dropped Woodhull.
The notorious sisters moved to England and married well. Although living
a quieter life, Woodhull remained a suffragist, and published a
humanitarian periodical. Although she was a fearless deflator of
religious hypocrisy, she appeared to be deistic and never fully outgrew
her early spiritualism. D. 1927.
“No legal ceremony--no election of the woman--no penalty for the perfidy of the man--no law to compel him to do his duty, no compensation for the poor woman who is turned adrift like the girl of the street, penniless, to sell herself on the best possible terms. This is Divine marriage, or Moses and the Bible lie; and this is Bible divorce--putting away!”
— Victoria Woodhull's spirited response to Thomas Nast's famous cartoon of her as "Mrs. Satan." Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly, Feb. 24, 1872
Compiled by Annie Laurie Gaylor - www.ffrf.org
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