FINALLY!! WOMAN SUFFRAGE STATUE HONORED IN U.S. CAPITOL ROTUNDA
Washington, D.C. June 26, 1997 -- The Portrait
Monument of Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, the
three women who initiated and then led the battle to enfranchise half our
population, was finally honored today during a Congressional ceremony in the
U.S. Capitol Rotunda hosted by Sen. John Warner (R-VA) and Rep. Constance
Morella (R-MD).
"Now that the statue has been transported from
the Crypt, which held it for so long, let this be more than a politically
correct gesture, but instead let this herald a new Renaissance for our nation,"
said Senator Warner. "A time of reconciliation, not only for budgets,
but race, gender and spirit. Let this statue and today's celebration signal
that we are a people who remember that the Seal of our nation E. Pluribus
Unum stands for: Out of Many One."
House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who broke away from budget
reconciliation meetings to participate in the ceremony said, "I hope
that when citizens, particularly younger citizens, come to this particular
statue they will say, 'what questions will I face in my lifetime that are
worthy of the dedication, courage and persistence that these women had.'"
To the tens of thousands of citizens from across the
country who fought in a four-year struggle to see the statue moved out of
the Capitol basement, where it stood for 76 years, the elevation of the statue
represents the profound contributions by women that have been glossed over
and left out of history.
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