Tennie C. Claflin

From collection Candidates

Tennie C. Claflin
Tennie C. Claflin announced her intention to run for Congress from the Eighth Congressional district of New York in 1872. She made this announcement at a meeting of the German-American Progressive Society in New York City on August 11, 1871. Claflin gave a speech supporting the rights of the individual, drinking of beer on Sundays, and announcing that, if she received a majority of the votes, her campaign would be a test case for the election of women to federal office. Claflin declared that: "no law . . . either forbids the people to elect a woman to an office, or which forbids her to accept it." Claflin was not elected. Tennie C. Claflin was a sister of Victoria Woodhull who ran for U.S. president in 1872. Woodhull and Claflin worked together in New York as stockbrokers, opening a business, gaining fame, fortune, and notoriety. The two women shared similar views on women's rights, free love, divorce, and other social reforms. Victoria and Tennie C. started Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly, a newspaper and platform for their progressive views on women's rights, socialism, sex education, and dress reform.
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