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The Laramie Foundation



































The 13 Historic Wyoming Women

Louisa Gardner Swain, Eliza Stewart, Martha Symons Boies, Esther Hobart Morris
Lynne Cheney, Barbara Cubin, Verda Janes, Marilyn S. Kite, April Brimmer Kunz,
Edith Miller, Estelle Reel, Nellie Tayloe Ross
Mayor and All Woman Council of Jackson
Thirteen Wyoming Women helped to change the world, their nation and their state.








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Early in the morning on September 6, 1870 in Laramie, Wyoming, Louisa Swain, a 70 year old Quaker lady, became the first woman in the world to cast a ballot under laws giving women the right to vote with full civil equality to men.




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"We gather here to salute you and pay homage to your memory and your life - may the memory of your simple act of placing a ballot in a box lead us all to pledge to never give up the fight for the idea of equality for all."
The Honorable
Cynthia Lummis
Former Wyoming State Treasurer
September 7, 2003
(Dedication of the Plaza)
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Congress Proclaims September 6th Louisa Swain Day.

Wyoming Women's History House

Hours of Operation:
October 2008 to May 2009
Tours by Appointment, Only.
Contact:  307-721-5118

The Plaza
Open Tuesday Through Saturday 10am to 5pm

Located in downtown Laramie, Wyoming
(On 2nd Street Between Grand and Garfield.)
Washington -- The U.S. House unanimously approved  Representative Barbara Cubin's (R-WY) resolution supporting the designation of September 6th as Louisa Swain Day.  On September 6, 1870, Louisa Swain cast a ballot in Laramie, Wyoming making her the first woman voter in the United States.

"Louisa Swain is truly a heroine in not only the state of Wyoming, but throughout the nation.  Her vote was representative of far more than the ballot she cast.  It served as inspiration to the women's suffrage movement and to the cause of Civil rights," Representative Cubin stated.

Wyoming, the Equality State, was the first state in the union to allow women to vote.  In fact, before Wyoming was given even a state its Territorial Legislature passed a law giving every woman 21 years old the right to vote. The issue of women's suffrage was one that Wyoming held dear to her heart as the territory applied for statehood.  In fact, even after threats that our great state would not be admitted into the Union, the Territory legislators replied that Wyoming would remain out of the Union 100 years rather than join without woman's suffrage.

Said Cubin, "As the first woman elected to federal office from the State of Wyoming, it was a great honor to see this legislation pass.  I was pleased to see the House recognize the first woman with full voting rights to cast a ballot in the United States.  It is my hope that Louisa Swain Day will remind citizens throughout the nation of the significant contributions made by the Equality State to secure women's suffrage in our nation."


September 30, 2008