Anonymous and Named: Stories of Women and God in the Struggle

Megan McKenna

Monday, 02 Oct 1995 at 12:00 am – Great Hall, Memorial Union

Megan McKenna is Supple Visiting Scholar in Religious Studies. McKenna is an author and professor of
religious studies.
Seventy-five years ago, the 19th Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution was ratified and women won the right to vote,
thanks in large part to the efforts of ISU alumna and
suffragist Carrie Chapman Catt.

Iowa State will honor Catt during a week-long celebration in
October that culminates with the dedication of Carrie Chapman
Catt Hall and the Plaza of Heroines.

The completely renovated Catt Hall, known since 1968 as "Old
Botany," is a 19th century building listed on the National
Register of Historic Buildings. It will house the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences and several academic programs,
including the Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and
Politics. The Plaza of Heroines at the entrance of the
building includes more than 2,500 bricks engraved with the
names of women others have chosen to honor.

The dedication ceremonies were integrated with Women's
Week '95, which brings to campus four keynote speakers and
hundreds of other participants.

"The Changing Role of Native Women" will be examined Oct. 4
by Wilma Mankiller, the first woman elected chief of the
Cherokee Nation.

Molly Ivins, nationally syndicated columnist for the Fort
Worth Star-Telegram, will give a lecture Oct. 5 titled,
"We've Come a Long Way Sister, Now Let's Talk About How Far
We've Got to Go."

On Oct. 6, Bernice Johnson Reagon will offer a historical
perspective of Catt's suffrage contemporaries, including
Sojourner Truth and Fannie Lou Hamer. Her lecture is titled
"From Harriet and Sojourner to Carrie Chapman Catt and Fannie
Lou Hamer: Right to the Tree of Life."

Reagon is a distinguished professor of history at American
University and curator emeritus of the Smithsonian
Institution's National Museum of American History.

She also is founder and artistic director of the musical
group, Sweet Honey in the Rock, and was a member of the
original Freedom Singers during the Civil Rights Movement. A
program of African American music and spirituals will follow
her lecture.

The Catt Hall dedication will begin at 3 p.m. Friday, Oct. 6.
Participants include national leaders of the League of Women
Voters, the organization Catt founded in 1920; national
officers for Pi Beta Phi, the sorority in which Catt was a
member; and Iowa political leaders such as Mary Louise Smith,
past chair of the National Republican Party, and Lt. Gov. Joy
Corning. Tours of Catt Hall will follow the ceremony.

Stay for the entire event, including the brief question-and-answer session that follows the formal presentation. Most events run 75 minutes.

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