Napoleon - An Intimate Portrait Napoleon - An Intimate Portrait



On eBay Now...

RARE \"1st Democrat Congresswoman\" Chase G Woodhouse Hand Signed 3X5 Card For Sale


RARE \
When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.


Buy Now

RARE \"1st Democrat Congresswoman\" Chase G Woodhouse Hand Signed 3X5 Card:
$699.99

RARE! "1st Democrat Congresswoman" Chase G Woodhouse Signed 3X5 Card. 


ES-4436


Chase Going Woodhouse (March

3, 1890 – December 12, 1984) was a prominent feminist leader, suffragist, and

educator. She served as a member of the United

States House of Representatives representing the Second

Congressional District of Connecticut, becoming the second Congresswoman from

Connecticut and the first elected as a Democrat. Woodhouse

was born in Victoria, British Columbia,

Canada. She attended Science Hill School, Shelbyville, Kentucky and

finished in 1908. She went to study at McGill University, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree with

honors in 1912 and a Masters of Arts degree with Honors in 1914, both in

Economics. She then studied at the University of Berlin and

the University of Chicago.

After graduating from McGill University, she began her career as a college professor

and spent part of it as a well-known political figure in the women's suffrage

movement and later in the Democratic Party of the State of Connecticut. While serving as a fellow in political economics

at the University of Chicago,

Chase Going met and eventually married a professor of government there, Edward

Woodhouse. They had two children, Noel and Margaret. In her early professional career, she was

a senior economist at the Bureau of Home Economics, United

States Department of Agriculture, from 1926 to 1928. Shortly after

moving to New London, Connecticut in 1934, Woodhouse registered to vote as a

Democrat. In 1940, she was the first Democratic woman to be elected as

Secretary of State for Connecticut, serving one term.[1] She also served as chair of the New

London, Democratic Town Committee in 1942 and 1943. During World War II Woodhouse was a consultant for the National

Roster of Scientific and Specialized Personnel, War Manpower Commission,

from 1942 to 1944. As a feminist leader, she became president of the

Connecticut Federation of Democratic Women's Clubs, which is the oldest

federation of Democratic Women's Clubs in the nation, from 1943 to 1948,. While

teaching economics at Connecticut College,

Woodhouse began her electoral campaign for the United States Congress. She was

elected as a Democrat to the Seventy-Ninth Congress and served from January 3,

1945 to January 3, 1947. She defeated Republican, John D. McWilliams from

Norwich, with a plurality of 3,046

compared to McWilliams plurality of 2,492. In this election many cities in

Eastern Connecticut, like Norwich and New London, voted Democrat for Woodhouse,

while smaller towns voted Republican. While in office, she was a political

activist for women's advancement in careers beyond education, focusing on

combining motherhood and feminism. Woodhouse introduced the bill, "H.R.

1584", to the subcommittee of the House Committee on Education and Labor,

which identified unequal labor practices and wages between men and women. She

ran for reelection to the Eightieth Congress in November 1946 but was defeated.

While out of office, she resumed her women's advocacies. She became Executive

Director of the Women's Division of the Democratic National

Committee (DNC), based in Washington, D.C., in 1947 and 1948. Democrats, like President Harry Truman believed Woodhouse was a valuable

link to women voters and encouraged this appointment. Woodhouse then successfully run

again and served in the Eighty-First Congress from January 3, 1949 to January

3, 1951, after defeating Horace-Seely Brown in

1948. She was also a visiting expert on the staff of General Lucius D. Clay, Allied Military Governor of Germany, in 1948. She

was defeated for reelection to the Eighty-Second Congress in the November 1950

elections. She returned as congresswoman from Connecticut following the 1952

elections. Woodhouse was appointed to the Banking and Currency Committee while serving in the

United States Congress. She was special consultant to the Director of

Price Stabilization, from 1951 to 1953. Woodhouse began serving as the director

of the Auerbach Service Bureau for Connecticut Organizations in Hartford in

1954  She was also a member of the

Permanent Commission on the Status of Women and served on the Connecticut

Humanities Council. She served as a delegate to the Connecticut State

Constitutional Convention in 1965. In 1967, she was chairman of the Governor's

Committee on the Status of Women. She then served as a member of the

Advisory Committee to the State Department of Community Affairs from 1967 until

1972. Woodhouse was also a member of Comprehensive Health Planning Council, the

Steering Committee of the Connecticut Mental Health Planning Project, the

Advisory Council to the Board of Mental Health, the Connecticut Humanities

Council, and the State Commission of Housing and New Communities. As

a staunch feminist, Woodhouse regularly contributed to Planned Parenthood and

was an early proponent of environmental legislation. She earned the prestigious

Ella T. Grasso Award for Outstanding Service at the end of her professional

career. 







Buy Now

RARE

RARE "1st Baron of Selmeston" John Wilmot Written Note JG Autographs COA

$174.99



RARE

RARE "1st Photo of the Sun" Richard Tousey Signed 5,75X3.5 Card

$489.99



INFO-EN003 Shield of the Millennium Dynasty x3 Ultra Rare 1st YuGiOh  picture

INFO-EN003 Shield of the Millennium Dynasty x3 Ultra Rare 1st YuGiOh

$10.98



INFO-EN052 Silhouhatte Rabbit Secret Rare 1st Ed YuGiOh picture

INFO-EN052 Silhouhatte Rabbit Secret Rare 1st Ed YuGiOh

$12.27



ZS - Ouroboros Sage - BROL-EN026 - Ultra Rare - 1st Edition picture

ZS - Ouroboros Sage - BROL-EN026 - Ultra Rare - 1st Edition

$1.00



Yugioh Cyber Repair Plant LEDD  ULTRA RARE 1st Edition LP picture

Yugioh Cyber Repair Plant LEDD ULTRA RARE 1st Edition LP

$1.81



RARE

RARE "1st Baron Wigram" Clive Wigram Hand Signed TLS Dated 1934

$139.99



RARE

RARE "1st Baronet" Sir Robert Fowler Hand Signed Album Page

$349.99



Images © photo12.com-Pierre-Jean Chalençon
A Traveling Exhibition from Russell Etling Company (c) 2011