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X OZY Live Curiously Newsletters Profile About Search TV PODCASTS NEWS NEWSLETTERS AWARDS FESTIVALS True Stories WHEN (ONLY) WOMEN RULED THIS FRONTIER TOWN * Facebook * Twitter * Love this?share * Email article * Copy link Copy link to share with friends Copy link Caption True Stories WHEN (ONLY) WOMEN RULED THIS FRONTIER TOWN By Sean Braswell * Facebook * Twitter * Love this?share * Email article * Copy link Copy link to share with friends Copy link The Petticoat Rulers of Jackson Hole, Wyoming SourceAlvaro Tapia Hidalgo/OZY WHY YOU SHOULD CARE Because glass ceilings can be shattered — but also replaced. By Sean Braswell October 22, 2016 When Women Rule: A special weeklong series on how influential women leaders managed — or mishandled — major crises during their tenure. Consider this a sneak peek into how a woman could rule the world. A century ago, Jackson, Wyoming, a small frontier town of around 300, was a poster child for what economists call a tragedy of the commons. With laws going unenforced and taxes and fines unpaid, the town’s coffers were drying up while its streets were swimming in mud and garbage. In need of a Wyatt Earp figure who could put a stop to the lawlessness and decline, the errant town stumbled on a radical solution to its problems: female rule. That’s right: In 1920, the same year the 19th Amendment of the U.S. Constitution was ratified, guaranteeing women the right to vote, the citizens of Jackson elected an all-female town council, an unprecedented “petticoat government” that would clean up the dirty frontier town — and then vanish from the town hall and the pages of history. And as America prepares to elect what would be its first woman president, the story of Jackson’s democratic experiment serves as a cautionary tale about the sporadic, often temporary nature of social progress. A trailblazing territory from the start, and the first in the U.S. to grant women the right to vote and hold public office (in 1869), Wyoming had earned its nickname, the Equality State, more than half a century before Jackson’s regime change. But it was less noble sentiment than desperate pragmatism that led to an all-female town council. Being a member of that council was a part-time job, and for Jackson’s menfolk, such a task represented a major distraction from their real jobs — and one they had not suffered well. > Jackson’s “petticoat” rulers quickly applied the same efficiency they had used > in managing their households to the town’s management. And so at a town caucus in early 1920, when the subject of male political impotence came up, a man named Dick Winger reportedly called out: “Why not let the women run the government?” It’s not clear whether the proposal was offered in earnest or in jest, but the women present agreed and an all-female slate of candidates was nominated to face off against the men. “My recollection is that it was not in protest to former administration, nor, really, a matter of politics,” Winger’s wife, Marta — later appointed town clerk — observed, “but just an impulsive and spontaneous gesture on the part of an assembled town caucus to give women a chance to run things.” The five women nominated, all members of the socialite Pure Food Club, ran on the simple platform of cleaning up the town’s streets. And in the May 11 election, they won in a landslide, with Grace Miller being elected as the town’s mayor. One of the new councilwomen, Rose Crabtree, bested her own husband by 19 votes. The election made national headlines, where it was largely treated as a charming curiosity. “Husband defeated by wife,” The New York Times trumpeted. “Their complete victory surprised even the women themselves.” Jackson was not the first American town to elect an all-female council, but it entered a league of its own when several more women were appointed by the victors to fill additional administrative positions, including a 22-year-old town marshal with a pearl-handled gun. Jackson’s “petticoat” rulers quickly applied the same efficiency they had used in managing their households to the town’s management. First, they replenished the town’s coffers by collecting back taxes and uncollected fines. “They went out personally and collected every cent due the town from those who ignored the notices,” reported The Delineator magazine in 1922. “Before the end of a fortnight, there was $2,000 in the treasury.” With new cash on hand, they set about making a rash of improvements, from installing culverts and grading streets to instituting garbage collection and anti-littering ordinances. “We simply tried to work together,” Mayor Miller told The Delineator. “We put into practise [sic] the same thrifty principles we exercise in our homes.” > They just wanted to fix their town. And when they did it, they were happy > enough to go back to their former lives. But the same pragmatism that had prompted the women to step up and save their town also led them to step down a few years later when the job was done. Women and political power may have been on the nation’s mind at the time, says Sherry Smith, a professor of history at Southern Methodist University and resident of Jackson Hole, but it was not on the minds of the Jackson women. They just wanted to fix their town. “And when they did it,” says Smith, “they were happy enough to go back to their former lives. They were not really interested in sustaining public political power.” And, in part because there was no intention in Jackson of expanding power for women, there was also no follow-up — and amazingly the town would not elect another female mayor until 2001. The arc of the moral universe is long and sometimes it sags considerably in the middle — where you’ll find the so-called Equality State, which today ranks dead last in its percentage of female state lawmakers at just 13 percent. Wyoming Median Income Heat Map FindTheHome As for Jackson, that paragon of rugged frontier parity? Well, according to the Economic Policy Institute, the winter playground for the rich is the single most economically unequal metropolitan area in America. And, alas, there is no radical democratic experiment afoot to clean that up anytime soon. Read the series everyone is talking about: The Seven Deadly Sins of American Politics. Have the special collection sent to your inbox by clicking here. * Sean Braswell, Senior Writer Follow Sean Braswell on Twitter Follow Sean Braswell on Facebook Contact Sean Braswell October 22, 2016 TOPICS * 2016 Election * American History * Cities * Feminism * HISTORY * Midwest * Politicians * POLITICS & POWER * Sexuality SIGN UP FOR THE WEEKLY NEWSLETTER! SIGN UP RELATED STORIES True Stories WHEN BAHRAIN'S MEN WENT PEARLING, ITS WOMEN RULED This nation has been at the center of major trade routes since antiquity, but it took a decidedly modern approach when its men shipped off to sea. The New + the Next HOW THIS MIDWESTERN CITY IS LEADING AMERICA IN RETAIL TECH Low-key Minneapolis is emerging as a home for retail startups not sold on an Amazon-only future. News + Politics LADIES, PROTESTING ISN'T GOING TO CUT IT Demonstrating for or against your beliefs is nice. News + Politics THANKSGIVING’S WELL-INTENTIONED WAR ON WOMEN Is it time American women got some more help on Turkey Day?. News + Politics A CABINET FULL OF WOMEN? A LOOK AT CLINTON’S POTENTIAL INNER CIRCLE How much will Hillary Clinton play the “woman card” when it comes to her Cabinet?. News + Politics A GAME-CHANGING YEAR FOR WOMEN — IN MORE WAYS THAN YOU THINK In the sixth and final part of our series on when women rule, OZY looks back at 2016 as a pivotal year for women — and what’s to come. News + Politics WHY WOMEN HAVE TO BE 2.5 TIMES BETTER In the fourth installment of When Women Rule, Canada’s former Prime Minister discusses the transition into a country’s top job. True Stories A TERRORIST BOMBING WAS NO MATCH FOR THIS IRON LADY Margaret Thatcher batted nary an eyelash when terrorists bombed her hotel, as we recount in the third installment of When Women Rule. News + Politics HOW ISRAEL’S GRANDMOTHERLY HERO FELL FROM GRACE The second installment of When Women Rule looks at how a strong-willed Golda Meir proved too inflexible to prevent a war — a mistake she would later regret. News + Politics WHO'S VOTING THIS NOVEMBER — AND WHY High levels of dissatisfaction with the two main presidential candidates mean voters will be staying home in November, right? Perhaps. News + Politics WHEN HILLARY CLINTON RAN FOR PRESIDENT ... IN 1992 Our Week of Hillary series begins with a look at how Hill was scrutinized like no other potential first lady in history when Bill campaigned for president 24 years ago. News + Politics WHEN WHITE FLIGHT HIT, THIS UNIVERSITY PRESIDENT FOUGHT BACK She reinvented a Catholic women’s college to serve struggling urban women. True Stories ABANDONED: NO ONE SLEEPS IN THIS DESERT TOWN Remembering a time when this California ghost town thrived. The New + the Next THE TYRANNY AND NECESSITY OF WOMEN-ONLY SPACES Should women have their own parking areas?. The New + the Next ROBIN POLLARD, A RISING BEAN STAR IN COFFEE TOWN Where is today’s hottest micro-roaster? Cooking away in Starbucks’ backyard. 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