Site Map

  Susanna M. Salter Index for
Susanna M
Website Links For
Susanna
 

Information About

Susanna M. Salter

APPAREL
BABY
BEAUTY
BOOKS
CAR TOYS
CELL PHONES
DVD'S
ELECTRONICS
GOURMET FOOD
GROCERIES
HEALTH & PERSONAL
HOME & GARDEN
JEWELRY
MUSIC
MUSIC INSTRUMENTS
OFFICE PRODUCTS
SOFTWARE
SPORTING GOODS
TOOLS & HARDWARE
TOYS
VIDEO GAMES
SHOPPING HOME

MORE SHOPPING...




Early life

Susanna Madora Kinsey was born near Lamira in rural Belmont County, Ohio . At age 12, she moved to Kansas with her parents, Oliver Kinsey and Terissa Ann White. Eight years later, she entered Kansas State Agricultural College (present-day Kansas State University ) in Manhattan , but was forced to drop out six weeks short of graduation due to illness. While a student, she met Lewis J. Salter, an aspiring attorney and the son of former Kansas Lt. Governor Melville J. Salter . They married soon thereafter and moved to Argonia, where she became a leader in the local Woman's Christian Temperance Union organization, and in 1883 , she gave birth to the first baby born in Argonia, Francis Argonia Salter. Lewis and Susanna Salter had a total of eight children, one of whom was born during her tenure as mayor and died in infancy. Following the city's incorporation in 1885 , her father and husband were elected as the city's first mayor and city clerk, respectively.


Election

As a joke intended to embarrass the local WCTU, several local-area men nominated Salter, then only 27 years old, for mayor on the Prohibition Party ticket in 1887 , just weeks after Kansas approved women's suffrage in local elections. Their plan backfired when the local Republican Party organization tipped her off about the plan. With their support, she agreed to serve if elected. On April 4 , 1887 , with the combined support of the Prohibitionists, the Republicans, and the WCTU, she was elected with a two-thirds majority. Instead of embarrassing the local WCTU, the men helped elect the first woman mayor in the United States.


First Woman Mayor

Although her term was uneventful, her election generated worldwide interest from the press, sparking a debate regarding the feasibility of other towns following Argonia's lead, which ranged from objections to a "petticoat rule" to a "wait-and-see" attitude. After only a year in office, she declined to seek reelection. As compensation for her service, she was paid one dollar. The house she lived in during her tenure as mayor was added to the National Register Of Historic Places in September, 1971 .


Later years

Following her term as mayor, Salter and her family continued to live in Argonia, until 1893 when her husband acquired land on the Cherokee Strip in Alva, Oklahoma . Ten years later, they moved to Augusta, Oklahoma, where her husband practiced law and established the Headlight newspaper. They eventually joined the town's settlers in moving to Carmen, Oklahoma . Following her husband's death in 1916 , she moved to Norman, Oklahoma accompanying her youngest child at the University Of Oklahoma . She lived in Norman for the remainder of her life and maintained an interest in religious and political matters, although she never again sought elected office. She died two weeks after her 101st birthday.


External links