Maria Thompson Daviess

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Maria Thompson Daviess

Birthdate:
Death: September 03, 1924 (51)
Place of Burial: Spring Hill Cemetery, Harrodsburg, Mercer County, Kentucky USA
Immediate Family:

Daughter of John Burton Thompson Daviess and Leonora Daviess
Sister of Emmeline Hamilton Daviess and Mortimer Hamilton Daviess

Managed by: Judith "Judi" Elaine (McKee) Burns
Last Updated:

About Maria Thompson Daviess

https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/maria-thompson-daviess/

Maria Thompson Daviess, artist and author, was born in Harrodsburg, Kentucky, in 1872 to an upper-middle-class family. Before she was eight years old, her sister and her father died, and her mother moved the family to Nashville. Daviess became active in Nashville society and studied art at Peabody College. After graduation she traveled to Europe and continued her artistic endeavors, visiting museums and meeting famous people including Pope Leo XIII, Auguste Rodin, and French Empress Eugenie. Michelangelo's magnificent art so overwhelmed Daviess that she resigned herself to photography and miniatures. She excelled at both and displayed her miniatures at a Paris salon.

In 1904 Daviess returned to America to teach art. She developed an interest in literature and eventually put aside visual art for writing. She wrote thirteen novels and an autobiography during her fifteen-year career. Her most famous novel, Miss Selma Lue, typifies her style of the excessive optimism associated with the Pollyanna school.

As Daviess wrote her novels, she adapted them to the stage. Phyllis played in Boston and was optioned for film, though there is no evidence it was produced. Some of her work developed from her devotion to woman suffrage, a cause she helped to win in Tennessee. Daviess was a charter member of the Nashville woman suffrage organization and founded the Madison organization after moving to Sweetbriar farm in 1915. She was living at her home in Madison when she wrote her autobiography, Seven Times Seven (1923). At the time, Daviess was fighting severe articular rheumatism. She died as a result of the disease in 1924.

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The daughter of John Burton T. Daviess and Leonora Hamilton Daviess.

https://teva.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p15138coll27/id/...

Sketch by artist Sarah Eakin Cowan of Maria Thompson Daviess. Daviess was the vice president of the Nashville Equal Suffrage League in 1911 and worked closely with Anne Dallas Dudley. She was also honorary president of the Tennessee Equal Suffrage Association and was present for the founding of the Madison Equal Suffrage League in 1915.

The 19th Amendment to the U. S. Constitution granted women the right to vote. When the Tennessee General Assembly passed the ratification resolution on August 18, 1920, it gave the amendment the 36th and final state necessary for ratification. Suffragists and anti-suffragists lobbied furiously to secure votes during that intense summer in Nashville. The ratification resolution passed easily in the Tennessee State Senate on August 13, but the House of Representatives was deadlocked.

When young Harry T. Burn of Niota changed his vote to support ratification of the 19th Amendment, he broke a tie in the House of Representatives and made history.

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Maria Thompson Daviess's Timeline

1872
November 25, 1872
1924
September 3, 1924
Age 51
????
Spring Hill Cemetery, Harrodsburg, Mercer County, Kentucky USA