Susanna Madora Salter

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Susanna Madora Salter (Kinsey)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Lamira, Smith Township, Belmont County, Ohio, United States
Death: March 17, 1961 (101)
Norman, Oklahoma, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Oliver Kinsey and Terrissa Ann Kinsey
Wife of Lewis Allison Salter
Mother of Francis Argonia Salter; Winfred Alwin Salter; Melva O. Harris; Infant Son Salter; Bertha E. Stover and 2 others
Sister of Charles Ross Kinsey; Seth Emmet Kinsey; Elzey Eastburn Kinsey and Lorene Kinsey

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Susanna Madora Salter

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/38837870

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susanna_M._Salter

Susanna Madora Salter (née Kinsey; March 2, 1860 – March 17, 1961) was a U.S. politician and activist. She served as mayor of Argonia, Kansas, becoming the first woman elected as mayor and one of the first women elected to any political office in the United States.

Early life

Susanna Madora Kinsey was born March 2, 1860, near the unincorporated community of Lamira in Smith Township, Belmont County, Ohio. She was the daughter of Oliver Kinsey and Terissa Ann White Kinsey, the descendants of Quaker colonists from England.

At age 12, she moved to Kansas with her parents, settling on an 80-acre farm near Silver Lake, Kansas. Eight years later, she entered Kansas State Agricultural College (present-day Kansas State University) in Manhattan. She was permitted to skip her freshman year, having taken college-level courses in high school, but was forced to drop out six weeks short of graduation due to illness.

While a student, she met Lewis Allison Salter, an aspiring attorney and the son of former Kansas Lieutenant Governor Melville J. Salter. They married soon thereafter and moved to Argonia, where she was active in the local Woman's Christian Temperance Union and Prohibition Party organizations, and became acquainted with nationally known temperance activist Carrie Nation.

In 1883, she gave birth to the first baby born in Argonia, Francis Argonia Salter. Lewis and Susanna Salter had a total of nine 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.

First female mayor

Salter was elected mayor of Argonia on April 4, 1887. Her election was a surprise because her name had been placed on a slate of candidates as a prank by a group of men against women in politics hoping to secure a loss that would humiliate women and discourage them from running. Because candidates did not have to be made public before election day, Salter herself did not know she was on the ballot before the polls opened. When, on election day itself, she agreed to accept office if elected, the Women's Christian Temperance Union abandoned its own preferred candidate and voted for Salter en masse. Additionally, the local Republican Party Chairman sent a delegation to her home and confirmed that she would serve and the Republicans agreed to vote for her, helping to secure her election by a two-thirds majority.

Although her term was uneventful, her election generated national 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.

One of the first city council meetings over which the newly elected Mrs. Salter presided was attended by a correspondent of the New York Sun. He wrote his story, describing the mayor's dress and hat, and pointing out that she presided with great decorum. He noted that several times she checked irrelevant discussion, demonstrating that she was a good parliamentarian. Other publicity extended to newspapers as faraway as Sweden and South Africa. As compensation for her year's service, she was paid one dollar. After only a year in office, she declined to seek reelection.

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 (then Oklahoma Territory). Ten years later, they moved to Augusta (Woods County, Oklahoma Territory), 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, but never again sought elected office.

Death

She died in Norman, two weeks after her 101st birthday, and was buried in Argonia, alongside her husband.

Honors

In 1933, a commemorative bronze plaque was placed in Argonia's public square honoring her as the first woman mayor in the United States.

The house she lived in during her tenure as mayor was added to the National Register of Historic Places in September 1971.

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Susanna Madora Salter's Timeline

1860
March 2, 1860
Lamira, Smith Township, Belmont County, Ohio, United States
1883
February 13, 1883
Argonia, Sumner County, KS, United States
1884
November 22, 1884
Argonia, Sumner County, KS, United States
1886
March 1886
Sumner County, KS, United States
1888
February 7, 1888
Argonia, Sumner County, KS, United States
1889
March 1889
Sumner County, KS, United States
1891
March 23, 1891
Argonia, Sumner County, KS, United States
1897
May 10, 1897
Carmen, Alfalfa County, OK, United States
1961
March 17, 1961
Age 101
Norman, Oklahoma, United States