(This book was originally published prior to 1923, and rep...)
This book was originally published prior to 1923, and represents a reproduction of an important historical work, maintaining the same format as the original work. While some publishers have opted to apply OCR (optical character recognition) technology to the process, we believe this leads to sub-optimal results (frequent typographical errors, strange characters and confusing formatting) and does not adequately preserve the historical character of the original artifact. We believe this work is culturally important in its original archival form. While we strive to adequately clean and digitally enhance the original work, there are occasionally instances where imperfections such as blurred or missing pages, poor pictures or errant marks may have been introduced due to either the quality of the original work or the scanning process itself. Despite these occasional imperfections, we have brought it back into print as part of our ongoing global book preservation commitment, providing customers with access to the best possible historical reprints. We appreciate your understanding of these occasional imperfections, and sincerely hope you enjoy seeing the book in a format as close as possible to that intended by the original publisher.
Ruth Baird Bryan Leavitt Owen Rohde, best remembered as Ruth Bryan Owen, was a politician and the first woman appointed as a United States ambassador.
Background
She was born on October 2, 1885 in Jacksonville, Illinois. Ruth was the daughter of attorney William Jennings Bryan and Mary E. Baird. Her father was three-time Democratic candidate for president.
Ruth once declared that she wished to emulate her mother's mind and character.
Ruth was five when her father was first elected to Congress in 1890, and she occasionally sat beside him on the House floor when he took part in congressional debates.
Education
She attended Monticello Female Academy in Godfrey, Illinois (1899 - 1901), before going to the University of Nebraska.
She left college to marry a young artist, William Homer Leavitt, in October 1903; and they had two children before the unhappy marriage was dissolved in 1909.
In 1925 she was named vice-chairman of the board of regents of the newly established University of Miami and taught public speaking for the university extension service in 1927-1928, using her salary to establish scholarships.
She also studied nursing and in 1915 was posted to Cairo as an operating room nurse with the British Volunteer Aid Detachment.
Career
Major Owen contracted a degenerative kidney disease in Gallipoli which ruined his health, so after the war the family returned to Florida, where Ruth Owen gave birth to her fourth child in 1920. Major Owen's failing health placed the responsibility for supporting the family upon his wife; therefore, she began lecturing on the Chautauqua and Lyceum circuits, becoming the highest paid woman lecturer on the circuit. She soon became a leader in various civic, cultural, educational, and patriotic organizations. In 1925 she was named vice-chairman of the board of regents of the newly established University of Miami and taught public speaking for the university extension service in 1927-1928.
In 1926 she entered the Democratic congressional primary; despite the complete opposition of the Democratic organization and the anti-suffrage prejudice of Florida, she lost by only 779 votes. Her husband died in December 1927. With the encouragement and help of her mother, she ran for Congress again in 1928. After an energetic campaign reminiscent of her father's campaigns, Owen won the Democratic primary and then swamped her Republican opponent by over 30, 000 votes in the general election, becoming the first congresswoman from the South.
Her greatest legislative contributions derived from the controversy surrounding her being seated in Congress. Her defeated opponent challenged her right to the seat on the grounds that she had not been a citizen of the United States for seven years prior to her election, as required by the Constitution. Under a 1907 law, she had lost her American citizenship by marrying an alien, and she had not regained it until 1925 under the provisions of the 1922 Cable Act, an "independent citizenship" law demanded by the women's rights movement. The House Committee on Elections heard the challenge, and Ruth Owen presented her own case. She condemned the 1907 law as unfair in that it penalized only women for marrying aliens. No American man lost his citizenship by marrying a foreigner. In addition, she showed that the procedural flaws in the Cable Act itself had made it difficult for her, a woman supporting four children and a dying husband, to go through the process of repatriation. The Committee on Elections unanimously accepted her, and the entire House seated her without discussion or dissent. Her case focused attention on the defects of the Cable Act and led to corrective amendments which produced "independent citizenship" for women. She was reelected without opposition in 1930.
In 1929 she was appointed to the House Foreign Affairs Committee, making her the first woman to serve on a major congressional committee. In Congress she championed feminist issues, including the creation of a cabinet-level Department of Home and Child, the appointment of a woman to a cabinet office, and appropriations to send delegates to international conferences on health and child welfare. She came to grief over the prohibition issue in the 72nd Congress (1931-1933). She always voted "dry" on the question during the session, but the forces of repeal defeated her in the Democratic primary in 1932. In the lame-duck session that followed she accepted the wishes of her district and voted to repeal the prohibition amendment.
In 1933 President Franklin Roosevelt appointed her to be envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Denmark, making her the first American woman to hold a major diplomatic post. Three years later she married Captain Borge Rohde of the Danish Royal Guards, which automatically made her a Danish citizen. This champion of independent citizenship found herself unable to continue in her diplomatic capacity because she now possessed dual citizenship. So she resigned and, with her husband and family, Ruth Rohde returned to live in the United States. She continued to lecture and write and in 1939 became a visiting professor at Monticello College.
In 1945 Roosevelt named her special assistant to the State Department to aid in the drafting of the United Nations Charter, and in 1949 President Harry Truman appointed her alternate delegate to the United Nations General Assembly. In 1954 she travelled to Denmark to accept the Order of Merit from King Frederick IX for her contributions to Danish-American friendship.
Achievements
She was a Democrat, who in 1929 was elected as Florida’s (and the South's) first woman US Representative, coming from Florida’s 4th district. Representative Owen was also the first woman to earn a seat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Ruth Bryan to William Jennings Bryan and his wife Mary E. Baird.
In 1903 Bryan married William H. Leavitt. The couple met when he was painting Bryan's father's portrait. The couple had two children before divorcing in 1909.
Bryan married Reginald Owen in 1910, and had two more children with him. Her second husband died in 1928.
In 1936 she married Borge Rohde.
Father:
William Jennings Bryan
He was an American orator and politician from Nebraska.
Mother:
Mary Baird Bryan
She studied law.
Third husband:
Borge Rohde
He was a Danish Captain of the King's Guard.
Second husband:
Reginald Owen
He was a British Army officer.
First husband:
William H. Leavitt
He was a well-known Newport, Rhode Island portrait painter.