"Indiana may well be and is
justly proud of one who is possessed of so many striking capabilities, such
inexhaustible energy and such unselfish readiness to give of herself for the
betterment of all as Marie Stuart Edwards of Peru, whom to know is to love."
Journal and Courier, 27 April 1921,
Lafayette, IN, quoting the Elkhart "Woman Voter's"
When we first began studying the
suffrage movement in Miami County, it quickly became clear Marie Stuart
Edwards was important. We just didn't realize how important a role she
played. Not just in Miami County but at both the state and national levels as
well.
Who was Marie? What exactly
did she do that deserves such high praise from the Journal and Courier?
Marie Stuart was a closer when it
comes to the Women's Suffrage. She and the women of Miami County played a
big part in getting the 19th Amendment to the finish line. We are working
on bridging the period gap between the time Lizzie Bunnell published the last
issue of The Mayflower in Peru in 1863 and the creation of the Peru Franchise
League in 1914, time when Marie Stuart arrived on our local scene.
Marie Stuart was born in Lafayette, IN on September 11th,
1880, the daughter of Ada Ellsworth and Thomas Arthur Stuart. We
don't know much about her youth, except that she is said to have been the first
girl in Lafayette to ride a bike and to go to college.
Marie was born in the
upper-middle-class family of prominent lawyer, Thomas Arthur Stuart, who
had followed in his own father's footsteps, Indiana Supreme Court Judge William
Z Stuart. Marie's mother, Ada, was not without a prominent background
herself. She was born in Indianapolis and had grown up at the site of
what is now the War Memorial. Her father Henry Ellsworth served as
Minister to Sweden under James Buchanan. Her great-grandfather, Oliver
Ellsworth, was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention and later served
as the 3rd Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court.
Enjoying the comforts money can
afford does not shelter one from tragedy.
It would not spare Marie any more than it had her mother Ada, who had
lost both her parents by the time she was 14.
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Marie Stuart in 1892
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Marie was almost 12 years old when
her father, Thomas died. Ada was left on
her own to raise Marie and her little brother, Allison, 6. The thirty-nine year old Thomas Arthur had been on his way to a
promising career of his own. In 1890, he and his brothers, Charles B. and
William V. founded the legal firm of the Stuart Brothers.
Both brothers would later take a turn as President of the Purdue University Board of
Trustees, as would Allison also.
After her husband’s death it seems
Ada began taking care of her ailing siblings. It is also said it is about then that Marie became the first girl in Lafayette to ride a bicycle. It is interesting to note that it is around 1890 that women's bikes became a symbol of the suffrage movement. Riding a bike enabled women to go further than they had before been able to go on their own.
It is easy to understand how Ada Ellsworth Stuart would want to foster a desire for self-reliance in her daughter. Ada had been an orphan and was now a widow, wealthy as she might have been, she still seemed to depend on the kindness of relatives to ensure her children had all she hoped they could have.
It is said that after Charles Stuart’s death in February 1899,
Ada moved in with her sister-in-law Alice
Earl Stuart, at “Earlhurst”, in Lafayette, Indiana. But the 1900 Census shows that she is ‘keeping
house’ for Lewis Perry, a “woolens
dealer” in Chicago. Allison Stuart is
listed as a cousin to the head of household however, while Rhea and John Morrill are
listed as “Wards”, and Annie F Ellsworth
a boarder, Ada’s younger sister.
1901-1902 correspondence
between Marie and her mother show that she took care of Annie and that her
extended family did indeed help ensure she and her brother would not want for
anything. By then Ada was no longer in
Chicago.
Marie attended Smith College
in Northampton, Massachusetts. The letters reveal that it is at Smith
College that she developed
her talent as a well-respected public speaker and maybe even as event
organizer. It seems that her love and talent for theater blossomed there
as well. Marie might even have pursued a
career in that field. Richard Edwards
well might have talked her out of it suggesting she should find as much
fulfillment becoming his wife. She graduated
in June 1901.
A year later, in late June 1902 she
applied for a US passport and on July 7, embarked on the Potsdam in route to
Europe to round up her education. In her letters, she shares her joy of
linking History to the places she visited.
Her itinerary included Boulogne and Paris (France), Lucerne and Lausanne
(Switzerland), Florence, Rome and Sorento (Italy). In one letter she mentioned how in Padua, a
university professor accidentally turned guide, quizzed her to establish she
truly had benefited from a higher education.
He asked her to “translate some Greek
text… to see how far women were educated in America.”
In the letters she also talks of the marriage plans between
her and Richard E Edwards, son of Alice Shirk and Richard A
Edwards of Peru, Indiana. She would not commit officially, though she
had made a private promise to him, until he was free from his obligation to
his father.
"I have definitely promised to marry Dick at some indefinite time. He wants me to say in a year, but I wouldn't, because to begin with, it's going to take him longer than that to do what his father wants him to, So I said when I came home from abroad we'd discuss it again. I don't wear a ring - for one reason, I don't want to now and for another, neither Dick nor I want anything of that sort while he is dependent on his father..." (Miami County Museum 1992.089.0013a-b)
Richard graduated from
Harvard in 1902 and between July 1902 and February 1904, he worked for his father’s
business, the First National Bank of Peru.
Marie and Richard were married on
October 11th, 1904, at the St. John’s Episcopal
Church in Lafayette, IN. Richard worked for the Wolverine Cedar & Lumber Company
and so the couple moved to the Upper Peninsula. They resided in Menominee until 1909 then
moved to Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan.
“Mrs.
Edwards spent six years in Menominee and Sault Ste. Marie and made many trips
with her husband to the snow-covered woods in logging season or to fight fires
in summer.”
Photo courtesy of the Miami County
Museum
Following in her civic-minded
mother’s footsteps, Marie had participated in fundraisers, such as one for the benefit of Free Kindergarten
and the Children’s Aid Society,
but it is in Sault Ste. Marie that she became an activist. Concerned about the quality of the milk she
was feeding her young son, she joined the Civic Improvement League and fought
to improve sanitation in processing milk and in pushing for city street
sanitation.
Marie had surgery at Chicago's St. Luke’s
Hospital in late October 1913 and was reported recovering well, although there was
no hint as to the reason for the surgery. It might be the reason Richard decided they should winter in California that year.
The little family returned to Peru
in the Spring of 1914. It is difficult to determine where they settled down but it is likely they stayed with Richard's parents at least for a short time after their return.
The 1920 Census shows Richard and Marie living at 123 West Main Street. The house belonged to her husband's cousin, Elbert Shirk, and his wife, Mary Emma Kimberley, whose sister Helen Kimberley had married Marie's paternal uncle, Herbert William Z Stuart, aka HWZS. This is where Marie hosted many suffragist meetings and received her friends, Adah Bush, among many others. This is the house where she resided during the years when she served as State President of the Woman's Franchise League of Indiana (1917-1919) and also as Treasurer (1920) and later First Vice-President (1921-1923) of the National League of Women Voters.
Richard spent a year
closing the lumber business, then began to manage the old Peru Chair Company,
renaming it Peru Chair Works
factory in 1915, with Marie by his side.
Marie settled in the
Peru social life fairly quickly. She loved theater and we find her already in April 1914 working with the local Drama Club. Mary Emma Kimberley
Shirk, who had been one of her bridesmaids, lived next door now, as she married Richard’s cousin, Elbert W Shirk.
Women gathered for teas to discuss a
variety of subjects. There was a Sewing
Guild, an Art Club, a Drama Club, the Tuberculosis Society, and of course the Woman's Christian Temperance Union.
The Women’s Christian Temperance
Union was
bringing about real change. The women
who attended its meetings considered alcoholism the root of most of family problems
and so they pushed for laws to ‘dry up’ states, but they did not just discuss temperance
and the ills of alcoholism.
The WCTU was also interested in the woman’s
suffrage movement and it is likely what brought Miss Harriet Henton, columnist for the Peru Republican to invite Dr. Amelia Keller to speak about the Woman’s
Franchise League of Indiana on
October 15, 1914, at the Peru Public Library
and
organize a new branch. The Peru Franchise League,
became the 78th branch organized in Indiana, with 16 charter members. Ellen
Cole Fetter, daughter of Albert Cole and Mary Galpin, was elected first President with Marie Stuart Edwards as First Vice-President. The League members had had good intentions, planning to meet every other week at the library but it is not until a year later that they really became active in the movement. On November 13, 1915, fifty-one women assembled at Marie Edwards' house, to reorganize the Peru League. Marie Edwards was elected President, switching roles with Ellen Fetter who served as First Vice-president and Mrs. F Van Ness, Second Vice-President.
In April 1916, both Marie Edwards and her mother Ada Ellsworth
Stuart were elected to the board of directors of the Woman’s Franchise League of Indiana.
A Suffrage Parade was to take place in Chicago on June 7th, 1916 as part of a special Convention. Marie, as State chair of the League, with the help of Mrs. Theo Ensel, local chair, arranged to rent a Pullman car on the C&O and travel the night before the convention and return a day after.
40,000 women were expected to march but the heavy rains kept many out of the street that day.
Indiana was well represented however and a large contingent braved the storm. The parade was to go from Randolph Street to the Coliseum. The Miami County contingent is believed to have been the best represented in the state.
During Indiana's centennial year, Marie had many other opportunities to demonstrate the qualities of a good leader and in spite of her young age (compared to the other women involved) she was quickly propelled to the presidency of the State League in April 1917,
succeeding Dr. Keller who was retiring.
Marie continued to work hard and
soon found herself with an increasingly heavy load. Her leadership skills were also put to the test right away.
In February 1917 the Maston-McKinley Act had given partial suffrage to Indiana women. They would be allowed to register to vote for delegates to a Constitutional Convention to take place in September. This was contested of course. Registration began Jun 11 and women came in to register in drove. But on June 25, Judge Thornton of Indianapolis put a stop to all women registration and Marie found herself in the middle of a legal battle with the state. Her brother Allison represented the Woman's Franchise League but in the end, the law was walked back later that summer. More on that in another article.
The other crisis looming on the horizon had been the World war. And on April 6, 1917, the USA joined the Allied Forces. The Woman's Franchise League of Indiana answered the call of Patriotism by creating a War Work Department, endorsing the work of the Woman's Committee of the Council of Defense. Marie became one of the local Fourteen-Minute Women speakers, traveling throughout the county to encourage and teach women on different subjects, still needing to continue her state work and answering to her family obligations.
Helen Royse Shirk had succeeded Marie locally and set up headquarters at the Episcopal Church Guild Hall. The leagues were busy all across the state that year, registering women with notaries, canvassing the state in automobiles.
So yes, 1917 was busy, and 1918 would not slow down. With the prospect of her husband leaving for war, in the Spring of
1918, Marie advised the League leadership
that, unless there was a way to get the League Headquarters moved to Peru, she
would prefer her name not be offered as selection for re-election.
"The proof is in the pudding", they say, and the League's board amended its constitution to allow headquarters to move to the president’s home town for the duration of her
service.

So from May 1918 until April 1919,
Peru, Indiana became the hub of the state league,
conducting business right from here. They located the State League Headquarters at the Dukes Building at 15 South Wabash, in Peru, IN, "in a pleasant suite of rooms, on the north side of the building, upstairs. The three large rooms are none too big for the increased office force and necessary machinery for this important yer. The press bureau, of which Miss Mary Gallahan is chairman, has a room all to itself. The ante room is conveniently arranged for committee meetings and contains an interesting display of suffrage literature, magazines and novelties for the visitors' inspection. Miss Kate Cox, the executive secretary, and Mrs. Edwards have their desks in the third room which with its telephone and its correspondence files has many lines leading out through the state...".
During her tenure, the league grew
from 80 branches across the state to 300.
Miami County alone went from 1 to 7, adding leagues in Bunker Hill,
Converse, Denver, Mexico, Macy, Gilead and Peoria. These leagues held at least
one convention
at the Peru Library, in April 1919.
In 1917 already she had organized a poll of Indiana women that is reminiscent of the war registration cards, women across the USA would be asked to fill out in 1918.
She also set goals for the members to increase
the membership. In July 1918, the league
started a campaign to reach 100,000 members by 1919 and collect 700,000
signatures to present to the 1919 state legislature. Miami County’s quota was 10,500 petition
signatures and 1,500 members. To achieve
these goals by October 1st, incentives were offered:
- $25 reward to the individual who secured
the most new memberships
-
$25 reward to the individual who collected
the most signatures
- $25 reward to the league that
increased the most (by percentage)
- $25 reward to the league organized
since April 1, 1918
- $25 reward to the first county
chairman to reach both goals.
Marie was no fan of Alice Paul or
the Woman’s Party, or closer to home, Lucy Burns and the Indiana Constitutional
Union, whom she viewed as radicals. In August
1918, she is quoted to say: “In spite of our frequent statements calling
attention to the fact that our organization disapproves of the picketing, I am
in despair of making people understand that we have tried in every way to stop
them, but that since we are entirely different organizations, opposed in
principle and practice, we cannot control their behavior. They are few and we are many, and they
seriously impair the suffrage cause. We
most emphatically do not picket, do not use nor believe in militant methods and
in every way are supporting, not attacking, the president and the
government. Ex-President Roosevelt once
said that every big public movement had its ‘lunatic fringe’. That is what the pickets of the Woman’s Party
are - the ‘lunatic fringe’ of the suffrage movement.”
Marie did not seek re-election in April
1919. She claimed her family wanted her
home; she had spent enough time on Suffrage.
She had however been named to the Board of the National League and would
soon be busy founding the National League of Women Voters with Carrie Chapman
Catt and the other national leaders of NAWSA. She was not slowing down,
although…
The summer of 1919 would prove a
difficult one for Marie. Her health deteriorated and she had to rest at Lake
Maxinkuckee, in Culver, IN. Her friend and fellow Indiana suffragist Ada Bush came to keep her
company. (The Culver Citizen, 16 Jul 1919, Culver, IN)
Marie's Cottage at Lake Maxinkuckee, Culver, IN (Courtesy of the Miami County Museum, Peru, IN)
She was present however the day the
one and only Suffrage Parade
took place in Peru, to celebrate the 19th Amendment passing the
House. She was on duty for Suffrage Tag
Day on Saturday June 7th and she was in the parade with her son Dickie
that evening to listen to those invited to speak.
On June 9th, she was absent when the Miami County
Board of Education elected her as the first woman
ever to sit with them and make decision affecting the schooling of all the
children in Miami County. It took thirteen
ballots to get a final vote.
“Mrs.
Gould, speaking in behalf of Mrs. Edwards, thanked the council for the honor
bestowed on Mrs. Edwards in electing her to a seat on the school board and
stated that the women of Peru felt sure that the selection was a wise one and
that the council would never have grounds to regret its act.”
It
was hard not to notice Marie’s work. At
the First Congress of the new league in Chicago in February of 1920, Marie was
elected its first treasurer.
In
April 1920, she was present at the transformation of the Woman’s Franchise
League of Indiana into the Indiana League of Women Voters. She was elected to
the new board of directors.

In
October 1920, she was one of three women called upon, at the last minute (two days' notice), to
organize Social Justice Day.
It was a great success, with 12,000 women descending on Marion, OH to march in the parade. Marie personally hand delivered the league’s
planks to Senator Warren Harding.
In
December 1920, the Peru Franchise League transitioned into the Peru League of
Women Voters and again the place of choice was the Peru Library’s Assembly
room.
Marie
was later elected as First Vice President of the National League of Women
Voters, position she held in 1921 and 1922. She
would relocate the National Headquarters of the League of Women Voters
to 26 North Broadway, Peru, IN.
From there she ran, among other things, the Speakers Bureau
with the help of 
Miss Etelka Rockenbach,
beginning May 1, 1921 until the
end of April 1923. There, women were trained
to give speeches, before being sent out to lobby for social reform
across the country. Citizen School and league meetings were also held there. Headquarters appear to have shifted in 1922 to be at the Traction building, on East Main Street, Peru, IN, as shown on the front page of the League's flyers.
Constance Drexel, of the Public Ledger Company, published an article that was carried in at least 2 newspapers:
(Also found in the Dayton Herald, 9 Dec 1921, Dayton, OH, page 24)
In
1922, Marie helped organize the Pan-American Conference of Women in Baltimore.
Central and South-American women came to participate in this intercontinental
convention.
http://loc.gov/pictures/resource/cph.3b01778/
“The Sentinel” printed the proceedings of this conference here, along with
league programs, yearbook, pamphlets, flyers etc.
All
through 1922, she traveled with Adah Bush, Mary McDowell, Della Dortch and Mrs.
Gilford Pinchot as they made their way West to San Francisco to attend the big
convention in August. The ladies carried
15 pieces of luggage including a typewriter and printing outfit and issued
bulletins in Omaha, Denver, Salt Lake City and Reno.
(R
to L: Ada Bush, Mary McDowell, Marie S Edwards, Della Dortch and Mrs. Gilford
Pinchot – picture courtesy of the Miami County Museum, Peru, IN)
In
1923, Marie retired from the national stage for health reasons, but remained a
director-at-large of the state league.
Maud
Wood Park, national president of the League of Women Voters offered a tribute
to Marie at the opening of the 4th annual convention of the National
League.
“I have no words to express what Mrs.
Edwards’ vitality, tireless energy and devotion to duty have done for the
league. Her qualities of genius have been a tower of strength to me in my own
duties and have gone far toward building the league toward success.”
In 1925, Marie resigned from the state board of directors of the League of Women Voters because she and her family expected to make a permanent move to Rochester, New York. However, in December 1925, she was named chairman of the nominating committee for the annual convention to be held in Indianapolis in March 1926.
Richard had moved to New York, ahead of Marie as we
find her home from Lake Maxinkuckee (Culver, IN) "overseeing the packing of the furnishing of the Edwards home on West Main Street." The Peru Republican article of May 21, 1926 continues: "From Peru, Mrs. Edwards will go to Rochester, New York where Mr. Edwards is now.". Young Richard was off to school by then.
The house at 123 W Main was sold to the Griswold family on August 29th, 1927, about 2 weeks after Marie's father-in-law, Richard A Edwards retired from his position at the First National Bank and made way for his son to succeed him.
Business would therefore bring Richard E back to Peru but Marie would lag behind a bit. She had joined the local League of Women Voters and in June 1927, she was elected Second Vice-President of the Monroe County LWV.
The seemed pretty excited about her being there to: "The acquisition as an officer of the League, of Mrs. Edwards, who, with her husband, came to Rochester to make their home this winter, is considered important by the League here, as she is one of the outstanding figures in the country among women's organizations interested in government. She was the first treasurer of the National League of Women Voters and for two years was its first vice-president. She is a member of the National Board of the National American Women's Suffrage Association, of which Mrs. Carrie Chapman is the president. This Board is still in existence because of the necessity of disposing of bequests left to the Association. She was the first woman member of the Board of Education in Peru, Indiana, where she lived for many years, and the first woman member of the State Board of Education of Indiana. For four years she was on the Commission for Feeble Minded of that state. But the offices given above are only a few of the many she has held." (The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle, Jun 9, 1927, Rochester, NY)
Pinpointing exactly when she came back is proving as difficult as determining when she actually arrived in Rochester. Her name appears as, once again, a member of the Peru Art Club in the Peru Republican of October 18, 1929.
She is also mentioned in the Indianapolis Times on August 31, 1929 as National Chairman of the 10th Anniversary and
Memorial Fund of the League of Women Voters.
The 1930 US Census shows that this time, they moved into the big Mansion at 50 North Hood. Even before her return to Peru many picnics and suffrage related gatherings took place there. Its
lawns were often compared to those of the White House lawns.
Marie Edwards continued to be active with the League of Women Voters at the state level.
She served in different capacities over the years. She was appointed to many boards but one stands out in particular. In March 1936, Marie Edwards was appointed to the very first newly created Indiana Public Welfare Board.
In
her application to the Register of National Landmarks, Terry Miller prepared a
short summary of Marie’s later career:
“In
1930 she made a nationwide tour on behalf of the League to increase
fundraising. Her committee reached the
$250,000 goal in spite of the onset of the Depression.
Due
to her leadership, shacks along the Wabash River, known as “Tin Town”, were
razed in September 1934, and the families who lived there were provided decent places to live.
In
1937, she was Vice President of the newly created Indiana Board of Public
Welfare and chair of the drafting committee for the Civil Service Bill in
Indiana. She served on the state Board
of Corrections and helped write the laws for this board.
She
was active on the county board of Associated Charities and headed the local
Works Project Administration Board, part of FDR’s New Deal program, during the
Depression years. 
She
was appointed to Peru’s first Civic Center board, supervising the initial
project of converting the building into a community center.
During
WWII she was responsible for organizing and conducting the Red Cross Blood
Donor Unit, which was one of the most successful in Indiana."
In
1945, she felt snubbed by the national level, at the occasion of the 25th
anniversary of the ratification of the 19th Amendment. This prompted
a letter exchange between Marie and Maud Wood Park, which is worth quoting: “When our state league paid its tribute,
board members spoke almost with indignation that the present generation of young
women took all you, grand people, did for them for granted… Some way, at
intervals, they should be reminded…”
She would not be forgotten on the 50th anniversary commemorations and at almost 90 years old, she attended.
She retired one last time in
1969. She was 89 years old.
Marie
died at her home at 50 North Hood in 1970, just a year after her husband.
Marie
Edwards’ funeral services were held at the Holy Trinity Episcopalian Church on
West Main Street. She and her husband
are resting at Mount Hope.
In 2020, as part of the commemoration of the Centennial of the Nineteenth Amendment, our group was encouraged to apply for an OCRA grant with the help of the local "Mainstreet" organization "Rediscover Downtown".
We wished to recognize and honor the memory of Marie Stuart Edwards with the realization of a bronze statue of her as a 12 y old, with her bike. As the first woman to be elected to the Board of Education in Peru, Marie Edwards had also become the first woman to become a trustee on the board of the Peru Public Library. This location was the ideal place for the statue.
Our application was successful and in spite of some difficult moments, the unveiling took place 26 August 2021. It was attended by the Lieutenant Governor Susan Crouch and members of the Indiana Humanities, partnered with OCRA. Local dignitaries also attended but most important of all was the presence of Marie's grandsons. We had a chance to spend time at the cemetery with them and watch as they placed a WWI medallion on their grandfather's grave, honoring the man who made it possible for their grandmother to accomplish all she did.
The library was all decked out thanks to the hard work of the Peru Library staff. Inside and out.
The statue is the work of Cindy Billingsley who was also present at the unveiling.
An unexpected flood of emotions washed over many. It became a reunion for some who had not seen each other since childhood and had a chance to reminisce for a short while.
This picture touched my heart most: Marie's grandsons standing next to the child their grandmother was. They never knew her except wheelchair-bound.
We are grateful to the Indiana Humanities and OCRA for inviting us to dream big.
Here we hope Marie Stuart Edwards will continue to inspire generations to reach their potential and make a difference for good in the world.
Here the trail begins...
Video of August 26 Unveiling - Short - courtesy of Jim Allison
On September 10th, 2022, MCIWR placed a time capsule east of the statue, on the grounds of the Peru Public Library.
The engraved capstone by Caldwell Monuments, placed on top of the capsule, was paid in full thanks to the Chamber of Commerce who sponsored the creation of local postcards by Modern Graphics, and thanks to all who purchased them.
It was an opportunity to gather with friends and the families of Marie Edwards and of her friend and private secretary Carrie Fuller. Yet another great story to tell...
The local suffrage trail was revealed ahead of the unveiling of the bronze plaque honoring Lizzie Bunnell.
The time capsule will be opened in 2072.
These letters are part of the Marie Edwards’ collection at
the Miami County Museum,
transcribed and compiled by Miami County Indiana Worth Remembering.
THRELKELD, MEGAN. “The Pan American Conference of Women, 1922: Successful Suffragists Turn to International Relations.” Diplomatic History, vol. 31, no. 5, 2007, pp. 801–828. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/24916101. Accessed 31 Dec. 2020.