While I would be content to sit in an air-conditioned space
from late May through the end of September, I know people can’t live that way
and remain productive members of society. The world is already positioned to
encourage my children to be mind-numbed couch potatoes glued to electronic
devices; we’ve got to counter that as best we can while we still wield some
influence over them.
My wife found out about an event happening at Sunnyside, the
estate of Washington Irving in Tarrytown, New York, which is not too far a
drive up from Queens. We decided to go. We have three girls and with women’s
political activism in its ascendency we must strike while the iron is hot to
give them a sense of empowerment.
Vote Like a Girl was hosted by HistoricHudson Valley at Washington Irving’s Sunnyside. The
author, best known for short stories “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow” and “Rip Van
Winkle,” lived in Tarrytown and his home is preserved as a historic site.
The event included a staged debate between a man who
advocated for suffrage and a woman who denounced the suffragette movement, a
parade of suffragettes marching from the visitor’s center to Irving’s cottage, and
a reading from Susan Hood, author of Shaking
Things Up: Fourteen Young Women Who Changed the World.
The event was not only a celebration of the suffragette
movement, but an encouraging look at a future with things that were encouraging
to young girls. They had a STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Math) room
at the event that allowed girls to play in ways that helped develop scientific
concepts, and an arts and crafts room that had some projects that spoke to the
theme of the day, such as cross-stitching political messages and making Statue
of Liberty-like crowns.
There were also fashion demonstrations, allowing women and
girls to see what they would have likely worn had they grown up in the 1800s or
early 1900s. And our girls tried their hand at kids’ games from that
era—attempting to walk on wooden stilts or keep a barrel loop moving with a
short stick both look a lot easier than they actually are.
Sunnyside is a great place to visit and was a winning trip
with small children in tow. It is on the bank of the Hudson River and has sunny
lawns and shady spots for picnicking.
Years ago I attended a holiday candle light tour there and
it was excellent, showing visitors how Irving’s house would have been decorated
during the Christmas season (e.g., lots of wreathes but no Christmas tree). In
mentioning the candle light holiday tour to one of the employees there, she
said that while they had been discontinued, they were very popular and that
there was hope that they could be brought back.
While the cause of women’s suffrage is not exactly up for
debate any longer in the U.S., the role of women in government and society
continues to evolve. There are more female candidates running for public office
than at times in the past and the revulsion of President Trump and the
potential shift in the Supreme Court further right means that women’s issues
are going to be central in our political dialogues over the next several years.
And if you are trying to raise girls, it is hard to cut
through the constant noise of our common culture, where women’s place in society
is not highly valued. Women who are given the largest platform are often not
there for productive achievements that are desired or realistic for our
daughters (the nine “most Googled” women of 2018 turned up zero scientists,
elected officials, or Supreme Court Justices; all were entertainers or reality
television personalities). So let us glory in the history of women’s suffrage
and use that as a springboard to greater ends.
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