Day of Rebellion for the ERA explained

The Day of Rebellion for the ERA was an event in 1982 organized by activists in support of the Equal Rights Amendment during the final struggle for ratification in Illinois.[1]

Overview of the event

The Day of Rebellion occurred on June 3, 1982.[2] It was modeled after the militant wing of the women's suffrage movement and organized a group known as A Grassroots Group of Second Class Citizens. Direction action activities included the women chaining themselves to the entrance of the Senate chamber. Participant May Lee Sargent from Champaign, Illinois said, "In the suffrage movement, this is called a militant demonstration." The group occupied the capital for four days.[3] Some of the women even slept in their chains.[4]

Roughly 200 people took part in this direction action. [5] The women loudly encouraged legislators to free them from discrimination based on sex. They chanted "equality now, break our chains" and "we want ERA."[6] This demonstration took place alongside a fast known as Women Hunger for Justice.[7]

Participants

17 people participated in this event. Active participants included:

References

  1. News: June 4, 1982 . Chained ERA Supporters Stage "Day of Rebellion" In Senate . Logansport Pharos-Tribune.
  2. News: Schoenburg . Bernie . June 2, 1982 . ERA Fasters to Join at Home . The Pantograph.
  3. Web site: Fauxsmith . Jennifer . Research Guides: Protest Movements and Civil Disobedience: Archival Collections--Individuals . 2024-04-17 . guides.library.harvard.edu . en.
  4. News: June 4, 1982 . ERA Supporters in Illinois Sleep in Capital, Some Still in Chains . St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
  5. News: June 4, 1982 . Equal Rights Amendment Has Stalled in Illinois . Santa Cruz Sentinel.
  6. News: June 4, 1982 . ERA Protesters, Draped in Chains, Barricade Senate . Herald and Review.
  7. News: June 4, 1982 . ERA Backers Don Chains . The Salina Journal.
  8. News: June 4, 1982 . ERA Backers Chained . Journal Gazette.