Today in History

Today in History: December 10

Walter Johnson
Walter Johnson, 1913.
Baseball Cards, 1887-1914

He's got a gun concealed about his person. You can't tell me he throws them balls with his arm.

Ring Lardner on Walter Johnson

On December 10, 1946, baseball great Walter Johnson died at the age of fifty-nine. Nicknamed "The Big Train," Johnson pitched his way to fame during twenty-one seasons with the Washington Senators. His fastball is considered to be among the best in baseball history.

Johnson joined the Senators in 1907 on the condition that the team pay his way home to Kansas if he failed in the big leagues. After a tentative first season, the former high school star found his ground eventually scoring more shutout victories (110) than any other major league pitcher. Johnson's 1913 record for pitching fifty-six consecutive scoreless innings stood for over fifty years until Don Drysdale bested it in 1968. His strikeout record (3,508) held until 1983. In all-time wins, Johnson is second only to Cy Young.

Honored in 1913 and in 1924 as the American League's Most Valuable Player, Johnson retired from play in 1927. Two years later, he took over as manager of the Senators, a position he held until 1932. In 1936, Johnson was elected to the National Baseball Hall of Fame, along with Ty Cobb, Christy Mathewson, Babe Ruth, and Honus Wagner. The "Five Immortals" were the first chosen for the honor.

Panoramic view of a baseball team
Washington Baseball Team, 1913.
Taking the Long View, 1851-1991

Wyoming Day

Three suffragists at a voting box
Suffragists Casting Votes, ca. 1917.
"Votes for Women" Suffrage Pictures, 1850-1920

On December 10, 1869, John Campbell, Governor of the Wyoming Territory, approved the first law in U.S. history explicitly granting women the right to vote. Commemorated in later years as Wyoming Day, the event was one of many firsts for women achieved in the Equality State.

On November 5, 1889, Wyoming voters approved the first constitution in the world granting full voting rights to women. Wyoming voters again made history in 1924 when they elected Nellie Taylor Ross as the first woman governor in the United States.

The events leading up to the passage of the 1869 suffrage law were put into motion by Esther Slack Morris, a pioneer whose ears were ringing, according to one account, with "the words of Susan B. Anthony" when she arrived in South Pass, Wyoming in 1869.

A native of New York state, Morris embraced the women's rights movement when she was prevented, on account of the discriminatory property laws in the state of Illinois, from claiming title to a tract of land left to her by her deceased husband. By the time she moved west, she was familiar with the ideas of activists Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Lucretia Mott.

When Morris joined her second husband and family in South Pass, preparations were being made for the first election in the newly-recognized territory.

At this point, twenty of the most influential men in the community, including all the candidates of both parties, were invited to dinner at the 'shack of Mrs. Esther Morris'…To her guests she now presented the woman's case with such clarity and persuasion that each candidate gave her his solemn pledge that if elected he would introduce and support a woman suffrage bill.

Woman Suffrage and Politics, the Inner Story of the Movement
Carrie Lane Chapman Catt and Nettie Rogers Schuler, p. 75, 1923.
Votes for Women: Selections from the National American Woman Suffrage Association Collection, 1848-1921

After winning a seat in the legislature, Democrat William Bright, who had been present at Morris's home, kept his promise and introduced a bill granting women the right to vote. Although the legislators treated the legislation as a joke, they approved it nonetheless. To their surprise, Governor Campbell signed it into law. The summoning, three months later, of the first women jurors to duty in Laramie, the capital of the territory, attracted international attention.

Panoramic view of the Teton Range
Teton Range, Wyoming, 1902.
Taking the Long View, 1851-1991