Lillie Devereux Blake

Lillie Devereux Blake
"Woman of the Century"
BornElizabeth Johnson Devereux
(1833-08-12)August 12, 1833
Raleigh, North Carolina
DiedDecember 30, 1913(1913-12-30) (aged 80)
Englewood, New Jersey
Pen nameTiger Lily
Occupationwriter, reformer, suffragist
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Alma materMiss Apthorp's School for Girls
Yale
Spouse
Frank Geoffrey Quay Umsted
(m. 1855; died 1859)
    Grinfill Blake
    (m. 1866)
    ChildrenKatherine Devereux Blake
    RelativesWilliam Samuel Johnson
    Samuel Johnson
    Jonathan Edwards
    Signature

    Lillie Devereux Blake, pen name, Tiger Lily; (August 12, 1833 – December 30, 1913) was an American woman suffragist, reformer, and writer, born in Raleigh, North Carolina and educated in New Haven, Connecticut. In her early years, Blake wrote several novels and for the press. In 1869, she became actively interested in the woman suffrage movement and devoted herself to pushing the reform, arranging conventions, getting up public meetings, writing articles, and occasionally making lecture tours. A woman of strong affections and marked domestic tastes, she did not allow her public work to interfere with her home duties, and her speaking outside of New York City was almost wholly done in the summer, when her family was naturally scattered. In 1873, she made an application for the opening of Columbia College to young women as well as young men, presenting a class of young women students qualified to enter the university. The agitation then begun, led to the establishment of Barnard College. In 1874, she published a novel entitled Fettered for Life that was designed to show the many disadvantages under which women labor.

    In 1879, she was unanimously elected president of the New York State Woman Suffrage Association, an office that she held for eleven years. During that period, she made a tour of the state every summer, arranged conventions, and each year conducted a legislative campaign, many times addressing committees of the senate and assembly. In 1880, largely through her efforts the school suffrage law was passed. In each year woman suffrage bills were introduced and pushed to a vote in one or both of the branches of the legislature. In 1883, the Rev. Morgan Dix, D.D., delivered a series of Lenten discourses on " Woman", presenting a most conservative view of her duties. Blake replied to each lecture in an able address, advocating more advanced ideas. Her lectures were printed under the title of "Woman's Place To-day" (New York) and sold in large numbers. Among the reforms in which she was actively interested were that of securing matrons to take charge of women detained in police stations. As early as 1871, she spoke and wrote on the subject, and through her labors, in 1881 and 1882, bills were passed by the assembly, but failed to become laws, however, because of the opposition of the New York City Police Department. She continued to agitate the subject, public sentiment was finally aroused and in 1891, a law was passed enforcing this reform.

    The employment of women as census takers was first urged in 1880 by Blake. The bills giving seats to saleswomen, ordering the presence of a woman physician in every insane asylum where women were detained, and many other beneficent measures were presented or aided by her.

    In 1886, Blake was elected president of the New York City Woman Suffrage League. She attended conventions and made speeches in most of the U.S. states and territories and she addressed committees of both houses of Congress as well as the legislatures of New York and Connecticut. She authored the 1891 law providing for matrons in the police stations.

    All the while, she continued her literary labors. She was remembered as a graceful and logical writer, a witty and eloquent speaker and a charming hostess, her weekly receptions through the season in New York having been for many years among the attractions of literary and reform circles.