Woodhull, Demosthenes' Mentee |
Victoria’s
father, Buck Claflin, was a working-class mid-western charlatan. He sold his
daughters’ paranormal powers in boarding-houses for $1 per
consultation—Victoria practised as a medium, and Tennessee (‘Tenny’) as a ‘magnetic
healer.’
Victoria
claimed that she had always been aware of her clairvoyant gift and could remember
her own birth. She was radicalised by an unhappy first marriage and by talking to women left widowed and starving by the Civil War. She read Wollstonecraft and Mill. She
became a socialist and feminist during her fruitful second marriage to another spiritualist as well as a freethinker, abolitionist and suffragist.
"Move to Manhattan and stand for the Presidency!" |
In
1868 Victoria had a vision in a hotel in Pittsburgh. Her ‘guide’ appeared to
her, and wrote the name DEMOSTHENES on the marble table at which she was
sitting ‘in English characters which gradually outlined themselves from
indistinctness to incandescence so brilliant as to light up the entire
apartment.’ Demosthenes, clearly fluent in
English, bade her hasten to 17 Great Jones Street,
Manhattan, where ‘she would find a house swept and garnished for the
commencement of the work she had to do.’ So she moved to the specified brownstone,
where she found a copy of the Orations
of Demosthenes conveniently awaiting her in the parlour.
The
following year, Demosthenes presented her with the text of a petition to Congress
when she was asleep. He wrote on a scroll ‘The Memorial of Victoria C.
Woodhull,’ claiming under the Fourteenth
Amendment the right of women as of all other ‘citizens of the United States’ to
vote and demanding that the State of New York, of which she was now a citizen,
should be restrained by federal authority from preventing her exercise of this
constitutional right.
Douglass, nearly Woodhull's Co-Nominee |
So along with her sister she set about her mission. They set up the first female-led stockbroker firm in the US, and made millions. This allowed them to found a feminist journal, Woodhull & Claflin’s Weekly, which also supported workers’ rights and published the first English translation of the Communist Manifesto. In its very first issue, Victoria’s candidacy for presidency was announced. She was constitutionally ineligible being under 35 years old. But she received the presidential nomination of the Cosmo-Political or ‘Equal Rights’ Party (Frederick Douglass was nominated to be their vice-president, but turned it down).
The
patriarchal ruling elite was having none of it. She spent the election behind
bars, arrested on obscenity charges (she campaigned for Free Love and enjoyed
exposing the hypocritical adulterous liaisons of the very male authority
figures who objected to her advocacy of women’s sexual freedom). Ulysses S.
Grant won the election in a landslide.
"The Death of Demosthenes"--not such a great role model |
But
Woodhull had put women’s exclusion from politics at the centre of the public
radar. Just fifteen years later, a woman became mayor of a US town—Argonia,
Kansas—for the first time in history.
Those of us who would like to see a woman
finally become president must hope that Hillary Clinton does not get stitched
up on obscenity charges before November 3rd 2015. I also recommend she acquire a better
netherworld mentor than Demosthenes, whose own political career ended in
suicide on the run after the Macedonian conquest. I have personally been visited
in dreams by both Aeschylus and Aristotle, but then I have no current plans to run for president.
Great knowledge, do anyone mind merely reference back to it
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