The rise and fall of a feminist reform powerhouse This is the first comprehensive history of the Women's Joint Congressional Committee (WJCC), a large umbrella organization founded by former suffrage leaders in 1920 in order to coordinate organized women's reform. Encompassing nearly every major national women's organization of its time, the WJCC evolved into a powerful lobbying force for the legislative agendas of twelve million women, and was recognized by critics and supporters alike as "the most powerful lobby in Washington." Through a close examination of the WJCC's most consequential and contentious campaigns, Jan Doolittle Wilson demonstrates organized women's strategies and initial success in generating congressional and grassroots support for their far-reaching, progressive reforms. By using the WJCC as a lens through which to analyze women's political culture during the 1920s, the book also sheds new light on the initially successful ways women lobbied for social legislation, the inherent limitations of that process for pursuing class-based reforms, and the enormous difficulties faced by women trying to expand public responsibility for social welfare in the years following the Nineteenth Amendment's passage.A volume in the series Women in American History, edited by Anne Firor Scott, Susan Armitage, Susan K. Cahn, and Deborah Gray White
List of Acronyms viiiAcknowledgments ixIntroduction 1The Emergence of the WJCC 9The Lobby for the Sheppard-Towner Bill, 1921 27Opposition to the State Campaign for Sheppard-Towner, 1921-23 50The Crusade for the Child Labor Amendment, 1922-24 66Allies and Opponents during the Battle for Ratification, 1924 93Defeat of the Child Labor Amendment, 1924-26 110The Struggle to Save the Sheppard-Towner Act, 1926-30 133The Impact of Right-Wing Attacks on the WJCC and Its Social Reform Agenda, 1924-30 148Conclusion 171Appendixes 175Notes 183Bibliography 221Index 239