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Hattie Wyatt Caraway (1878 - 1950)

On January 12, 1932, Hattie Wyatt Caraway of Arkansas became the
first woman ever elected to the United States Senate after
winning a special election to fill the remaining months of her husband's
term. Arkansans elected Hattie Caraway to the Senate two more times,
and she served in the U.S. Senate until January, 1945.
While in the Senate, Hattie Caraway in 1933 became the first woman
to chair a Senate Committee and in 1943 became the first woman to
take up the gavel on the Senate floor as the Senate's presiding
officer.
I feel a special bond with Hattie Caraway because I followed in
her footsteps to become the second woman to serve Arkansas in the
U.S. Senate in 1998. In fact, during my campaign I carried around
with me a quote Hattie Caraway made during her own campaign for
the U.S. Senate in 1932: "If I can hold on to my sense of humor
and a modicum of dignity, I shall have a wonderful time running
for office whether I get there or not."
After Hattie Caraway's path-breaking career concluded in 1945
when then- Representative William Fulbright beat her in the primary,
her Senate colleagues honored her for her service with a standing
ovation on the Senate floor. This was quite an accomplishment considering
that women had just won the right to vote only 25 years earlier.
Hattie Caraway made history again recently by becoming the first
Arkansan to ever appear on a stamp. On February 21, 2001 in Little
Rock, I helped unveil the 76-cent Hattie Caraway definitive stamp,
which is the third in the "Distinguished Americans" series after
Joseph W. Stilwell and Claude Pepper.
There is no doubt that Hattie Caraway's service in the Senate
paved the way for women seeking elective office. 29
women have followed Hattie Caraway to the U.S. Senate, and
today, a record high of 13 women are serving in the Senate all at
the same time. Combined with the 62
women in the U.S. House of Representatives , a record total
of 75 women serve in the U.S. Congress today.
We've come a long way since the Suffragist Movement at the turn
of the century, and we have women like Hattie Caraway of Arkansas
to thank. As a seventh-generation Arkansan, I am proud to represent
my state in the U.S. Senate, and I am especially honored to be the
first woman to serve Arkansas in the U.S. Senate since Hattie Caraway.
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