Katherine Reed Balentine (January 23, 1875 – September 17, 1934) was an American
suffragist and the founder of The Yellow Ribbon, a suffrage magazine.[1]
Early life
Katherine "Kitty" Reed was born in 1878 in
Portland, Maine, to Susan Prentice Merrill Reed and
Thomas Brackett Reed.[2] Her father was in his first term as a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from
Maine's 1st congressional district. He eventually became Speaker of the House, and was on the record as opposed to women's suffrage, making his daughter's very public activism in favor of suffrage more newsworthy.[3]
Suffrage work and The Yellow Ribbon
In 1906,[4] Katherine Reed Balentine founded The Yellow Ribbon magazine, a monthly suffrage publication.[5][6]The Yellow Ribbon magazine was later known as Western Woman.[7] This magazine was a statewide California newspaper, based in
Monterey.[5]
Reed was a leading figure in the
National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA); in 1907, she was part of a NAWSA delegation which met with President
Theodore Roosevelt. In 1908, she spoke before the national NAWSA convention in Buffalo, on the theme "Woman Suffrage at Home and Abroad".[8] She led the Maine branch of
NAWSA from 1916 to 1917,[9][10] bringing her experience with the California suffrage movement to Maine's effort.[11][12] In 1917 she was quoted as saying, "there is nothing radical about equal suffrage."[13]
Personal life
Reed married Army colonel Arthur Trumbo Balentine in 1905.[13] He served on the staff of U.S. military commander
John J. Pershing, and was based at the
Presidio of San Francisco before he resigned in 1908.[14] After their marriage the couple moved to
San Francisco. They had a son, Thomas Reed Balentine,[15] and a daughter, Katherine Balentine Jenney.[16] Katherine Reed Balentine died in 1934, at the age of 59, in
San Diego.[9]
^Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony, Susan B.; Gage, Matilda Joslyn; Harper, Ida Husted; Harper, Ida Husted (1887–1902).
History of woman suffrage;. Robarts - University of Toronto. Rochester, Anthony.
^"Popular Officer has Quit the Army". San Francisco Call. November 29, 1908. p. 23. Retrieved December 29, 2022 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.