Adèle Clark

Born: 27 September 1882, United States
Died: 4 June 1983
Country most active: United States
Also known as: NA

The following is shared from the Encyclopedia Virginia, in line with the Creative Commons licensing.

Adèle Clark was a founding member of the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia, the chair of the Virginia League of Women Voters (1921–1925, 1929–1944), the social director of women at the College of William and Mary (1926), a New Deal–era field worker, and an accomplished artist and arts advocate. A native of Alabama, Clark attended schools in Richmond and later studied art in New York. She taught art in Richmond and established a training studio, while also working as a political activist. In 1909, she helped to found the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia and when women won the right to vote in 1920, she worked to educate women voters and to influence Congress and the General Assembly on issues of special interest to women. During the Great Depression, she served as the state director of the Federal Art Project (1936–1942). In her later years, Clark spoke for the desegregation of public schools and against the poll tax. She opposed the proposed Equal Rights Amendment in 1973. Clark died in Richmond in 1983.

Early Years and Art Career
Adèle Goodman Clark was born on September 27, 1882, in Montgomery, Alabama, and was the daughter of Robert Clark and Estelle Goodman Clark. During her childhood her family moved several times, to Virginia, to Mississippi, back to Alabama, and then to Louisiana. After her family settled in Richmond about 1894, she enrolled in Virginia Randolph Ellett’s school (later Saint Catherine’s School). She graduated in 1901, studied art privately with Lily M. Logan and at the Art Club of Richmond, and in 1906 received a scholarship to the Chase School of Art (later the New York School of Art and eventually the Parsons School of Design), where she studied with William Merritt Chase and Robert Henri.

Clark returned to Virginia and taught classes in illustration at the Art Club of Richmond and was an instructor at the Richmond Training School for Kindergartners. About 1916 she and the Richmond artist Nora Houston established the Atelier. Their studio became a training ground for a generation of Virginia artists, including Theresa Pollak, who later founded the art program at the University of Richmond and the art school at Virginia Commonwealth University. Intending to revive the long-moribund eighteenth-century Academy of Sciences and Fine Arts, Clark and Houston in 1919 founded the Virginia League of Fine Arts and Handicrafts, which later merged with the Atelier and became part of the Richmond Academy of Arts. A painter primarily of portraits, landscapes, and religious scenes, Clark exhibited canvases at the Carnegie Institute, in Pittsburgh, and at Richmond’s Valentine Museum. Her oil painting Cherry Tree (ca. 1920–1930), depicting a shimmering impression of a tree blooming in her garden, is in the permanent collection of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.

Suffrage Activity
Clark’s life exemplified the crucial role women played in the social reform movements of the twentieth century. She applied her sharp intellect, artistic skills, and determination to champion women and the arts. Her interest in the woman suffrage movement began in 1909. On November 27 of that year Clark and other civic-minded women held a meeting to establish a statewide suffrage organization. Many of them wanted the vote in order to work more effectively for the passage of health, education, and child labor laws.

Clark was elected recording secretary at that first meeting of the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia but resigned the office the following March. Her first paying job in Richmond, as a stenographer for the Chamber of Commerce, provided useful experience. She enlisted her mother and sister in the suffrage cause, helped direct legislative initiatives, designed and drew postcards, organized suffrage rallies, and went on speaking tours that helped establish league chapters throughout the state. In 1912 Clark debated the antisuffrage leader Molly Elliot Seawell in various Richmond newspapers. Clark opened with “If Women Were to Vote” on February 8 in the Richmond Virginian, Seawell answered with “Why Women Should Not Vote” on February 25 in the Richmond Times-Dispatch, and Clark shot back in the Times-Dispatch on March 11 with “The Suffragist Movement: A Reply to Miss Molly Elliot Seawell,” a detailed explanation of why women should have the vote. Clark’s second article was so persuasive that the Equal Suffrage League distributed an expanded version as an educational booklet entitled Facts vs. Fallacies: Anti-Suffrage Allegations Refuted (1912). That same year Clark organized the screening of a suffrage film at the state fair, where the league also distributed suffrage buttons and yellow “Votes for Women” flags. The women often held their meetings in public places, such as Capitol Square, and Clark sometimes set up her easel and began drawing chalk sketches to lure people to suffrage speeches. “It reached the point,” she remembered, “where I couldn’t see a fireplug without beginning, ‘Ladies and gentlemen.’”

Through canvassing, distributing leaflets, and public speaking, members of the Equal Suffrage League intended to educate Virginia’s citizens and legislators and win their support for woman suffrage. Despite the fact that the league was one of the most vital suffrage organizations in the South, the General Assembly defeated woman suffrage resolutions in 1912, 1914, and 1916. Virginia suffragists thereafter directed their work primarily toward the passage of an amendment to the U.S. Constitution. By the time Congress submitted the Nineteenth Amendment to the states in June 1919, the league boasted 30,000 members. Clark chaired the league’s ratification committee in 1919 and 1920. Nevertheless, Virginia was one of the nine southern states that refused to approve the amendment, and the commonwealth did not ratify the Nineteenth Amendment until 1952.

Other Social and Political Work
Within a few weeks of the national ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1920, the Equal Suffrage League disbanded, and its successor, the Virginia League of Women Voters, began work to make the new vote an informed one. Clark chaired the organization committee to establish the league, was the first chair of the league in 1920, and served as president from 1921 to 1925 and again from 1929 to 1944. With fellow suffragist Naomi Silverman Cohn, Clark in 1923 founded the Virginia Women’s Council of Legislative Chairmen of State Organizations (later the Virginia Council on State Legislation) to monitor bills of special interest to women. Her work involving social issues and governmental efficiency expanded in 1924 when she was elected to the board of the National League of Women Voters (later the League of Women Voters of the United States) as director of the third region, which included Washington, D.C., Virginia, and several other southern states. From 1925 to 1928 she was second vice president of the national league. In that capacity she traveled to and spoke at conventions in twenty-four states, including an address before the platform committee at the 1928 Democratic National Convention. In 1927 she chaired the Lila Meade Valentine Memorial Association, which sought to place a tablet or bust honoring the Richmond suffragist in the State Capitol.

In 1922 the governor appointed Clark to the Commission on Simplification and Economy of State and Local Government, on which she served for almost two years as secretary. In 1928 the next governor appointed her to a nine-member commission, of which she also became secretary, to study the feasibility of establishing a new liberal arts college for women at one of the state teachers’ colleges. From March through September 1926 Clark was acting social director of women at the College of William and Mary, which had become coeducational in 1918.

Beginning in 1933 Clark was a field supervisor in Virginia for the National Reemployment Service, and from 1936 to 1942 as the state director of the Federal Art Project (after 1939 the Federal Art Program) of the Works Progress Administration (after 1939 the Work Projects Administration) she sought to provide employment opportunities for artists in Virginia. Under her direction, artists produced murals for public buildings and executed hundreds of paintings for display in local and state tax-supported institutions. During Clark’s tenure several new art galleries were established, including the Federal Art Gallery at Big Stone Gap. In 1938 Clark chaired the Virginia committee for the exhibition of southern art at the 1939–1940 World’s Fair in New York. She served in 1941 on the Virginia executive committee for National Art Week.

Later Years
Clark was active in the Richmond community for decades. After converting to Catholicism in 1942 (her mother had been Jewish, her father raised in the Church of England in his native Ireland), she helped organize the Richmond Diocesan Council of Catholic Women and shape its legislative program. She spoke for desegregated schools and against the poll tax. In December 1967 Clark received a brotherhood citation from the Richmond chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews (later the National Conference for Community and Justice). In the 1940s she taught art to Richmond children who were disabled or convalescing from illness. She also worked with the city school board and the Virginia Society for Crippled Children and Adults. Clark offered instruction in painting and modeling, along with making masks, puppets, marionettes, and block prints. She continued to support the city’s art community and was instrumental in establishing Virginia’s Art Commission, of which she was a member from 1941 to 1964. Clark never married and for many years lived with her companion and first cousin, the bohemian fashion designer, artist, and writer Willoughby Ions.

On February 2, 1973, Clark’s photograph appeared on the front page of the Richmond Times-Dispatch with the skeptical headline, “Beginning of an ERA?” The ninety-year-old Clark and 800 other people had attended a public meeting to express their opinions of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment. As usual, Clark did not mince words. “This is an appalling amendment,” she told an audience that included citizens, legislators, the president of the National Association of Women Lawyers, and prominent ERA opponent Phyllis Schlafly. “It reflects the thinking of fifty years ago. They are fighting a battle that has already been won.” Clark, who had been fighting the battles from the beginning, died in a Richmond retirement community on June 4, 1983, and was buried in Emmanuel Episcopal Church Cemetery, in Henrico County.

TIMELINE
September 27, 1882: Adèle Clark is born in Montgomery, Alabama.
ca. 1894: The family of Adèle Clark settles in Richmond.
1901: Adèle Clark graduates from Virginia Randolph Ellet’s school (later Saint Catherine’s School) in Richmond.
1906: Adèle Clark receives a scholarship to the Chase School of Art (later the New York School of Art and eventually the Parsons School of Design).
November 27, 1909: A group of women, including Kate Waller Barrett, Kate Langley Bosher, Adèle Clark, Ellen Glasgow, Nora Houston, Mary Johnston, Lila Meade Valentine, and Sophie Gooding Rose Meredith, found the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia.
1912: The General Assembly defeats a bill that would give women the right to vote.
February 8, 1912: The Richmond Virginian publishes “If Women Were to Vote,” a pro-suffrage argument by Adèle Clark.
February 25, 1912: The Richmond Times-Dispatch publishes “Why Women Should Not Vote” by Molly Elliot Seawell.
March 11, 1912: The Richmond Times-Dispatch publishes “The Suffragist Movement: A Reply to Miss Molly Elliot Seawell” by Adèle Clark. The piece is later published as an educational booklet.
1914: The General Assembly defeats a bill that would give women the right to vote.
1916: The General Assembly defeats a bill that would give women the right to vote.
ca. 1916: Adèle Clark and Nora Houston establish in Richmond the Atelier, an art studio that will become a training ground for a generation of Virginia artists.
1919: Adèle Clark and Nora Houston found the Virginia League of Fine Arts and Handicrafts, which will later merge with the Atelier and become part of the Richmond Academy of Arts.
June 1919: The Equal Suffrage League of Virginia boasts 30,000 members.
June 4, 1919: The U.S. Congress passes the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The amendment guarantees women the right to vote.
1920: Adèle Clark becomes the first chair of the newly organized Virginia League of Women Voters.
February 12, 1920: The General Assembly votes not to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees women the right to vote.
August 18, 1920: Tennessee becomes the thirty-sixth state to ratify the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, completing the ratification process.
1921: Adèle Clark becomes president of the League of Women Voters and holds this position for nineteen years (from 1921 until 1925 and again from 1929 until 1944).
1922: The governor appoints Adèle Clark to the Commission on Simplification and Economy of State and Local Government.
1923: Adèle Clark and Naomi Silverman Cohn found the Virginia Women’s Council of Legislative Chairmen of State Organizations to monitor bills of special interest to women.
1924: Adèle Clark is elected to the board of the National League of Women Voters.
1925—1928: Adèle Clark serves as second vice president of the National League of Women Voters.
March—September 1926: Adèle Clark serves as acting social director of women at the College of William and Mary.
1927: Adèle Clark chairs the Lila Meade Valentine Memorial Association, which seeks to place a tablet or bust honoring the Richmond suffragist in the State Capitol.
June 26—28, 1928: Adèle Clark attends the Democratic National Convention in Houston, Texas, addressing the platform committee.
1933: Adèle Clark becomes a field supervisor for the National Reemployment Service.
1936—1942: Adèle Clark serves as Virginia Arts Project director of the Works Projects Administration, helping to provide employment opportunities for artists in the state.
1938: Adèle Clark chairs the Virginia committee for the exhibition of southern art at the 1939—1940 World’s Fair in New York.
1941: Adèle Clark serves on the Virginia executive committee for National Art Week.
1941—1964: Adèle Clark serves as a member of the Virginia Art Commission.
1942: Adèle Clark converts to Catholicism.
February 21, 1952: The General Assembly ratifies the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, thirty-two years after it became law.
December 1967: Adèle Clark receives a brotherhood citation from the Richmond chapter of the National Conference of Christians and Jews.
February 2, 1973: Appalled by the idea of the Equal Rights Amendment, Adèle Clark appears in a front page photograph of the Richmond Times-Dispatch with the skeptical headline, “Beginning of an ERA?”
June 4, 1983: Adèle Clark dies in a Richmond retirement community. She is buried in Emmanuel Episcopal Church Cemetery, in Henrico County.

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Posted in Activism, Activism > Suffrage, Visual Art.