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Her Legacy: Helen Aston Williams, Lady Newspaperman

Helen Aston Williams, Lady Newspaperman

ARTICLE BY: RUTH VANSTEE FOR THE GREATER GRAND RAPIDS WOMEN’S HISTORY COUNCIL

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In 1890, a Detroit daily reported that the “lady newspaper men” of Michigan met to organize “an association of their own.” Indeed, the new Michigan Women’s Press Association was surprised by the number of responses from women engaged in every aspect of newspaper work: editors, reporters, proofers, etc. Of the two Grand Rapids women attending, Etta Smith Wilson from the Grand Rapids Telegram/Herald would found women’s pages all across the state, and writer Claudia Murphy became the fi rst secretary of the MWPA. During the 1890s, the association held annual conventions, selected delegates for national congresses and grew from 26 charter members to 100 in just six years. Over time, there were many members from Grand Rapids, including Helen Aston Williams who was elected president in 1919. Details about the life of early newspaper woman Helen Aston Williams can be gleaned mostly from newspapers themselves—what she wrote herself and what was written about her. But, like most women of her period, the main images we have of her are from micro lmed print publications.

at so many women wrote for newspapers helps women’s history researchers, but the minor errors often found in daily publications can send us in wrong directions. e obituary of Aston Williams in 1948 kept us initially from locating her in the 1900 census. In fact, she had not lived in Grand Rapids for 52 years, but for 42, leaving us mysti ed about why we couldn’t nd her.

Still, a clue in Aston Williams’ rst publishing venture in 1908 Grand Rapids mentions that she had moved to Grand Rapids from Duluth, Minnesota, where she had been a “brilliant writer” whom they hated to lose. at single report opened a door into her record from 1903 to 1906 with the Duluth News Tribune and as eventual editor of its women’s pages. It also opened a door into her early career in su rage work. As president of her Minnesota area’s su rage association, Aston Williams made at least one incredible lecture to a resistant Women’s Christian Temperance Union audience that was reprinted in full in Labor World on March 3, 1906.

Helen Aston Williams rst appears in Grand Rapids history as a founder and managing editor of the astonishing 1908 Woman: A Weekly Newspaper Of the Women, For the Women, By the Women. Founded by conventions.

local newspaper women, it ran for ten issues guided by the editorial view that “women can do everything as well as any man, and most things better.” It featuring national news, social reform and consumer issues and gives us a good look at the concerns of early 20th-century Grand Rapids women.

After Woman, Williams o cially reported for the Grand Rapids Herald, but on May 2nd, 1914, she joined twelve other su ragists to take over the Grand Rapids Press. She served as editorial and feature editor for the “Su rage Edition” that highlighted the ght for equal rights that had dragged on for decades. In 1916, she was elected president of the Grand Rapids Equal Franchise Club and oversaw the state su rage convention that year in

ILLUSTRATION BY KIM NGUYEN HEADER ILLUSTRATION BY LIBBY VANDERPLOEG

over good oratory. Afterwards, Aston Williams helped to organize su rage groups all over Kent County.

At this point in her career with the Grand Rapids Herald, she wrote a weekly column titled “Woman and the Ballot” and was a featured speaker for many local su rage clubs. After the success of universal su rage, Williams lost a race for the city commission in 1922 but was on slates of delegates to county and state Republican Grand Rapids, where they focused on good organization

Aston Williams remained serious about her profession and served in its organizations in leadership positions: rst, as a director for the Michigan Press and Printers’ Federation, then as its recording secretary in 1917. During the early 1920s, she led the Michigan Woman’s Press Association as its president, after overseeing its 1919 state convention in Grand Rapids.

GGRWHC’s program year honoring the 19th Amendment centennial was interrupted by the coronavirus outbreak. We regret especially the loss of the August 26th celebration; but continue to follow us on Facebook, read our monthly features in Women’s Lifestyle Magazine, and sign up for our hard copy and electronic newsletters at ggrwhc.org!

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