Jesse Daniel Ames (1883 - 1972)
W
I L L I A M S O N C O U N T Y |
Marker Text: A native of Palestine, Texas, Jesse Daniel came to Georgetown on 1893. She graduated from Southwestern University in 1902. In 1904 she moved to Laredo, where she married Roger Post Ames (d.1914), an army surgeon. They were the parents of three children.
Following her husband's death, Jesse operated the Georgetown telephone company with her mother and became active in civic projects, including the woman's club. She joined the Texas Equal Suffrage Association and worked to acquire voting rights for women, she led a large group of women to Williamson County courthouse to register to vote for the first time in 1918. The Texas Equal Suffrage Association reorganized as the Texas League of women Voters in 1919, and she served as its first president until 1924. A champion of civil rights causes, Ames was active in the commission on interracial cooperation. Opposed to the use of chivalry as a justification for lynching, she moved to Atlanta, Georgia, and formed the Association of Southern Women for the Prevention of Lynching in 1930. She retired in 1944 and to Tryon, North Carolina. Ames later returned to central Texas and died in an Austin nursing home in 1972. She is buried in the I.O.O.F. Cemetery in Georgetown. (1988) Marker No: 13878
Aluminum 27 x 42 Subject Marker
|
Geographic: 30.632849, -97.675804
Location: 1004 Church Street, Georgetown