Elizabeth Lowe Watson

{{Short description|American lecturer}}

File:ELIZABETH LOWE WATSON A woman of the century (page 763 crop).jpg"]]

Elizabeth Lowe Watson (October 6, 1842 – October 7, 1927) was an American lecturer on moral, social, religious reforms, and advancement of women. She served as president of the California Equal Suffrage Association and directed the work which won the ballot for women of the state. She was also active in the cause of temperance and peace work. Watson owned and managed a fruit farm in Cupertino, California.{{sfn|Leonard|Marquis|1908|p=1997}}{{cite news |title=Suffrage Leader Dies at Age of 84 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/457722532/?article=8e1ea17b-cf97-4d38-a03b-1148ba9537d5 |access-date=26 April 2021 |work=The San Francisco Examine |via=Newspapers.com |date=8 October 1927 |page=5 |language=en}}{{cite news |title=State Pioneer In Equal Suffrage Dies In San Jose |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/616943695/?terms=Elizabeth%20Lowe%20Watson&match=1 |access-date=26 April 2021 |work=The Sacramento Bee |via=Newspapers.com |date=8 October 1927 |page=11 |language=en}}

Biography

Elizabeth Low was born in Solon, Ohio, October 6, 1842. Her maiden name was Low, which was changed to Lowe by the younger members of the family. Her parents were Abraham and Lucretia (Daniels) Low.{{cite news |last1=Severance |first1=Sarah M. |title=Elizabeth Lowe Watson |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/487665317/?terms=Elizabeth%20Lowe%20Watson&match=1 |access-date=26 April 2021 |work=Progressive Woman |via=Newspapers.com |date=1 September 1911 |page=9 |language=en}} Her father was of Teutonic descent, born in New York City, and her grandfather, of the Knickerbocker type, had large landed possessions in "Old Manhattan Town." Her mother was of Scotch ancestry. Her grandmother, Mary Daniels, was an intelligent woman, with a poetic, religious temperament. Watson was the ninth child in a family of thirteen.{{sfn|Willard|Livermore|1893|p=753}}

Her parents soon moved to Leon, New York where Elizabeth received a common school education and early became an inspirational speaker on liberal religious lines, anti-slavery, temperance, peace, and women's rights.

At fourteen, her public ministry began, attracting great crowds of people to hear her discussion upon religion and social ethics. She then, as in later years, often answered all kinds of questions from the audiences, and usually the subject of her lecture was chosen by a committee.{{sfn|Willard|Livermore|1893|p=753}}

In 1861, she married Jonathan Watson, one of the oil barons of Titusville, Pennsylvania. They established a home in Rochester, New York, which soon became a center of intellectual, spiritual, and reform activities. In addition to caring for his five step-children, Watson had four children of her own. Two of them died young of diphtheria The eldest, Will Watson, died at age 25. Only a daughter, Lucretia, survived.

For some years after her marriage, she discontinued her public work, except to officiate at funerals.{{sfn|Willard|Livermore|1893|p=753}} Her lectures in Chicago and other Eastern areas were successful. Her work was principally devoted to spirituality, as well as moral, social and religious reform, including the advancement of woman.{{sfn|Willard|Livermore|1893|p=753}}

=California=

In 1878, after some financial troubles, she left her husband and moved to California, making a country home at the "Sunny Brae" fruit farm in what is now Cupertino, Santa Clara County, California.{{cite news |last1=Hugger |first1=Gail Fretwell |title=Roots The Cupertino Library From the Good Old Days to the Future |url=https://www.cupertino.org/home/showdocument?id=827 |access-date=26 April 2021 |work=Cupertino Scene |volume=xxvi |issue=3 |date=November 2002}} It brought an annual income of between {{USD|4000}}-{{USD|5000}}. Mrs. Watson superintended the business.{{sfn|Willard|Livermore|1893|p=753}}

File:Metropolitan Temple, San Francisco, California, by Continent Stereoscopic Company.jpg

In 1882, she filled a four months' lecture engagement in Australia.{{sfn|Willard|Livermore|1893|p=753}} Mr. Watson died in 1892. From the 1890s, for seven or eight years, she lectured nearly every Sunday in San Francisco at the Metropolitan Temple, out of which grew the Religio Philosophical Society, with Watson as it pastor. The Temple had a seating capacity of 1,500 and was often filled to the doors with an audience composed of people of all denominations.

File:Elizabeth Lowe Watson, Stockton Daily Evening Record, 1911.png

Though in later years, Watson removed to Saratoga, California, she continued to own Sunny Brae where, for the last 30 years of her life, she conducted religious services on the last Sunday of each June.{{cite news |title="Dar Horse" Elected to State Presidency |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/609717600/?terms=Elizabeth%20Lowe%20Watson&match=1 |access-date=26 April 2021 |work=Stockton Daily Evening Record |via=Newspapers.com |date=2 October 1909 |page=1 |language=en}} She also established a lending library, the "Sunny Brae Free Library".

For more than 30 years, Watson was a life member of the American Peace Society. In 1906, she published Song and sermons, which included some of her poems and sermons.{{sfn|Potter|1907|p=531}} She served as President of the California Equal Suffrage Association in 1910–1912, directing the work which won the ballot for women of the state.

She died in Santa Clara County, October 7, 1927, after an illness of two months, survived by two brothers, Eugene and Alvin.

References

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=Attribution=

  • {{Source-attribution| {{cite book|last1=Leonard|first1=John William|last2=Marquis|first2=Albert Nelson|title=Who's who in America|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eX0QOpl7iBQC&pg=PA1997|edition=Public domain|year=1908|publisher=A.N. Marquis}} }}
  • {{Source-attribution| {{cite book|editor-last=Potter|editor-first=Marion E.|title=The Monthly Cumulative Book Index|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f2mu31q1wMkC&pg=PA531|edition=Public domain|year=1907|publisher=H. W. Wilson|location=Minneapolis}} }}
  • {{Source-attribution| {{cite book|last1=Willard|first1=Frances Elizabeth|author1-link=Frances Willard|last2=Livermore|first2=Mary Ashton Rice|author2-link=Mary Livermore|title=A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life|chapter=Elizabeth Lowe Watson |url=https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Woman_of_the_Century/Elizabeth_Lowe_Watson|edition=Public domain|year=1893|publisher=Charles Wells Moulton}} }}