National Library of Wales: Peace petition from 1923 comes home
- Published
A 100-year-old peace petition signed by nearly 400,000 women has been returned to Wales from the United States.
It called on the US to join a League of Nations and has been exhibited at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History, external in Washington DC since 1924.
Signatures gathered over seven months represented 30% of Wales' female population at the time.
The petition and a chest have now been donated to the National Library of Wales in Aberystwyth, Ceredigion.
Soon after World War One, a group of women in Wales organised a campaign for world peace.
Annie Hughes-Griffiths led the effort, with two paid staff and 400 organisers getting 390,296 women to sign their petition.
Mrs Hughes-Griffiths, Mary Ellis, Elined Prys and Gladys Thomas left Wales in February 1924, taking the petition to Washington DC in a specially-designed chest.
The New York press at the time described it as "a monster petition" said to have been seven miles (11km) long.
"Annie Hughes-Griffiths gave countless speeches," said Mererid Hopwood from the Women's Peace Petition Partnership, a group that worked over many years to bring the petition home.
"They travelled around with their message in Salt Lake City, Chicago, Colorado, San Francisco, Los Angeles and many more."
The peace campaigners were welcomed to the White House by President Calvin Coolidge, who then gave it to the Smithsonian for preservation.
The names on the petition will be digitised and made available online as part of a £249,262 National Lottery award to a peace petition project, external.
National Library of Wales chief executive Pedr ap Llwyd called the petition's arrival back "remarkable".
"I can't possibly imagine how these ladies gathered such a vast number of signatures, without the conveniences of the web we have today. It's incredible.
"It's remarkable that the Smithsonian has released such an important archive or collection to another national institution."
- Published10 August 2022
- Published18 July 2022
- Published21 September 2016