Hooper, Jessie Jack (1865–1935)

views updated

Hooper, Jessie Jack (1865–1935)

American suffragist and antiwar activist. Name variations: Jessie Annette Hooper. Born Jessie Annette Jack, Nov 8, 1865, in Winneshiek County, Iowa; died May 8, 1935, in Oshkosh, Wisconsin; dau. of David A. Jack Jr. and Mary Elizabeth (Nelings) Jack; m. Ben C. Hooper (attorney), May 30, 1888; children: 1 daughter.

Served as legislative chair and 1st vice president, among other positions, of Wisconsin Woman Suffrage Association (1915–19); became director of National American Woman Suffrage Association (1919); elected 1st president of Wisconsin League of Women Voters (1920); ran unsuccessfully as Democratic candidate for US Senate (1922); stumped for Democratic presidential candidate John W. Davis (1924); campaigned for 1928 Kellogg-Briand Pact; helped present peace petition, with more than 8 million signatures, to League of Nations disarmament conference in Geneva, Switzerland (1932).