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When Suffrage Rides Sidesaddle in Chinatown: Mabel Lee’s Unfinished Victory

In 1912, a teenage Mabel Ping Hua Lee led Chinese American women on horseback through New York City’s suffrage parade—a striking image in a movement that often overlooked women of color. Born in Guangzhou and educated in both China and the U.S., Lee was a prodigy who entered Barnard College at 16 and quickly became a voice for equality. She argued that true democracy required women’s full participation, linking the fight for suffrage to broader ideals of justice. Despite her leadership, Lee herself was barred from voting by the Chinese Exclusion Act, a law that denied citizenship to Chinese immigrants even as suffrage was won in New York and nationwide. Lee earned her Ph.D. in economics, led community organizations, and championed women’s rights, yet the ballot box remained out of reach. Her story is a reminder that progress often arrives unevenly, and sometimes the pioneers never get to cross the finish line they helped create. #AAPIHeritage #WomensHistory #SuffrageMovement #Culture

2025-06-07
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