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Suffrage Pioneers Alice and John Pickler

Maj. John A. Pickler - Alice Alt Pickler
South Dakota State Archives
Alice Alt while attending the University of Iowa
South Dakota State Archives
John A. Pickler while serving in the Civil War
South Dakota State Archives
Major John A. Pickler, 1870s

The notion that women’s voting rights ought to be affirmed in the U.S. Constitution was decades old by the time Dakota Territory was organized in 1861. The Territorial Legislature first considered the idea in 1868, but it would be another 50 years before an amendment to the South Dakota State Constitution finally recognized woman suffrage rights.

Alice Alt Pickler and her husband, John A. Pickler, were two of the earliest and most active supporters of woman suffrage in South Dakota. Alice Alt was born in Iowa. She was well-educated, well-spoken, and, by the time she graduated from the University of Iowa, well-connected to a national network of temperance and suffrage activists.

John Pickler was born in Indiana but, as a child, moved with his family to an Iowa farm. At age 18, he enlisted in the U.S. Army, 3rd Iowa Cavalry. He was promoted several times, eventually reaching the rank of major. As an officer, Pickler was trained to lead so-called "colored" soldiers. In 1865, he was placed in command of a regiment of black troops stationed in Atlanta.

After the war, Major Pickler attended the Old University of Chicago and went on to earn a law degree at the University of Michigan.

Alice Alt and John Pickler were married in 1870 and established themselves in Muscatine, Iowa. They came to South Dakota from Iowa in 1883 in the company of fellow Iowans lured to the region by the promise of good farmland. The group traveled by train and eventually by wagon to a frontier location in Faulk County, where they established the town of Faulkton. Major Pickler restarted his legal practice, set up a land office, and was very soon making a good living by processing the many new land claims in the area.

In 1884, the Picklers began building a grand home in Faulkton. Unlike many pioneers, they had the money to hire carpenters and other craftsmen. The mansion was finished in 1894 after several modifications and additions. The Picklers raised four children in the home.

Both John and Alice Pickler were exceptionally outspoken and active in the temperance and suffrage movements of the day. Mrs. Pickler led state and national organizations working on both issues. She was well-acquainted with the most prominent activists of the era, including Susan B. Anthony, who stayed in the Pickler home during several visits to South Dakota.

Major Pickler was a member of the Dakota Territorial Legislature from 1883 to 1889. Major Pickler introduced several suffrage bills during his time Pierre. His 1885 suffrage proposal passed both houses but Governor Gilbert Pierce vetoed the measure.

Pickler went on to serve South Dakota in the U.S. Congress from 1889 - 1897. He chaired a committee on "invalid pensions," essentially a veteran's rights oversight committee.

The Picklers never stopped working on the issues they cared about and they and inspired many younger activists to pick up where they had left off. John Pickler died in 1910. Alice passed away in 1932.

The Pickler mansion sat vacant from 1958 until 1987 but it has been lately been restored to some of its former grandeur thanks to by the Faulk County Historical Society, which now holds the deed to the property. Funding for the restoration has been provided by Faulk County, the South Dakota State Historical Society, and private donation. Tours are available from Memorial Day through Labor Day.

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Swords & Plowshares - South Dakota & the Civil War

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