Ohio has been called 鈥渢he mother of Presidents,鈥 with eight chief executives calling it home.
In 1872, Ohioan Victoria Woodhull became the first woman to run for president 鈥 an election won by fellow Buckeye Ulysses S. Grant. A new documentary, premiering Sunday at the Lorain Historical Society, explores Woodhull鈥檚 life.
鈥淓verything about her was definitely audacious,鈥 said Bette Lou Higgins, producer of "Victoria Woodhull: Shattering Glass Ceilings.鈥 鈥淪he was open-minded, open speaking. She wanted equal rights for everybody. She wanted access to health care for everyone. She wanted all citizens to be able to vote. She wanted sex education in the classroom.鈥
Higgins and her team at Elyria-based Eden Valley Enterprises produce historical programs and films, such as 2016鈥檚 鈥,鈥 nominated for a regional Emmy. She was planning the Woodhull project, again working with writer Kelly Boyer Sagert and director Peter Huston, when work was halted by the pandemic. The , and a premiere set, just days before Vice President Kamala Harris moved to the top of the Democratic ticket.
鈥淲hen we started this, the goal was to finish it in 2020 for the anniversary of the Suffrage Act, which obviously we missed,鈥 she said. 鈥淲ho would have thought that there would be a woman running for president now that we are actually done?鈥
Higgins was partly inspired to focus on Woodhull after former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton鈥檚 presidential run. Yet she鈥檚 been a fan since first hearing Woodhull鈥檚 story in the mid-鈥70s.
The story from Homer
Victoria Woodhull was born in 1838 in Homer, Ohio, about midway between Mansfield and Columbus.
鈥淎s an Ohioan, I hope a lot of the Ohioans who don't know about her find something else to brag about for Ohio,鈥 Higgins said. 鈥淚 also hope that it opens people鈥檚 eyes to so much of the interesting parts of history that so many of us don't know about.鈥
In the film, Kate Luke plays the adult Woodhull, who couldn鈥檛 have voted for herself in 1872: Women鈥檚 suffrage was decades away. She was also in jail on Election Day, charged with obscenity for publishing information about an allegedly adulterous pastor. Even if elected, she was only 34, a year too young to serve. She ran anyway to advance her ideas of labor reform, women鈥檚 rights, free love and caring for the developmentally disabled. She even selected Frederick Douglass as her running mate.
鈥淓verything that she did was so far ahead of her time, but it opened a lot of eyes,鈥 Higgins said. 鈥淓ven President Grant, when she was running against him, admitted that of course she wasn't going win, but it brought those topics to the forefront.鈥
The film closes with a nod to the present, using an excerpt from a speech by Kamala Harris. Yet Higgins is careful to point out that the film and her team are making no endorsements in this year鈥檚 presidential race.
鈥淲hen she was elected to, or became, vice president, her speech was about how she stood on the shoulders of all the women who came before her,鈥 Higgins said. 鈥淪urely, one of those shoulders was Victoria Woodhull鈥檚.鈥