Sarah Bond Hanley


Sarah Bond Hanley was an American politician most notable for being one of the first two Democratic women to serve in the Illinois General Assembly.

Biography

She was born in Leon, Iowa in 1865. She attended Monmouth College in Monmouth, Illinois. In 1889, she married attorney John Hanley with whom she would have one daughter, Helen. Hanley was a member of the first Democratic Women's Club in the country, organized in 1888. During the 1892 election, Hanley, as an officer of the club, made the first monetary campaign contribution from a women's club to a political campaign. She served on the woman's auxiliary of the Democratic Party of Illinois. She campaigned for both Woodrow Wilson and James M. Cox. In 1921, she became the first woman to participate in a judicial convention. She was a member of the Illinois delegation to the 1924 Democratic National Convention. In 1926, she and Mary C. McAdams of Quincy, Illinois became the first two Democratic women elected to the Illinois General Assembly. She served two terms, leaving the House in 1931. In addition to her involvement in the Democratic Party, she was also active as a high-ranking member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. She died April 15, 1959 in Springfield, Illinois at age 94.