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Please contact mpub-help umich. For more information, read Michigan Publishing's access and usage policy. The early French Third Republic was replete with energetic women - intellectuals, artists, journalists, actresses, teachers, organizers, feminists - who forged careers in public life.
They actively operated as citizens, often without benefit of formal education and in every case without the vote. Most of them were well known in their time, even famous but have fallen or been shoved into oblivion in the historiography of the Third Republic.
They deserve better than that. This article will explore the public career of one such woman. She served it as secretary-general first under Sarah Monod then under Mme Jules Siegfried, whom she succeeded as president from until She then served the ICW as vice president for several decades, working hand-in-glove with the longtime president, Lady Aberdeen.
She was knowledgeable, outspoken, and an excellent organizer. By the mids, she was regarded as "the foremost feminist in France. This part of the story begins in Paris at the feminist congress of , following which Savioz paid a visit to the Saint-Lazare prison with a group of other women. She was utterly appalled at what she saw. There she met the renowned English abolitionist Josephine Butler, the founder and spirit of the FAI, and was as she later put it "conquered by her goodness, her grace, by the way she incarnated purity and feminine softness.
Savioz returned to London in June to participate in an international congress on the White Slave Trade as well as a major feminist congress organized by the International Council of Women and chaired by Lady Aberdeen; that September she participated in the Geneva conference of the FAI, which she reported for La Fronde.