[Congressional Bills 108th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. 2600 Introduced in Senate (IS)]







108th CONGRESS
  2d Session
                                S. 2600

  To direct the Architect of the Capitol to enter into a contract to 
revise the statue commemorating women's suffrage located in the rotunda 
 of the United States Capitol to include a likeness of Sojourner Truth.


_______________________________________________________________________


                   IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

                             June 24, 2004

   Mrs. Clinton (for herself, Mr. Levin, Mr. Dodd, Ms. Cantwell, Mr. 
Sarbanes, Mr. Schumer, Ms. Landrieu, Mr. Santorum, Mr. Lieberman, Mrs. 
 Boxer, Mr. Specter, Mr. Alexander, Ms. Stabenow, Mrs. Feinstein, Mrs. 
   Hutchison, Ms. Mikulski, Ms. Collins, Mr. Corzine, and Mr. Pryor) 
introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the 
                 Committee on Rules and Administration

_______________________________________________________________________

                                 A BILL


 
  To direct the Architect of the Capitol to enter into a contract to 
revise the statue commemorating women's suffrage located in the rotunda 
 of the United States Capitol to include a likeness of Sojourner Truth.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the 
United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. FINDINGS.

    Congress finds the following:
            (1) Sojourner Truth was a towering figure among the 
        founders of the movement for women's suffrage in the United 
        States, and any monument that accurately represents this 
        important development in our Nation's history should include 
        her.
            (2) The statue known as the Portrait Monument, originally 
        presented to Congress in 1920 in honor of the passage of the 
        Nineteenth Amendment guaranteeing women the right to vote and 
        presently exhibited in the rotunda of the Capitol, portrays 
        several early suffragists who were Sojourner Truth's 
        contemporaries, but not Sojourner Truth herself, the only 
        African American among the group.

SEC. 2. REVISION OF WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE STATUE.

    Not later than the final day on which the One Hundred Ninth 
Congress is in session, the Architect of the Capitol shall enter into a 
contract to revise the statue commemorating women's suffrage located in 
the rotunda of the United States Capitol (commonly known as the 
``Portrait Monument'') to include a likeness of Sojourner Truth.
                                 <all>