Proclamation 5518 --
Women's Equality Day, 1986
By
the President of the
of
A
Proclamation
Sixty-six
years ago our Constitution was amended for the nineteenth time -- to grant
women a cherished privilege of citizenship in a free Nation, the right to vote.
Since then, women have not only availed themselves of their access to the voting
booth, they have gone on to take part at every level of politics and
government. We as a Nation are much the better for this fundamental enlargement
of our public life.
Women's
growing participation in public life has been paralleled by their increasing
importance in every field. All of us benefit from the accomplishments of women
in commerce, law, science, medicine, the arts, and every other area of human
activity. We are most grateful for all of these achievements, just as we are
for women's special role at the heart of the family and for the freedom of
opportunity women have to determine the vocations they wish to pursue.
Each
year we celebrate August 26, the anniversary of the ratification of the
Nineteenth Amendment, as ``Women's Equality Day,'' to honor the many
contributions of women to our Nation.
Now,
Therefore, I, Ronald Reagan, President of the
In
Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this twenty-sixth day of August,
in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred and eighty-six, and of the
Ronald
Reagan
[Filed with the Office of the
Federal Register,