The eleven women were Vera Andrus (1896-1976), Ruth Gibson Butler (1891-1981), Anne M. Conklin (1925-1975), Katherine Moore Cushman (1916-1991), Ann Elizabeth Donnelly (1924-1984), Daisy Elizabeth Elliott (1919-2015), Adelaide Julia Hart (1900-1995), Lillian Hatcher (1915-1998), Dorothy Leonard Judd (1898-1989), Ella Demmink Koeze (1905-1986) and Marjorie Frances McGowan (1930-1980).
[1] The eleven were appointed to 11 of the fourteen committees of the Constitutional convention, and three would serve as vice-chairs, though none were chairs.
The delegates were from Port Huron, Houghton, Livonia, Dearborn, Highland Park, Detroit and Grand Rapids, Michigan.
[1] Dorothy Leonard Judd was a civic leader and activist, born in 1898 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where she grew up.
She was a large promoter of the Constitutional convention, giving speeches, writing letters, and urging people to vote for the measure.
Upon the calling of the convention, Cushman served on Local Government, and Style and Drafting Committees.
A lifelong Republican, she served as a school teacher, and was later elected to be a delegate to the Michigan state constitutional convention.
She served on the Commission for the Equality of Women and was appointed by William Milliken as a delegate to the White House Conference on Problems of the Aging.