Amy Regina Juengling (1886 – January 16, 1974) was an American suffragist, educator, and women's rights activist who worked with the National Woman's Party to promote birth control and equal employment.
[1][2] Juengling was born with a congenital dislocation of the left hip, which required her to wear steel leg braces throughout her childhood until the age of twelve, when she decided to remove them and teach herself to walk without them.
[5][10] In the fall of 1917, she traveled to Washington, D.C., with her step-grandmother, Wanda, who wanted to visit the National Woman's Party headquarters and join a protest march.
[16][17] In June 1926, Juengling represented the National Women's Party at the International Suffrage Alliance meeting in Paris, France's La Sorbonne, where she advocated employment equality.
[18][19][20] In June 1929, Juengling founded Daffodil House as a country home in Eden to provide childcare for families living in South Buffalo, in response to the area's high concentration of single working parents.
[21][22][5] Juengling's activity after 1930 received little coverage by local press; however, in March 1939, she spoke out against a bill pushing for a centralized education system at a legislative hearing, representing the Eden Valley School District.