Sallie Davis Hayden

Sallie Davis Hayden (July 12, 1842 – September 15, 1907[1]) was a suffragist in the Arizona Territory of the United States.

[8] She quickly transformed her new home, adding running water, a grass lawn, and the first wood floor in the valley.

[8] They had three more children after Carl, Sarah "Sallie" Davis Haden (b. June 25, 1880), Anna Spencer Hayden (b.

The family spent considerable money on litigation, and when Charles left the town on business, Sallie defended Hayden water rights with a shotgun.

[10] Along with Josephine Brawley Hughes and Frances Willard Munds, Sallie was one of the founders of the suffrage movement in Arizona.

Every year, she, with president Josephine Brawley Hughes, unsuccessfully worked to get the territorial legislature to pass a woman suffrage bill.