Significant Dates in the History of Women and Politics in PEI

1888 Unmarried women in Charlottetown win the right to vote in municipal elections.
1892 Unmarried women in Summerside win the right to vote in municipal elections.
1899 Women win the right to sit on School Boards in Charlottetown and Summerside.
1917 Women with close relatives in the armed forces win the right to vote in federal elections.
1918 Women over the age of 21 who are Canadian citizens win the right to vote in federal elections, with the exception of Indigenous women.
1922 Island women win the right to vote in provincial elections, with the exception of Indigenous women.
1929 British Privy Council declares women to be "persons" able to serve in the Senate.
1951 Hilda Ramsay (CCF) from Indian River is the first female candidate to campaign for a seat in the provincial legislature.
1955 Elsie Inman is the first Island woman appointed to Senate.
1960 First Nation peoples living on reserve win the right to vote in federal and provincial elections without losing their registered status.
1960 Mary Bernard is the first woman elected chief of the Lennox Island First Nation.
1961 Mary Margaret Smith MacDonald (PC) is the first Island woman, as well as the first woman east of Ottawa, elected to the House of Commons. To date, only two other PEI women have followed in her footsteps.
1968 Dorothy Corrigan is the first woman elected mayor of Charlottetown.
1970 Jean Canfield (Lib.) is the first woman elected to PEI's Legislative Assembly.
1972 Jean Canfield (Lib.) is the first woman in PEI appointed to Cabinet, responsible for the PEI Housing Authority.
1972 The PEI Advisory Council on the Status of Women is created to bring about political action on issues of concern to women, including the election of women. Other similarly focused organizations, such as Women's Network PEI and East Prince Women's Information Association are later formed.
1979 Frances Perry is the first woman elected mayor of Summerside.
1983 Marion Reid (PC) is the first woman in PEI to hold the office of Speaker of the Provincial Legislative Assembly.
1990 Pat Mella (PC) is the first woman in PEI to become Leader of a provincial political party.
1990 Marion Reid is appointed the first female Lieutenant Governor for Prince Edward Island.
1993 Catherine Callbeck (Lib.) is the first woman in PEI and Canada to be elected Premier.
1993 Pat Mella (PC) is the first woman in PEI to hold the position of Leader of the Official Opposition.
1993 A precedent setting 25% of the PEI Legislative Assembly are women.
2004 Lennox Island First Nation elects an all-female Band Council which includes Chief Darlene Bernard, Emily Bernard, Tabatha Thomas and Mary Moore Phillips.
2006 Olive Crane (PC) wins a by-election to bring the percentage of women in the PEI Legislature to a record breaking 26%.
2008 One third of PEI candidates in the 2008 Federal Election are women. Gail Shea (PC) becomes the third female MP in PEI history.
2010 Two of four political parties are led by women, including Olive Crane as Leader of the PC Party and Sharon Labchuk as Leader of the Green Party.