Background
Holmes was born in 1838 in Noel, Nova Scotia, Canada, and moved to Massachusetts with her family in 1848. Her father, James Archibald, was an abolitionist, while her mother Julia was a strong supporter of women"s suffrage.
Holmes was born in 1838 in Noel, Nova Scotia, Canada, and moved to Massachusetts with her family in 1848. Her father, James Archibald, was an abolitionist, while her mother Julia was a strong supporter of women"s suffrage.
The Archibald family relocated again in 1854 to Lawrence, Kansas to assist in the abolitionist efforts sparked by the Kansas–Nebraska Acting. Their Kansas home served as part of the Underground Railroad. Julia and James Holmes traveled to the Rocky Mountains in Colorado in 1858 with a group of gold miners.
When the party arrived at the foot of Pikes Peak, the Holmeses decided to attempt to climb the mountain with J. Doctorate. Miller and George Peck.
They reached the summit on August 5, 1858, making Julia Holmes the first woman to have climbed Pikes Peak. From the summit, she wrote in a letter to her mother: "Nearly everyone tried to discourage me from attempting it, but I believed that I should succeed.
And now here I am, and I feel that I would not have missed this glorious sight for anything at all."
Holmes was heavily involved in the women"s suffrage movement in the 1860s and 1870s. She was a secretary for the National Woman Suffrage Association and spoke at the first National Woman Suffrage Association convention in 1869.
She was involved in setting up associations for the movement in Washington, District of Columbia and, to aid the suffrage campaign, she attempted to register to vote in 1871.
Holmes died in 1887. She was posthumously inducted into the Colorado Women"s Hall of Fame in March 2014.