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Marietta Bones (May 4, 1842 – July 11, 1901) was an American woman suffragist, social reformer, and philanthropist.

Marietta Matilda Wilkins took the name Marietta Bones after marriage. In 1881 Bones was elected vice-president of the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) and annually re-elected for nine years. In 1890 suffragist Susan B. Anthony and supporters of the movement merged the National Women Suffrage Association into the National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA). In 1882, Bones made her first appearance as a public speaker in Webster, soon to be Webster, South Dakota, where she later resided. She was an active temperance worker, and was secretary of the first Non-Partisan National Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) in 1889. She took great interest in all reform and charitable institutions.

From 1881-1890 Bones was the vice-president of the National Women Suffrage Association. In September, 1883 she addressed Dakota's State Constitutional Convention on behalf of woman's enfranchisement. Failing to have her claim for woman's equality before the law recognized in the State Constitution there framed, she earnestly petitioned both houses of Congress to deny Dakota's admission to the Union as a State. Bones actively opposed efforts to make the social question of temperance a political question by sharing her controversial views in newspaper articles.

She was an active temperance worker and in 1889 was secretary of the first non-partisan national Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) convention in Chicago, IL. The local WCTU in Webster, SD discharged her after a year of service for her participation in the non-partisan convention. Bones received an official notice stating "The ladies of Webster union moved and carried that Bones' dues be returned on account of her having joined the secession movement, and also on account of her antagonism to our State president."

As a pioneer settler in her town, Bones secured a donation of a block of lots for a courthouse and county buildings. Through her influence, Day County, SD was divided to provide a central location for the county-seat. Her actions to have the South Dakota state capital located at the geographical center, attracted the attention of the board of trade in the city of Pierre, SD. She was then invited to be an honored guest of their city. Bones was an able assistant of Matilda Joslyn Gage in organizing the Woman's National Liberal Union. She addressed the convention in Washington, D.C., and was one of the executive council of that organization.