Red, white, and blue pinback button with the words "Vote Citizenship Suffrage Amendment" divided into equal parts with an "E" at the center. This may have been distributed by the National American Woman Suffrage Association during the Empire State…
This issue of the New York Tribune contains the article, "Kate Carew Fell into Line and Marched--Oh, Miles--Seeking a Vote." The author and illustrator comedically discusses her experience being a part of the woman's suffrage parade held in New York…
This issue includes the articles:
"Suffs Set back in Two States/ North Carolina Senate Votes to Defer Matter until Session of 1921/ Tennessee is Wavering/Adjournment of Lower House Prevents Final Action and Antis Claim Victory"
Crannell was the Chairman of the Anti-Suffrage Association of the 3rd Judicial District in New York. In her address she asks members to refuse to take action on the woman suffrage amendment.
She counters arguments regarding equal pay, taxation…
Henry Brewster Stanton was an abolitionist, social reformer, writer and orator. In 1840, he married Elizabeth Cady Stanton. He was a founding member of the New York Anti-Slavery Society and joined the Free Soil Party. After the Civil War ended,…
Transcript from the Constitutional Convention of New York State held in Albany on August 8, 1894. Delegates met to discuss whether or not to accept the adverse report of the Committee on Suffrage regarding the proposed constitutional amendment to…
The program includes lists of officers and special committees, schedule of events, speakers, suffrage quotations and the lyrics to the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" by Julia Ward Howe.
Reverend Samuel E. Eastman, D.D., was the senior pastor of The Park Church in Elmira, New York and a social reformer for temperance and women's rights.
This address by Eastman was first given on March 28th at City Hall and the Woman's Suffrage…
Six pie charts demonstrate the percentage of non-natives who comprise the male populations of Berlin, Paris, and London and in the United States (males of voting age) of New York, Boston and Chicago.