Letter and envelope : Mrs. B.L. Robinson, President, Public Interests' League of the Women's Anti-Suffrage Association of Massachusetts, to the "Chairman," Mrs. Frank Alden Besse. March 1, 1918
Anti-suffrage
Besse, Mary B.
Robinson, Margaret C.
Women and War
Women--Suffrage--Massachusetts
Women's Anti-Suffrage Association of Massachusetts
World War, 1914-1918
Robinson requests data from the chairman of an unidentified organization of women in their branch who are engaging in "war work" for a report she will be giving on the amount and kinds of war work being done by suffragists and anti-suffragists in Massachusetts.
The envelope identifies the recipient as Mrs. Frank Alden Besse, Mary Besse, of Wareham, Massachusetts.
Mary B. Besse became a member of the Massachusetts Republican State Committee in 1929, and was a delegate from Massachusetts to the Republican National Convention in 1932 and an alternate in 1940.
1918-03-01
1 p.
English
DOCU.1918.05
Massachusetts
Pamphlet : Garden primer; how to plant and care for a vegetable garden. April 1917
Suffrage gardens were a popular technique to gather support for woman's suffrage in 1917.
This pamphlet was originally created by Mayor Mitchel's Food Supply Committee of New York City. The Albany Branch of the New York State Woman Suffrage Party pasted their own label on this pamphlet instead of creating one of their own, as a public service toward the war effort.
Vegetable gardening
Gardening
New York State Woman Suffrage Party--Albany Branch
Women--Suffrage--New York
World War, 1914-1918--Women--United States
New York, N.Y. : Isaac Goldmann Company, Printers
1917-04
8 p.
English
DOCU.1917.04