Clipping : "Progressives are pledged to help organized labor" by Jane Addams, Detroit News Tribune. October 20, 1912
Labor laws and legislation
Labor movement --United States
Political parties --United States
Progressive Party (1912)
Roosevelt, Theodore, 1858-1919
United States --Politics and government
Addams discusses the growing Progressive Party, formed by Theodore Roosevelt and its potential to spark reform for industrial workers. She uses Roosevelt as someone who has the power and personality to "gather up the sense of social wrong and direct it into channels of redress, to focus the scattered moral energy of our vast nation and to turn it into practical reform."
Addams, Jane, 1860-1935
Detroit, Mich. : The Detroit News Tribune
1912-10-20
English
ALMS.1912.02
Detroit, Michigan
National Anti-Slavery Standard. January 1843 - May 1843.
African Americans --New York (State) --New York --Newspapers
American Anti-Slavery Society
Antislavery movements
Antislavery movements --United States --Newspapers
New York (N.Y.) --Newspapers
Philadelphia (Pa.) --Newspapers
Slavery--United States--Periodicals
The National Anti-Slavery Standard was the official weekly newspaper of the American Anti-Slavery Society, an abolitionist society founded in 1833 by William Lloyd Garrison and Arthur Tappan. Lydia and David Child, abolitionists and writers, established the newspaper in 1840. The Standard advocated for the rights of slaves throughout the country, as well as suffrage for women.
The Lewis collection includes the following issues:
Volume 3, No. 32, January 12, 1843
Volume 3, No. 34, January 26, 1843
Volume 3, No. 35, February 2, 1843
Volume 3, No. 36, February 9, 1843
Volume 3, No. 37, February 16, 1843
Volume 3, No. 38, February 23, 1843
Volume 3, No. 39, March 2, 1843
Volume 3, No. 40, March 9, 1843
Volume 3, No. 42, March 23, 1843
Volume 3, No. 48, May 4, 1843
American Anti-Slavery Society
Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society.
New York: American Anti-Slavery Society
1843
Child, Lydia Maria, 1802-1880, Editor.
Child, David Lee, 1794-1874, Assistant Editor.
English
Type
Dates of publication: 1840-1870
The Anti-Slavery Examiner. Vol. 1, no. 2. September, 1836
American Anti-Slavery Society
Antislavery movements
Grimke, Angelina Emily, 1805-1879
Slavery--United States--Controversial literature
The Anti-Slavery Examiner was among several serials published by the American Anti-Slavery Society. It began publication in August 1836 and was published irregularly (at times as a pamphlet or tract) until 1845.
"Appeal to the Christian Women of the South" by A.E. Grimke. In this essay, Angelina Grimke urges Southern women to use their influence on the men in their lives to fight against slavery.
American Anti-Slavery Society
New York: American Anti-Slavery Society
1836-09
English
Text
ALMS.1836.
New York, New York
The Emancipator. Vol. 4,, no. 46, whole number 202. March 12, 1840
American Anti-Slavery Society
Antislavery movements
Antislavery movements -- United States -- Newspapers
Leavitt, Joshua, 1794-1873, Editor
New York (N.Y.) -- Newspapers
Slavery--United States--Periodicals
The Emancipator was one of several publications by the American Anti-Slavery Society. First published in May 1833 in New York City, the title of the publication changed several times, as did its editors and publishers. When Joshua Leavitt became the editor in 1840, the Emancipator became a leading abolitionist newspaper. He focused on the political and moral issues related to the abolition of slavery.
In December 1841 the Free American, the official paper of the Massachusetts Abolition Society, merged with the Emancipator and the editors renamed it the Emancipator and Free American.
The Emancipator ran for 18 years and became one of the most widely circulated antislavery newspapers in the country.
American Anti-Slavery Society
New York: American Anti-Slavery Society
1840-03-12
Leavitt, Joshua, 1794-1873, Editor
English
Text
New York, New York
Clipping : "Votes for Women" Campaign is on; joint debate begins." Wilkes-Barre Times-Leader. April 27, 1910
Ballot
Belmont, Alva, 1853-1933
Jones, Louise Caldwell (Mrs. Gilbert E.), 1858-1929
National League for the Civic Education of Women
Palmer, Henry Wilbur, 1839-1915
Political Equality League
Public opinion polls--periodicals
Wilkes-Barre (Pa.)
Wilkes-Barre (Pa.) -- Newspapers.
Women--Suffrage--Pennsylvania
Front page of the newspaper contains a debate on woman's suffrage with the affirmative written by Alva Belmont, President of the Political Equality Association, and the negative written by Mrs. Gilbert E. Jones, Chairman of the National League for the Civic Education of Women, New York City.
In the center is a ballot and notice to women that the Times Leader would take all of the ballots sent in by local citizens and send the results of the poll to Congressman Palmer so that he would know the wishes of his district.
Belmont, Alva, 1853-1933
Jones, Louise Caldwell (Mrs. Gilbert E.), 1858-1929
Wilkes-Barre, Pa. : Richard L. Conner
1910-04-27
1 p.
English
Clipping : Cartoons magazine. The March to Washington. [1913]
Cartoons (Commentary)--1910-1920
Jones, Rosalie,--1883-
National American Woman Suffrage Association
Parades & processions--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920
Willard, Archibald M., 1836-1918. Spirit of '76
Women--Political activity--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920
Women's suffrage--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920.
Reproductions of drawings by Clifford Berryman, Robert W. Satterfield, and J.H. Donahey, originally published in the Washington Star, Central Press Association, and the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The cartoons depict the National American Woman Suffrage Association's March 3, 1913 parade held in Washington, D.C. the day before President Woodrow Wilson's inauguration.
"Spirit of 1913" by Berryman showing three women marching in snow and carrying a flag with the slogan "Votes for Women" after Archibald Willard's "Spirit of '76"
"Spirit of 1913" by Satterfield showing three women marching in snow while dreaming of voting for the first time
"Gen. Jones crossing the Delaware" by James Donahey after Leutze, showing General Rosalie Jones, leader of the New York State participants, standing up in boat while the other women row.
Berryman, Clifford Kennedy, 1869-1949
Satterfield, Robert W.
Donahey, J. H. (James Harrison), 1875-1949
Chicago : Ill. : H.H. Windsor, Editor and Publisher
[1913]
2 p.
English
Clipping : Life Magazine. She: You are too severe, James. Even the suffragette is one of God's screechers. [May, 1915]
Anti-suffrage
Cartoons (Commentary)--1890-1900
Suffrage--United States--Caricature and cartoons
Illustration of a woman speaking to a man in a crowd of people. In the background is a woman standing on a platform with her arm raised, speaking about votes for women.
Birch, Reginald Bathurst, 1856-1943
New York, Mitchell & Miller
[1915-05]
1 p.
English
PERI.1915.03
The Women's Political World. Vol. I, No. 1. January 6, 1913
Blatch, Harriot Stanton, 1856-1940
New York (N.Y.)--Newspapers.
Women--Suffrage--New York (State)--Newspapers
Women's Political Union (New York, N.Y.)
First issue of this publication.
Tagline: "Immediate Object: Securing Woman Suffrage in New York State in 1915."
Publication contains information on the women's suffrage movement in New York State and the national movement.
Blatch, Harriot Stanton, 1856-1940
New York : Women's Political Union
1913-01-06
8 p.
English
Clipping : Cartoons magazine. The Washington Parade. [1913]
Cartoons (Commentary)--1910-1920
Gender roles
National American Woman Suffrage Association
Parades & processions--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920
Women--Political activity--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920
Women's suffrage--Washington (D.C.)--1910-1920.
Reproductions of drawings by John Clubb, William O'Loughlin, Ralph Wilder, and Guy Spencer, originally published in the Rochester Herald, Portland Telegram, Chicago Record Herald, and Omaha World Herald.
The cartoons depict the National American Woman Suffrage Association's March 3, 1913 parade held in Washington, D.C. the day before President Woodrow Wilson's inauguration.
"Shake" by Clubb, shows a suffragist holding a "Votes for Women" banner shaking hands with a man wearing a "Votes for Daydreamers" sash and holding a "Absentee votes for Travelers banner.
"During the Parade" by O'Loughlin, shows a woman with a "Votes for Women" sign being pulled off the ground away from a bunch of mice and shouting "A Chair. A Chair. My Kingdom for a Chair."
"Having Trouble Making the First Page" by Wilder, shows a woman seated on a park bench with two men, writing the story of the suffrage parade on a blank newspaper.
"A Suggestion" by Spencer, shows a parade float labeled "My Wife's in the Parade." The float is carrying a man at the center making dinner surrounded by children.
Clubb, John Scott, 1875-1934
O'Loughlin, William
Wilder, Ralph, 1875-1924
Spencer, Guy R., 1878-1945
Chicago : Ill. : H.H. Windsor, Editor and Publisher
[1913]
2 p.
English
The Woman's Tribune. Vol. 2, No. 5. March 1885
Anthony, Susan B. (Susan Brownell), 1820-1906
Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879
National Woman Suffrage Association (U.S.)
Nebraska Woman Suffrage Association--Newspapers
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
United States--Nebraska--Beatrice
United States--Oregon--Portland
Women--Press coverage
Women--Suffrage--Newspapers
Women's rights--Newspapers
Published from 1883 to 1909 and established by Clara Bewick Colby, the Woman's Tribune was the first daily paper ever produced and edited by a woman. It was published in Beatrice, Nebraska and in Washington, D.C. until Colby moved to Portland, Oregon in 1904. It ceased publication in 1909.
This issue contains a report by Managing Editor, S.R.L. Williams, on the 17th National Convention of the National Woman Suffrage Association held in Washington, D.C. on January 20-22; a speech by Elizabeth Cady Stanton; a reprint of a letter from William Lloyd Garrison to Susan B. Anthony dated Jan. 11, 1885; and a list of all the officers of the National Woman Suffrage Association for 1885.
Colby, Clara Dorothy Bewick, 1846-1916
Beatrice, Neb., Nebraska Woman Suffrage Association
1885-03
English
Text
ALMS.1885.03
Beatrice, Nebraska