Suffrage--Washington (State)]]> Tagline: "The magazine that won equal suffrage in Washington"

Missouri Hanna was the founder and editor of the Edmonds Review in 1904. She is considered the first woman newspaper publisher in Washington. After selling the Edmonds Review, she created Votes for Women, the official newspaper of the women's suffrage movement in Washington (state) until the successful vote to enfranchise women in 1910. The New Citizen was its successor, and focused on the role of newly enfranchised women.]]>

Broadway Magazine was an illustrated magazine covering New York theater and culture. It began in 1898 and in 1907, it was renamed 'New Broadway Magazine', which then became 'Hampton's Broadway Magazine' in 1908 and 'Hampton's Magazine' in 1909.]]>
Cox, James M. (James Middleton), 1870-1957
Frierson, William L., 1868-1953
Los Angeles (Calif.)--Newspapers
Los Angeles County (Calif.)--Newspapers
North Carolina. General Assembly
Tennessee. General Assembly
Women--Suffrage--North Carolina
Women--Suffrage--Tennessee]]>

The article refers to actions taken by the state legislatures on August 17, 1920. In North Carolina, the state legislature voted to defer consideration of the federal suffrage amendment until the General Assembly met in regular session in 1921. According to the article, anti-suffrage forces planned to bring the matter up under special order the following morning to get rid of it quickly. The article quotes Representative Neal, anti-suffrage floor leader, as saying "Call it up and kill it right."

In Tennessee, the lower House of the Tennessee legislature adjourned after three hours of debate with a final vote expected the following day. The article discusses the number of votes required to pass the amendment.

The article discusses National Woman's Party efforts to get Democratic Presidential nominee Governor Cox, of Ohio, to go to Nashville and exert his influence on the Tennessee Legislature to ratify the amendment.]]>
Boston (Mass.) -- Newspapers
Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879
Knapp, Isaac, 1804-1843
Suffolk County (Mass.) -- Newspapers
The Liberator]]>

Over its 35 year run, Garrison published 1,820 issues, ending in 1865 after the end of the Civil War. This issue was the newspaper's final issue. It includes a poem by a woman identified as Carrie from Brooklyn, New York, entitled "A Farewell to the Liberator." There are also tributes to Garrison and to the paper.
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Knapp, Isaac, 1804-1843]]> J.B. Yerrinton & Son, Printers]]>
Cotton manufacture
Manchester (England)]]>

Group of people, each with a different label along the bottom, including knocker-up, reeler, hot-water woman, hand-mule spinner, half-timer, winder, scavenger, overlooker to self-acting mules, throstle-spinner, power-loom weaver, carder, self-acting minder, weaver, power-loom weaver, throstle-doffer, jack-tenter.]]>
Elections
Harvard University
Lockwood, Belva Ann, 1830-1917
National Equal Rights Party (U.S.)
Presidents-Election
Satire
Stow, Marietta L.B., 1830?-1902
Voting
Women political candidates
Women presidential candidates]]>

In 1884, a group of women organized a new political party, "The Equal Rights Party," and organized the first convention to nominate two women for office: Belva A. Lockwood for president and Marietta L. Stow, for Vice-President.

The Harvard Lampoon publication was founded in 1876 at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The humor magazine was inspired by popular publications like Puck (1871) and Punch (1841). ]]>