Twelve colorful pages strung together with red yarn. There is one page for every month of the year, each featuring a pro-suffrage sentiment from a well-known person.
Each page consists of a detachable postcard, picturing four ballot boxes and the…
Public announcement from the committee appointed by the National American Woman Suffrage Association, inviting those interested to a public meeting on February 15, 1900 at the Lafayette Square Opera House.
Documents from the New York Women's Suffrage Campaign of 1915.
The Empire State Campaign Committee was a coalition of organizations, including the Women's Suffrage Party, the Women's Suffrage Association, the Women's Political Union and other…
Flier published by the Empire State Campaign Committee in advance of the 1915 election in New York contains statistics and arguments about women's suffrage, including the number of women who want the right to vote, the number of women already able to…
Using excerpts from a pro-suffrage speech by Congressman Edward T. Taylor, of Colorado, where women were granted full suffrage in 1893, he answers common questions about the impact of woman suffrage in his state. These issues include whether or not…
Provides information about the ten states where women are eligible to vote for President in the next presidential election, and asks New York men to grant New York women the right to vote in the upcoming election on in November 1915.
Flier published by the Empire State Campaign Committee in advance of the 1915 election in New York contains a cartoon by Art Young depicting a "Suffragist" standing at a chalkboard quizzing an "Anti-Suffragist." The question written on the blackboard…
Mary Ware Dennett was a suffragist, artist, and advocate of birth control and sex education. She served as the field secretary for the Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Association and the corresponding secretary of the National American Woman Suffrage…
Included in a group of materials from the New York Women's Suffrage Campaign of 1915, this letter from Carrie Chapman Catt contains an update to field workers, focused on the need for fund raising and an update on reference materials they could…
In 1933, Carrie Chapman Catt began protesting against the Nazi persecution of Jews. This letter, sent in June, and signed by Catt with a personal note, encouraged readers to gather signatures on an official protest statement. In August 1933, Catt…