Hooker, Isabella Beecher, 1822-1907
Women --Suffrage --Connecticut
Women --United States --Political Activity]]>
Custody of children--Connecticut
Married women --Legal status, laws, etc.
Married women --Legal status, laws, etc. --Connecticut
Marital property
Women--Suffrage--Connecticut]]>
  • The wife's personal subjection to the husband
  • Her want of legal authority over their children
  • Her property
]]>
Buttons
Campaign buttons
Campaign insignia
Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association
Political campaigns
Women--Suffrage--Connecticut]]>

Purple, green and white were colors associated with the suffrage movement in England, but several American suffrage organizations borrowed the colors.

White back paper contains the name and address for the Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association 55-57 Pratt St. Hartford, Conn. and the Rochester, N.Y. union bug.]]>
American Woman Suffrage Association
Buttons
Campaign buttons
Campaign insignia
National Junior Suffrage Corps
Political campaigns
Ruutz-Rees, Caroline
Women--Suffrage--Connecticut]]>

The National Junior Suffrage Corps was created in 1914 by Caroline Ruutz-Rees, the principal of a girls' school in Greenwich, Connecticut, to interest young women in the cause. Ruutz-Rees was also the third Vice President of the American Woman Suffrage Association. The group's motto was "Youth Today, Tomorrow Power."

The backpaper was ripped off leaving no manufacturer information. ]]>
Buttons
Campaign buttons
Campaign insignia
Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association
Political campaigns
Women--Suffrage--Connecticut]]>
Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association
Hooker, Isabella Beecher, 1822-1907
Women--Suffrage--Connecticut
Women--Suffrage--History]]>

Isabella Beecher Hooker, president of the CWSA for thirty years, recounts a history of the right to vote in Connecticut up through current petitions.]]>
Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association]]>
Newspaper editors
New York (State)--Politics and government
Stanton, Henry B. (Henry Brewster), 1805-1887
United States--Politics and government--1815-1861]]>
This work is the original version of his autobiography, which would later be published as a second and was working on the third edition in 1887 when he died.]]>
Political Equality League
Women--Suffrage--Connecticut]]>
National American Woman Suffrage Association. Convention
United States--Connecticut--Hartford
Women--Suffrage--Connecticut]]>
Washington, D.C.]]>
Anti-suffrage
Cannon, Angus M. (Angus Munn)
Cannon, Martha Hughes
Crannell, Elizabeth Walker Shaule, -1936
Elections
Mormons--Utah
United States--New York--Albany
Voting
Women--Suffrage--New York
Women--Suffrage--Utah
Women's Anti-Suffrage Association of the Third Judicial District of the State of New York (Albany, N.Y.)]]>

Crannell argues that Utah cannot be compared to Eastern states because of the different values that exist, particularly in the Mormon religion. She also provides statistics from states including Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Chicago, that support the notion that women do not vote.

The letter was reprinted by the Women's Anti-Suffrage Association of the Third Judicial District of the State of New York.]]>