Jailed for freedom / by Doris Stevens.
Women --Suffrage --United States
National Woman's Party
Stevens, Doris, 1888-1963
New York, Liveright Publishing Company
1920
Available online
http://books.google.com/books?id=3eQm9wZIMEkC&pg=PR3#v=onepage&q&f=false
Book
xii, 388 p., [34] leaves of plates : ill. ; 21 cm.
English
Text
Clipping : "Suffs Battle with Police; Burn Speech / Women are badly battered in clash with officers, soldiers and civilians, in fight near Metropolitan Opera House." March 5, 1919
Castleton, Beatrice
Dortenheim, Mrs. Max
Hill, Elsie M. (Elsie Mary), 1883-1970
Maverick, Lucy Madison, 1883-1967
Metropolitan Opera (New York, N.Y.)
National Woman's Party
Paul, Alice, 1885-1977
Stevens, Doris, 1892-1963
Wilson, Woodrow, 1856-1924
Women--Suffrage--New York
Article about demonstration by the National Woman's Party outside of the New York Metropolitan Opera House where President Woodrow Wilson was speaking. Suffragists were attacked by police, soldiers, and onlookers; six women were arrested and later released. The arrested women included Elsie Hill, Doris Stevens, Alice Paul, Mrs. Max Dortenheim, Beatrice Castleton, and Lucy Maverick.
3/5/19
English
New York City, New York
Pamphlet : The governing board of the American Institute of International Law approves Equal Rights and names Doris Stevens first woman member, Session 29-31 October 1931. Washington, D.C. Pan American Union. 1931
American Institute of International Law
Equal rights amendments
Inter-American Commission of Women
Lee, Muna, 1895-1965
National Woman's Party
Pan American Union
Stevens, Doris, 1888-1963
Report from the Inter American Commission of Women session, held from October 29 to October 31st in Washington, D.C. where Doris Stevens was named the first woman member of the American Institute of International Law.
Doris Stevens was a suffragist and a paid organizer for the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage, later the National Woman's Party. After women won the right to vote in 1920, she continued working with the NWP for the Equal Rights Amendment. From 1928 to 1939, Doris Stevens served as chair of the Inter-American Commission of Women, an advisory group created by the Pan American Union (later the Organization of American States).
Inter-American Commission of Women
Pan American Union
Washington, D.C. : Pan American Union
1931
8 p.
English
DOCU.1931.01