Pamphlet : Julia Ward Howe on suffrage. [Circa 1905-1915]
Howe, Julia Ward (1819-1910)
New England Woman's Suffrage Association (Boston, Mass.)
Women--Suffrage--Massachusetts
Reprint of Julia Ward Howe's address on suffrage at the May Festival of the New England Woman Suffrage Association. The New England Woman Suffrage Association was formed in November, 1868, with Julia Ward Howe as president. The Association's annual meeting was held in May.
Howe, Julia Ward (1819-1910)
New York
[Circa 1905-1915]
4 p.
English
DOCU.1000.90
Boston, Massachusetts
Leaflet : "The New Woman" and the problems of the day. [Circa 1896-1897]
Albany Anti-Suffrage Association
Anti-suffrage
Appleton's popular science monthly
Education
Marriage
Ouida, 1839-1908
United States--New York--Albany
Women--Suffrage--New York
Women's Anti-suffrage Association of the Third Judicial District of the State of New York (Albany, N.Y.)
Reprint of an article published in "Appleton's Popular Science Monthly" by the Women's Anti-suffrage Association of the Third Judicial District of the State of New York, in response to a recent essay entitled "The New Woman", written by Ouida.
[Albany, N.Y.] : Women's Anti-suffrage Association of the Third Judicial District of the State of New York
[Circa 1896-1897]
2 p.
English
DOCU.1000.74
Leaflet : Facing facts; woman suffrage will improve the electorate in New York State. New York State Woman Suffrage Party. April 1917
Constitutional amendments
Elections
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
Voting
Women--Education
Women--Suffrage--New York
Leaflet issued by the New York State Woman Suffrage Party, argues that woman suffrage will benefit the state because women voters will increase the native-born vote, the proportion of educated voters, the law-abiding vote, and the powers of good.
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
New York : National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, Inc.
1917-04
4 p.
English
DOCU.1917.34
Flier : "Politics is man's business." Some political questions . . . Is politics woman's business, too? New York State Woman Suffrage Party [Circa 1914-1917]
Child labor
Election
Food--Safety measures
Mothers' pensions
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
Politics
Women--Education
Women--Employment
Women--Suffrage--New York
Series of questions "all settled by politics and votes." The questions concerned issues that were considered of direct interest to women, including food safety regulation, education, child labor, protective labor legislation, mother's pensions, etc.
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
New York : National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, Inc.
[Circa 1914-1917]
1 sheet ([1] page)
English
DOCU.1000.29
Flier: Not at home. You were out today! New York State Woman Suffrage Party. [Circa 1917]
Ballot
Homemakers
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
Women--Education
Women--Employment
Women--Suffrage--New York
Series of statements about where women go during the day, including children's school, grocery store, buying clothes, and looking for employment, and how those places are under some type of political control. The final question is: "Who controls politics? The ballot."
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
New York : National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, Inc.
[Circa 1914-1917]
1 sheet ([1] page)
English
DOCU.1917.43.02
Pamphlet : International Council of Women : assembled by the National Woman Suffrage Association of the United States to celebrate the fortieth anniversary of the first woman's rights convention, Albaugh's Opera House, Washington, D.C. March 25 to April 1, 1888, inclusive. 1888
Albaugh's Opera House (Washington, D.C.)
International Council of Women. Convention
National Woman Suffrage Association (U.S.)
Woman's Rights Convention
Women--United States--Congresses
Women --Suffrage --Washington (D.C.)
Program for the inaugural convention of the International Council of Women includes detailed information for the attendees, including a morning and evening session calendar; a list of the speakers; information on room and board; and lyrics to 19 hymns used during religious services to open and close the convention.
The International Council of Women, founded in 1888, was created during the second international conference of the National Woman Suffrage Association as a way to bring women from many countries together to work for women's issues.
International Council of Women
National Woman Suffrage Association (U.S.)
Washington, D.C. : Rufus H. Darby, Printer
1888
16 p.
English
DOCU.1888.04
Washington, D.C.
Broadside : Teachers need the vote! [Circa 1915-1917]
Campaign literature
Child labor--Law and legislation
Food--Safety measures
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
Teachers
Teachers--Salaries, etc.--United States
Teachers--Tenure--United States
Women--Education
Women in education
Women--Suffrage--New York
Created by the Teacher's Section of the New York State Woman Suffrage Party, this flier encourages teachers to work for woman suffrage by listing the reasons why they need the vote.
New York State Woman Suffrage Party. Teacher's Section
New York : National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, Inc.
[Circa 1915-1917]
1 p.
English
DOCU.1000.22
Leaflet : Women of Virginia : this is your opportunity. 1921
Anderson, Henry W. (Henry Watkins), 1870-1954
Campaign literature
Elections--Virginia
Governors--Virginia
Republican Party (Va.)
Campaign flier for candidate, Henry W. Anderson, a U.S. attorney and a leader of the Republican party in Virginia, who was running for Governor of Virginia. The flier contains information on public schools, child welfare and mother's relief, public roads, and government and taxation. On the back is a list of the Republican nominees for state offices for 1921. Anderson lost to Elbert Lee Trinkle.
[Republican Party (Va.)]
1921
4 p. Bifold
English
DOCU.1921.01
Virginia
Newsletter: Headquarters News Bulletin. Vol. 2, No. 22. Ohio Woman Suffrage Association. November 15, 1917
Education
National American Woman Suffrage Asociation
Ohio Woman Suffrage Association
School board members
White House (Washington, D.C.)
Wilson, Woodrow, 1856-1924
Women--Suffrage--Ohio
Women--Suffrage--New York
Bimonthly newsletter published by the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association. This issue celebrates the recent passage of suffrage in Lakewood, Ohio and in New York; announces appointments of women to school boards in Ohio; and reports on the National American Woman Suffrage Association's deputation to President Wilson on November 9, 1917.
Warren, Ohio : Ohio Woman Suffrage Association
1917-11-15
4 p.
English
DOCU.1917.23
Article on woman suffrage introduced in the United States Senate by Hon. Thomas B. Catron, Senator from the state of New Mexico. February 19, 1917
Anti-suffrage
Catron, Thomas Benton, 1840-1921
Constitutional amendments
Women--Suffrage--New Mexico
Article, written by Senator Thomas B. Catron, in opposition to a federal suffrage amendment.
Contents include:
Failure of women to vote when given the ballot
The women's vote for president
Taxation and woman suffrage
Prohibition and woman suffrage
Schools and playgrounds
Vice not suppressed where women vote
War and woman suffrage
Wage-earning women and woman suffrage
Woman suffrage undemocratic
Woman suffrage not an inherent right
Women as office seekers
Rural communities and woman suffrage
Women as jurors in woman suffrage states
Feminism and socialism
Woman suffrage and divorce
Woman suffrage unjust
Population, not territory, counts
High cost of woman suffrage
Defeats of woman suffrage
Opinions of eminent men against woman suffrage.
Catron, Thomas Benton, 1840-1921
Washington, D.C. : Government Printing Office
1917
16 p.
English
DOCU.1917.12