Miniature telescope, made of brass-like metal with a black leather sheath. Stanhopes were novelty souvenirs popular during the 19th century. The image can be seen by holding it up to the light and looking into the tiny hole.
Miniature telescope, made of brass-like metal with a black leather sheath. Stanhopes were novelty souvenirs popular during the 19th century. The image can be seen by holding it up to the light and looking into the tiny hole.
Official program for the National American Woman Suffrage Association procession held in Washington, D.C. on March 3, 1913. The procession was organized by NAWSA's Congressional Committee, led by Alice Paul and Lucy Burns.
Reprints the replies to four questions Mary Bentley Thomas asked the Governors of the first four states to grant women the right to vote: Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, and Colorado. The questions were: Are your women as devoted to house and home interest as…
Stamp on the envelope was produced by the National American Woman Suffrage Association. The design is a photograph of a woman, wearing cap and gown, standing next to a tablet containing the inscription: "In Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Idaho women…
This weekly paper was affiliated with the Woman's Journal and edited by Alice Stone Blackwell. The goal was to convert and recruit women to the cause. In this issue, articles included: Why Should Women Vote?
Are women represented?
Men and women…
Martha Carey Thomas was the second president of Bryn Mawr College from 1894 until 1922. In this address, she argues for financial and social equality for women. Thomas discusses the increasing presence of women in the workplace and that without the…
The program includes lists of officers and special committees, schedule of events, speakers, suffrage quotations and the lyrics to the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" by Julia Ward Howe.