The Woman's Tribune. Vol. 2, No. 5. March 1885
Anthony, Susan B. (Susan Brownell), 1820-1906
Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879
National Woman Suffrage Association (U.S.)
Nebraska Woman Suffrage Association--Newspapers
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
United States--Nebraska--Beatrice
United States--Oregon--Portland
Women--Press coverage
Women--Suffrage--Newspapers
Women's rights--Newspapers
Published from 1883 to 1909 and established by Clara Bewick Colby, the Woman's Tribune was the first daily paper ever produced and edited by a woman. It was published in Beatrice, Nebraska and in Washington, D.C. until Colby moved to Portland, Oregon in 1904. It ceased publication in 1909.
This issue contains a report by Managing Editor, S.R.L. Williams, on the 17th National Convention of the National Woman Suffrage Association held in Washington, D.C. on January 20-22; a speech by Elizabeth Cady Stanton; a reprint of a letter from William Lloyd Garrison to Susan B. Anthony dated Jan. 11, 1885; and a list of all the officers of the National Woman Suffrage Association for 1885.
Colby, Clara Dorothy Bewick, 1846-1916
Beatrice, Neb., Nebraska Woman Suffrage Association
1885-03
English
Text
ALMS.1885.03
Beatrice, Nebraska
Postcard : By gum! Them suffragettes be gittin everything. [Circa 1909-1913]
Property
Color illustration of a man looking at a sign that says "For ladies only", a woman seated on a bench labeled "This bench for women", and in the distance, a "Women's Hotel."
On the verso, the card is addressed to Russell Sigler Esq. Rogers, Nebraska, and postmarked August 23, 1913. The message reads: "Question / what kind of time am I having. Answer / Good time / F.D. Jr."
[Circa 1909-1913]
Postcard : The speech of a woman suffragette at a meeting in Omaha, Neb. [Circa 1900-1910]
Speech
United States--Nebraska--Omaha
Postcard with the text of a speech given at a suffrage meeting in Omaha, Nebraska. The content appears to be satirical in tone.
[Circa 1900-1910]