Debate on birth control / Mrs. Sanger and W. Russell ; and Shaw vs. Roosevelt on birth control. 1905
Birth control
Birth control -- Moral and ethical aspects
Dramatists, Irish --20th century --Correspondence
Presidents -- United States -- Correspondence
Roosevelt, Theodore, -- 1858-1919 -- Correspondence
Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950 --Correspondence Presidents --United States --Correspondence
Little Blue Book No. 208
Transcript of a debate between Margaret Sanger, Theodore Roosevelt, Winter Russell, George Bernard Shaw, Robert L. Wolf, and Emma Sargent Russell on the subject of birth control.
Sanger, Margaret, 1879-1966
Russell, Winter
Girard, Kansas : Haldeman-Julius Company
1905-04-04
E. Haldeman-Julius, Editor
64 p.
English
ALMS.1921.
Pamphlet : Measuring up equal suffrage : an authoritative estimate of results in Colorado. 1911
Women--Suffrage--Colorado
Reprint of extracts from an article published in the magazine, "The Delineator" in February 1911. The authors described the effect of women's suffrage on the laws and politics of Colorado, where women were permitted to vote in 1893.
Creel, George, 1876-1953
Lindsey, Ben B. (Ben Barr), 1869-1943
New York : National American Woman Suffrage Association
[1911]
32 p.
English
DOCU.1000.21
Pamphlet : The physical force argument against woman suffrage by A. MacCallum Scott, M.P. 1912
Anti-suffrage
Justice
Women and democracy
Women--Suffrage--Great Britain
Alexander MacCallum Scott was the Liberal M.P. for the Bridgeton constituency of Glasgow from 1910 until 1922.
In this article, he makes the argument that suffrage is not a necessary consequence of the principles of Democracy and Justice, but would in fact undermine the foundation of government.
Scott, A. MacCallum (Alexander MacCallum), 1874-1928
London : National League for Opposing Woman Suffrage
1912
16 p.
DOCU.1912.02
Pamphlet : Why Not? [1917]
Elections
National American Woman Suffrage Association
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
Women--Suffrage--New York
The pamphlet asks and answers the question "In the United States all men are allowed to vote. Why not women?"
This pamphlet was published as a part of the campaign to lobby for woman's suffrage in the upcoming election in New York State. New York granted state voting rights to women in 1917.
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
New York : National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, Inc.
[1917]
4 p.
English
DOCU.1917.07