Admission ticket : Society for the Betterment of the Race lecture by Lady Cook (Tennessee Claflin) on the need of revising morals and laws. Carnegie Hall. February 3, 1911
Carnegie Hall (New York, N.Y.)
Cook, Tennessee Claflin, Lady, 1845-1923
Women--Suffrage--New York
Ticket for admission to a speech given by Tennessee Claflin under the auspices of the Society for the Betterment of the Race, at Carnegie Hall in New York. Claflin was the only speaker at the event, where she spoke about women's suffrage.
Tennessee Claflin, sister to Victoria Woodhull, was one of the first women to open a Wall Street brokerage firm.
Society for the Betterment of the Race
Society for the Betterment of the Race
1911
English
DOCU.1911.04
Broadside : The Negro and the new social order (Extracts from the Messenger). [1919]
African Americans--Civil rights
African Americans--Politics and government
African Americans--Social conditions
Anti-suffrage
Civil rights--United States
Constitutional amendments
Equality
Intermarriage
Men's Anti-Ratification League of Montgomery, Alabama
Messenger
National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage
Race discrimination--United States
Randolph, A. Philip--(Asa Philip),--1889-1979
States' rights (American politics)
Women--Suffrage--Alabama
The broadside, published by the Men's Anti-Ratification League of Montgomery, Alabama contains excerpts from "The Negro and the New Social Order," published in The Messenger, a magazine founded in 1917 by A. Phillip Randolph and Chandler Owen as the "only radical Negro magazine in America."
Extracts pulled include those for universal suffrage, social equality, and intermarriage. The League encourages voters to reject the Susan B. Anthony amendment in the name of states' rights. The League was a state affiliate of the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage.
The Men's Anti-Ratification League of Montgomery, Alabama
Montgomery, Ala. : Men's Anti-Ratification League of Montgomery, Alabama
[1919]
1 p.
English
DOCU.1919.01
Alabama