Their Married Life or the Adventures of Suzanne the Iconoclast ; a series of modern comedies by Orson Lowell II Suzanne Suffragette. [March 1914]
American wit and humor--Periodicals
Anti-suffrage
Caricatures and cartoons--Periodicals
Husband and wife
Lowell, Orson, 1871-1956
Magazine illustration
Parades
Processions
Originally published in McClure's Magazine, Vol. 42, this was a series of humorous illustrations that tell the story of Suzanne, a suffragist, and her efforts to sway him by overexposing him to the anti-suffrage rhetoric of a neighbor, Mrs. Gudge.
Orson Lowell was an American artist and illustrator, who became known as a social critic and commentator.
Lowell, Orson, 1871-1956
New York : S.S. McClure
1914-03
6 p.
English
DOCU.1914.07
Flier : Arguments for husbands who do not want wives to vote. [1924]
Campaign literature
Davis, John W. (John William), 1873-1955
Elections
Presidents--United States--Election--1924
Campaign flier for candidate, John W. Davis, Congressman from West Virginia, Solicitor General of the United States, and U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, before he became the Democratic nominee for President in 1924. He lost the election to Calvin Coolidge.
This flier urges husbands to encourage their wives to vote in the election to protect their business and their home.
[n.p.]
[1924]
1 p.
English
DOCU.1924.01
Broadside : What every woman knows. New York State Woman Suffrage Party. [1917]
Elections
Farmers' wife
Husband and wife
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
United States--New York--New York
Voting
Women--Suffrage--New York
Flier argues that wives are partners to their husband's in the home and should also be able to vote as partners.
Issued in advance of the 1917 election when New York women were granted the right to vote.
New York State Woman Suffrage Party
New York : National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, Inc.
[1917]
1 sheet ([1] p.)
English
DOCU.1917.40
Postcard : This is pretty heavy work, But I'll never, never shirk. [Circa 1909-1915]
Cupids
Demonstration
Voting
Series of cards with Cupid as the central figure. This card features a black and white illustration of Cupid wearing a "Woman Suffrage" sash and holding a sign that reads: "Isn't your wife intelligent enough to vote? Mine is."
C.E. Perry
[Circa 1909-1915]