The Woman's Advocate was among the first publications focused on issues related to women's equality. The mission of the Woman's Advocate was to "labor for the legal and political equality of women . . . . also consider the questions of woman's work,…
Appleton's Journal features a cover illustration entitled "Will she vote?" (see page 614), of a woman holding a baby. The illustration accompanies a poem written by Edgar Fawcett with the same title.
Published in the Ladies' Home Journal in 1911, this survey of prominent women of the time indicates that the women interviewed were largely opposed to woman suffrage. The magazine was on record in opposition to women's right to vote.
Women quoted…
Equal Rights was the official weekly magazine of the National Woman's Party from 1923 until it ceased publication in 1954. The newspaper served as a resource to keep the membership informed on the status of the Equal Rights Amendment and other bills…
Tagline: "For Ohio women, being a resume of the activities of the women of the state"
Contents of this issue include:
The Women of Europe, by Marie Thraikill
The Ohio Children's Code
Thrust the Ballot Upon Women, by Al[f]red Hayes
Suffrage in…
Tagline: A Twentieth century weekly for Ohio women being a resume of the activities of the woman of the state. "Everywoman" gives you the latest suffrage news. Create suffrage sentiment by sending the paper into some home.
Subscription appeal from The Woman's Journal newspaper. The leaflet details the publisher's goals for 1898, including a list of special features by well-known authors that will appear in upcoming issues and a series of biographical sketches entitled…
This issue features a cartoon by Charles G. Bush, entitled "Sorosis, 1869" that pokes fun at Sorosis, one of the organizations that began the women's club movement in the United States.
Harper's Weekly was an American illustrated political…