<div style="text-align:left;">The Woman's Advocate. Vol. 1, no. 5, May 1869</div>
Campbell, Margaret W.
DeForest, Jane O., 1839-1976
Gage, Frances Dana, 1808-1884
Gage, Matilda Joslyn, 1826-1898
Hanaford, Phebe A. (Phebe Ann), 1829-1921
Linton, W. J. (William James), 1812-1897
Littlefield, Louisa J.G.
Perry, Nora, 1831-1896
Stone, Lucy, 1818-1893
Whipple, Content
Women--Suffrage--Periodicals
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, wages, education, and social status. It will record the progress of the cause abroad, and aim to be a faithful index of all important home movements." The publication was absorbed by the Woman's Journal in 1870.
This issue included essays and articles by Nora Perry, Frances D. Gage, Jane O. DeForest, Louisa J.G. Littlefield, M.E.J. Gage, Phebe A. Hanaford, Content Whipple, W.J. Linton, M.W. Campbell, and Lucy Stone.
Tomlinson, William P. Editor and Proprietor
New York : William P. Tomlinson
1869-05
English
Text
Appleton's Journal : a magazine of general literature. Volume 1,. No. 20-With Supplement. August 14, 1869
Mother and child
Poetry
Voting
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.
Fawcett, Edgar, 1847-1923, author
New York : D. Appleton and Company
1869-08-14
English
Do you, as a woman, want to vote? Some prominent women of America answer the question., 1911
Anti-suffrage
Women--Suffrage--United States
National Society of Colonial Dames of America in the State of ColoradoNational Society of Colonial Dames of America in the State of Colorado
New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage
National League for the Civic Education of Women
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 include former First Lady Mrs. Benjamin Harrison, wife of President Harrison; Mrs. Francis W. Goodard, President of the Colonial Dames of Colorado; Anna Roosevelt Cowles, sister of President Teddy Roosevelt, cousin to President Franklin D. Roosevelt and distant cousin to First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt; and Agnes Irwin, former Dean of Radcliffe College in Cambridge, MA.
The collection includes two copies of this publication.
Ladies' Home Journal
1911-01-19
1 p.
English
ALMS.1896.02
Equal Rights. Vol. 1, No. 1. February 17, 1923
Equal rights amendment
Hooker, Edith Houghton, 1879-1948
National Woman's Party
United States -- Periodicals
Women -- Legal status, laws, etc. --
Women's rights -- Periodicals
The first issue of Equal Rights, the official weekely 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 affecting women including protective labor legislation, nationality issues, jury service, and more.
This issue includes:
News from the Field by Eleanor Taylor Marsh
U.S. Senator William Cabell Bruce pledges support to Equal Rights
Declaration of Principles, 1848-1923
The Picket Line (Editorial) by Edith Houghton Hooker
After Seventy-Five Years (Editorial)
Treasurer's Report
National Woman's Party
Washington, D.C. : National Woman's Party
1923-02-17
708 LR- Bookcase, Blue Album #7
8 p., ill.
English
PERI.1923.01
Washington, D.C.
Equal Rights. Vol. 23, No. 1. January 15, 1937
Equal rights amendment
National Woman's Party
Pollitzer, Anita, 1894-1975
United States -- Periodicals
Women -- Legal status, laws, etc. --
Women's rights -- Periodicals
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 affecting women including protective labor legislation, nationality issues, jury service, and more.
This issue features an article by NWP member Anita Pollitzer entitled, "Lobbyists Demand Promt Passage of Amendment."
National Woman's Party
Washington, D.C. : National Woman's Party
1937-01-15
West, Helen Hunt, Editor
8 p., ill.
English
PERI.1937.01
Washington, D.C.
Everywoman. Vol. 1, No. 21. August 16, 1913
Ballots
Children--Legal status, laws, etc.--Ohio
Dunne, Finley Peter, 1867-1936
Hayes, Alfred
Thrailkill, Marie
Women--Suffrage--Italy
Women--Suffrage--Ohio
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 Italy
Editorial
Everywoman Contest
News of the Suffrage Movement
Drink and the Government, by Finley Peter Dunn[e]
Swaney, Sara C., Editor
Columbus, Ohio : The Scioto Publishing Company
1914-08-16
16 p.
English
Columbus, Ohio
Everywoman. Vol. 1, no. 6. April 26, 1913
Women--Suffrage--Ohio
Tagline: "For Ohio women, being a resume of the activities of the women of the state"
Contents of this issue include:
Educational Views
Lagniappe by Kate M. Lacey
In the realm of music by Bertha G. Brent
Shorter Hours for Women by John Voll
Suffrage News
The March of Progress by Maude Murray Miller
Views and Things by Penelope Smythe Perrill
The Irish in English Literature by Francis F. Finn, S.J.
Swaney, Sara C., Editor
Columbus, Ohio : The Scioto Publishing Company
1913-04-26
Toole, Mary A.R., Managing Editor; Smith, Alison M., Artist
16 p.
English
PERI.1913.04
Columbus, Ohio
Everywoman. Vol. 2, nos. 31 and 32. August 6, 1914
Women--Suffrage--Ohio
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.
Columbus, Ohio : The Scioto Publishing Company
1914-08-06
8 p.
English
Columbus, Ohio
Flier : The Woman's Journal for 1898. [1897]
Advertising, Political--United States
Boston (Mass.)--Newspapers
Chicago (Ill.)--Newspapers
Fundraising
Saint Louis (Mo.)--Newspapers
Woman's journal (Boston, Mass. : 1870)
Women--Suffrage--Newspapers
Women--United States--Newspapers
Women--Political activity
Subscription appeal from <em>The Woman's Journal</em> 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 "Husbands of Distinguished American Women." <br /><br />The page also lists the subscription rates, club rates, and special rates for new and old subscribers.
Woman's journal (Boston, Mass. : 1870)
[1897]
1 p.
English
DOCU.1897.04
Harper's weekly; a journal of civilization. Vol. 13, No. 646. May 15, 1869
American wit and humor--Periodicals
Bush, Charles Green, 1842-1909
Croly, J. C. (Jane Cunningham), 1829-1901
Magazine illustration
Newspapers--New York (State)--New York--19th century
Sorosis
Women--Societies and clubs
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 magazine published from 1857 until 1916 that offered fiction, news, illustrations, and essays related to current events of the day.
George William Curtis, the editor of Harper's Weekly, was an advocate of women's rights and often presented women's rights and organizations in a light-hearted manner.
New York : Harper & Brothers
1869-05-15
Bush, Charles Green, 1842-1909, artist
16 p.
English
New York