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Published byHilda Boyd Modified over 9 years ago
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The Suffrage Movement In connection with Iron Jawed Angels
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The pioneers of suffrage! Lucretia Mott Carrie Chapman Catt Anna Howard Shaw Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
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March 1913: Beatrice Forbes and Roberta Hale hold open air meetings to prepare for and advertise for the suffrage parade.
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March 3, 1913: Washington, D.C. Suffrage Parade, mounted marshals.
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March 3, 1913: Washington, D.C. Suffrage Parade, Mrs. Richard Burleson, Grand Marshal.
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March 3, 1913: The day before Wilson’s inaugration – Inez Milholland leads a parade of about 5000 suffragists.
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Inez Milholland
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"Scene of Memorial Service-Statuary Hall, The Capitol," December 25, 1916, honoring suffragist Inez Milholland Boissevain. (© Harris and Ewing)
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May 9, 1914: Suffrage Parade
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July 1914: Delaware Headquarters: State Chairman, Florence Bayard Hilles with the white hat.
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1916: Congressional Campaign, National Woman’s Party activities in Colorado
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Lucy Burns
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1917: Suffrage pickets who served 60 days in the workhouse at Occoquan, protesting for Alice Paul’s release.
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Alice Paul and members celebrate the unfurling of a banner in front of National Woman’s Party headquarters.
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Message to President Wilson Actual photograph at right, HBO above
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To protest Wilson’s refusal to push for a Constitutional amendment backing suffrage, suffragists staged a daily picket line at the White House beginning in 1917. Once the US entered World War I, the protestors were seen as an embarrassment and had them arrested.
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April, 1917: Suffrage pickets at the gates of Congress, the day after Wilson asked Congress to declare war.
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1917: Mob in front of the White House during a demonstration
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1917: Doris Stevens, Mrs. J.A.H. Hopkins, Eunice Dana Branham, in prison clothes.
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1917: Suffrage prisoners in jail
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League of Women Voters Founder Carrie Chapman Catt (center, in white) leads a suffragist march in New York City in 1917.
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Tennessee, 1920: Suffrage Ratification: At left, Banks Turner, whose vote prevented the tabling of the suffrage resolution. At right in back, Harry Burn who gave the last needed vote for ratification.
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Historian for the National Woman’s Party with the Nina Allender political cartoons.
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The work of Nina Allender.
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1919-1920: Alice Paul in front of headquarters.
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1920s: Mrs. Harvey Wiley, on phone, Anita Pollitzer, Alice Paul, and unknown woman making phone calls for the Equal Rights Amendment.
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1920: Catherine Flannagan, notary public, swearing in Alice Paul to vote.
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1920: Alice Paul toasts banner in front of National Woman’s Party headquarters to commemorate the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment.
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Most pictures and text (unless otherwise noted) taken from HBO.com
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