Catalog - UGA Libraries

Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Special Collections Libraries
University of Georgia
Index
1.
Legal Treatises. Ca. 1575-2007 (29).
Age of Enlightenment.
An Awareness of Social Justice for Women.
Women in History and Law.
2.
American First Wave. 1849-1949 (35).
American Pamphlets timeline with Susan B. Anthony’s letters: 1853-1918.
American Pamphlets: 1849-1970.
3.
American Pamphlets (44)
American pamphlets time-line with Susan B. Anthony’s letters: 1853-1918.
4.
American Pamphlets. 1849-1970 (47).
5.
U.K. First Wave: 1871-1908 (18).
6.
U.K. Pamphlets. 1852-1921 (15).
7.
Letter, autographs, notes, etc. U.S. & U.K. 1807-1985 (116).
8.
Individual Collections: 1873-1980 (165).
Myra Bradwell - Susan B. Anthony Correspondence.
The Emily Duval Collection - British Suffragette.
Ablerta Martie Hill Collection - American Suffragist.
N.O.W. Collection - West Point ‘8’. Photographs.
Lucy Hargrett Draper Personal Papers (not yet received)
9.
Postcards, Woman’s Suffrage, U.S. (235).
10.
Postcards, Women’s Suffrage, U.K. (92).
11.
Women’s Suffrage Advocacy Campaigns (300).
Leaflets.
Broadsides.
Extracts
Fliers, handbills, handouts, circulars, etc.
Off-Prints.
12.
Suffrage Iconography (115).
Posters.
Drawings.
Cartoons.
Original Art.
13.
Suffrage Artifacts: U.S. & U.K. (81).
14.
Photographs, U.S. & U.K. Women of Achievement (83).
15.
Artifacts, Political Pins, Badges, Ribbons, Lapel Pins (460).
First Wave:
1840-1960.
Second Wave: Feminist Movement - 1960-1990s.
Third Wave:
Liberation Movement - 1990-to present.
16.
Ephemera, Printed material, etc (114).
17.
U.S. & U.K. Periodicals, Scrapbooks (232).
18.
Rare and Scholarly Books - Signed & Inscribed (499).
19.
Rare and Scholarly Books known as the Repro Library (239).
Numerology is consistent with original documentation.
20.
Addendum
Cambio-Avery woman’s rights movement collection (91).
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
The foundation of Draper Collection begins with Legal treatises from 16th Century Europe, primarily
from England, which would become the basis of the America’s legal system to the present. Followed
by The Age of Enlightenment representing the important works of Mary Wollstonecraft - the first
feminist philosopher. American and British law are both represented in this section.
Wherein Housbandes and Wyues Maye Lerne to Kepe House Together Wyth Loue. [Wherein
Husbands and Wives May Learn to Keep House Together With Love.]
[Henrich Bullinger]. Myles Couerdale. The Christen State Of Matrymonye Wherein Housebandes
And Wyues Maye Lerne To Kepe House Together Wyth Loue The Original Of Holy Wedlok:
Wha[n], Wher, How, [and] Of Whom It Was Intituted [and] Ordeined: What It Is: How It Ought
To Proceade: What Be The Occasio[n]s, Frute And Commodities Thereof Contraryewyse: How
Shameful [and] Horrible A Thi[n]g Whoredom And Aduoutry Is: How One Ought Also To Chose
Him A Mete [and] Conuenient Spouse To Kepe And Increase The Mutual Loue, Trueth And
Dewty Of Wedloke: And How Maryed Folkes Should Bringe Vp Theyr Children In The Feare Of
God. Set Forthe By Myles Couerdale London, John Awdeley. 1575.
Myles Coverdale (also Miles Coverdale) was a 16th-century Bible translator who produced
the first complete printed translation of the Bible into English. He studied at Cambridge,
became priest at Norwich in 1514 and entered the convent of Austin friars,
where Robert Barnes was prior in 1523 and influenced him in favor of Reform. When
Barnes was tried for heresy in 1526, Coverdale assisted in his defense and afterward left
the convent and gave himself entirely to preaching.
From 1528 to 1535, he appears to have spent most of his time on the Continent In 1535 he
published the first complete English Bible in print, the Coverdale Bible. He made use of
Tyndale's translation of the New Testament (following Tyndale's November 1534 Antwerp
edition) and of those books which were translated by Tyndale: the Pentateuch, and the book of
Jonah. The publication appeared in Antwerp and was partly financed by Jacobus van Meteren.
In 1537, his translations were included in the Matthew Bible. In 1538, he was in Paris,
superintending the printing of the "Great Bible," and the same year were published, both in
London and Paris, editions of a Latin and an English New Testament, the latter being by
Coverdale. That 1538 Bible was a diglot (dual- language) Bible, in which he compared the
Latin Vulgate with his own English translation. He also edited the Great Bible (1540). Henry
VIII had a Coverdale Bible put into every English Church, chained to a bookstand, so that
every citizen would have access to a Bible.
He returned to England in 1539, but on the execution of Thomas Cromwell (who had been his
friend and protector since 1527) in 1540, he was compelled to go into exile and lived for a
time at Tubingen, and, between 1543 and 1547, was a pastor and schoolmaster at Bergzabern
in the Palatinate. In March, 1548, he went back to England, was well received at the court of
the new monarch, Edward VI, and was made king's chaplain and almoner to the queen
dowager, Catherine Parr. In 1551, he became bishop of Exeter, but was deprived in 1553 after
the succession of Mary. He went to Denmark (where his brother-in-law was chaplain to the
king), then to Wesel, and finally back to Bergzabern. In 1559, he was again in England, but
was not reinstated in his bishopric, perhaps because of Puritanical scruples about vestments.
From 1564 to 1566, he was rector of St. Magnus's, near London Bridge. Coverdale died in
London and was buried in St. Bartholomew's Church.
Henry Swinburne. A Treatise of Spousals, or Matrimonial Contracts: Wherein all the Questions
Relating to that Subject are Ingeniously Debated and Resolved. London: 1686. Published
posthumously, this was the first English ecclesiastical law treatise devoted to marriage, the relationship
between spousal contracts and marriage contracts, the dissolution of those contracts and divorce. He
offers a definition of the term "spousals": "Spousals are a mutual Promise of future Marriage, being
duly made between those Persons, to whom it is lawful. In which definition I observe three things
especially: One, That this Promise must be mutual; Another, That it must be done rite, duly: The Last,
By them to whom it is lawful." (p.5) Swinburne [15607-1623] was commissary of the exchequer and
judge of the consistatory [O.E. Consider it important] court at York.
[Walsh, William]. A Dialogue Concerning Women, Being A Defense of The Sex. London. 1691.
Preface by John Dryden. Walsh (1663-1708), was a man of fashion as well as a critic, poet, and member
of Parliament. He was a poet from Abberley, Worcestershire. After the death of his father, he divided
his time between the pursuits of a country gentleman and those of a well-known -well- dressed, amorous
beau in London. He joined the ‘wis’ at Will's Coffee House in Covent Garden, presided over by Dryden.
Ostensibly addressing himself to his mistress, Walsh dissects the attacks on women in contemporary
literature with a strident defense of the intellectual potential of women and argues for the equality of
women. Attacking the stereotypes that had been promulgated by anti- feminists, he reviews the
biographies of notable women and defends them.
[Legal Issues] (Anonymous) Baron and Feme. A Treatise of Spousal's, or Matrimonial Contracts:
Wherein all the Baron and Feme... The Law of Baron and Femme, of Parent and Child, Guardian and
Ward, Master and Servant, and of the Powers of the Courts of Chancery; with an Essay on the Terms
Heir, Heirs, Heirs of the Body. London, 1700. Under traditional English common law an adult
unmarried woman was a considered to have the legal status of feme sole, while a married woman had
the status of feme covert. These are English spellings of medieval Anglo- Norman phrases (the modern
standard French spellings would be femme seule "single woman" and femme couverte, literally
"covered woman"). A feme sole had the right to own property and make contracts in her own name. A
feme covert was not recognized as having legal rights and obligations distinct from those of her husband
in most respects. Instead, through marriage a woman's existence was incorporated into that of her
husband, so that she had very few recognized individual rights of her own. As it has been pithily
expressed, husband and wife were one person as far as the law was concerned, and that person was the
husband. A married woman could not own property, sign legal documents or enter into a contract,
obtain an education against her husband's wishes, or keep a salary for herself. If a wife was permitted to
work, under the laws of coverture she was required to relinquish her wages to her husband. In certain
cases, a woman did not have individual legal liability for her misdeeds, since it was legally assumed that
she was acting under the orders of her husband, and generally a husband and wife were not allowed to
testify either for or against each other. Judges and lawyers referred to the overall principle as
"coverture". |O.E. Cover it up| The United States Supreme Court upheld the idea of coverture in the case of
* Bradwell v. Illinois, 1873. Even before that time, though, many states had begun reforming marriage
laws to eliminate or reduce the effects of coverture. See Individual Collections for the Bradwell
Archive. Duplicate in collection.
William Blackstone. Commentaries on the Laws of England. [Clarendon Press 1766-1769, London,
1769]. Miscellaneous volume. Blackstone’s great work on the laws of England is the extreme example
of justification of an existing state of affairs by virtue of its history. Until the Laws of England was
published, the ordinary Englishman had viewed the law as a vast, unintelligible and unfriendly machine.
Blackstone’s great achievement was to popularize the law and the traditions which had influenced its
formation.
[Legal Document]. The Case of Elizabeth Gomeldon, Widow. The case of Elizabeth Gomeldon,
widow [with Reference to a bill to enable her to enter her claim before the commissioners and
trustees for forfeited estates, etc] London, 1720.
Alexander, William. The History of Women, From Earliest to Antiquity, To the Present Time.
Volume One of Two. London, 1779. A wide-ranging anthropology of women in society. Alexander
is aware of inadequacies and inconsistencies in the past treatment of women, and gives
explanations which he uses to reflect on his own society.
[ANON]. An Essay on Marriage or The Lawfulness of Divorce in Certain Cases. Considered.
Addressed to the Feelings of mankind. Philadelphia: Zachariah Poulson, Jr. 1788. First American
edition. Only copy located in The Library Company of Philadelphia. Believed to have published By
the Printer.
The Age of Enlightenment
The Age of Enlightenment was characterized by secular intellectual reasoning, and a flowering of
philosophical writings. Mary Wollstonecraft is characterized as the first feminist philosopher, A
Vindication of the Rights of Women is one of the first works that can be called feminist, although in
some instances, may seem to be dated, as a feminist argument Wollstonecraft saw that it was the
education and upbringing of women that created their limited expectations based on a self-image
dictated by men. Wollstonecraft believed that both sexes contributed to the inequalities, but that both
would require education to ensure the necessary changes in social attitudes. Her own achievements
speak to her own humble origins and scant education. Her legacy remains the need for women to
speak out and tell their story. Her book A Vindication of the Rights of Women remains the foundation
stone of feminist thought.
Wollstonecraft, Mary. Original Stories from Real Life; with Conversations, Calculated to Regulate
the Affections, and form the Mind to Truth and Goodness. London: Printed for J. Johnson, 1788.
With the 6 plates by William Blake after his own designs. Bound in contemporary calf. Containing
William Blake’s characteristic illustrations, reminiscent in iconography to his designs for his own
Songs of Innocence (1789). This Collection of didactic tales for youth, in part reinforcing the lessons
of Wollstonecraft’s first book, “Thoughts on the Education of Daughters” proved her most popular
book, going through five editions by 1800.
[Private Divorce in Parliament] An Act to Dissolve the Marriage of John Street, Gentleman, with
Lucy his now Wife, late Lucy Duncomb, and to enable him to marry again [London], 1793.
Burton, F. Lecture on Female Education. New York, Samuel Campbell. 1794. First American
edition. An 18th century lecture series on the various aspects of women's education, as it was
perceived in post-Revolutionary times.
Wollstonecraft, Mary. An Historical and Moral View of the Origin and Progress of the French
Revolution and the Effect it Has Produced in Europe. Thomas Dobson, Philadelphia, 1795. Volume
I only - Volume II never published. First American edition, OCLC locates four copies
Wollstonecraft, Mary. A Vindication of the Rights of Women: With Strictures on Political and
Moral Subjects. London, J. Johnson, 1796. Tipped into the front cover: 7 lines fragment- signed:
“Your Affectionately. Mary Wollstonecraft”. The most influential book ever written about the subject
of woman's rights! Wollstonecraft, later Godwin (1759-97) was dissatisfied with this tract, yet its
passion and inclusiveness fully merit its classic status [Blain, p. 1180]. Wollstonecraft has been called
the first major feminist because of this work, in which she discussed all aspects of women's education,
status, and position in society and dramatically argues that true freedom necessitates equality of men
and women.
Wollstonecraft, Mary. Letters Written During a Short Residence in Sweden, Norway, and
Denmark. London: 1796. First edition of these eloquent travel narratives, comprising the first
published account in English of a woman traveling on business. "When Johnson published the Letters
they found an enthusiastic public, not least among young poets. The wording of her description of the
waterfalls she visited -appears to have played a part in inspiring Coleridge's description of the sacred
river Alpha in Xanadu; and the theme of the book... set a fashion for questing romantic journeys.
Byron, Wordsworth, Shelley, and Mary's as yet unborn daughter Mary, who sends her Frankenstein
north at the end of his story, all read and followed in Mary Wollstonecraft's footsteps."
Gisborne, Thomas. An Enquiry Into the Duties of the Female Sex. London, T. Cadell And W.
Davies, 1797. Printed the same year as the first edition. Gisborne's Enquiry was one of many books of
advice for young women in the wake of Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindications of the Rights of Women,
1792. Gisborne was an evangelical clergyman and takes a fairly traditional view of the subject, save
for an antipathy to forced marriage and some respect for intellectual women. The chapters deal with
the "character of the female mind discriminated", female education, "on amusements in general",
matrimonial life, and parental duties.
[Wollstonecraft, Mary]. Posthumous Works of the Author of “A Vindication of the Rights of
Women”. 4 volumes. London: 1798. First Edition. Volumes one and two of this set contain the text of
Wollstonecraft's "The Wrong's of Woman, or Maria" to which is added the first book of a series of
lessons for children. Volumes three and four contain letters and miscellaneous pieces. William
Godwin issued these volumes right after Wollstonecraft's death as a way of paying off her debts, but
also because Godwin felt that Wollstonecraft was the most remarkable woman of her time and that he
owed it to the world to have her works and letters available to all. In Maria, Wollstonecraft portrayed
a heroine who is literally a prisoner of sex, immured in a madhouse by her husband so that he can
control her property, and she traced the maze of legal and domestic oppression of women to the Same
conclusion reached by the Vindication: "Was not the world a vast prison and women slaves?"
[Wollstonecraft, Mary] Godwin, William. Memoirs of the Author of a Vindication of -the Rights of
Woman. Engraved frontispiece portrait of Mary Wollstonecraft by Heath after Opie. London: J.
Johnson, 1798. The first edition of the first biography of Mary Wollstonecraft author of the
groundbreaking “ A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, written by her husband and published
within a few months of her death.
An Awareness of Social Justice for Women
Rosina Lady Lytton. (1802-1882) née Wheeler, daughter of Anna Doyle Wheeler) Wrote eleven
novels, a collection of essays and her memoir, entitled 'A Blighted Life' (1880). She married
Edward Bulwer-Lytton, a novelist and prominent politician, in 1827, although they separated in
1836; Edward denounced Rosina as 'mad' and had her confined to a lunatic asylum. Rosina made
Louisa Devey her executrix and left to her by will all her papers, including correspondence
between her and her husband. See: Devey, Louisa. Life of Rosina -Lady Lytton. London,
Swan Sonneschein, Lowrey & Co., 1887. Documents published in Vindication of Her Memory.
Engraved portrait frontispiece. First edition.
[Anonymous]. A Defense of the Character and Conduct of the Late Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin.
Boston, James Wallis, 1802. A Defense of the Character...founded on Principles of Nature and
Reason. As Applied to the Peculiar Circumstances of Her Case In A Series of Letters to A Lady.
Branagan, Thomas. Excellence of the Female Character Vindicated. Branagan assails the
degradation of women and suggests they form their own Universities. He notes that women raise the
next generation of defenders of the rights of all and that we as a country risk everything by not
allowing women to developed their abilities. 1807. Branagan assails the degradation of women and
suggests they form their own Universities. “...that women were morally stronger than men, being
the sex less susceptible to lust and must take it upon themselves to act as a man *s conscience."
Branagan notes that women [should ] raise the next generation of defenders of the rights of all and that
we as a country risk everything by not allowing women to develop their abilities.
More, Hannah. Practical Piety or the Influence of the Religion of the Heart on the Conduct Of the
Life. London, 1811. The Evangelical philanthropist Hannah More (1745-1833) provides an
indispensable link between the Georgian and Victorian periods. Born just before the last Jacobite
rebellion, she lived to see the beginnings of the railway age. In her youth she was the friend of David
Garrick, Samuel Johnson, and Horace Walpole. In middle age she was closely connected with William
Wilberforce and his fellow Evangelicals in the Clapham sect. In her retirement she welcomed two
promising children to her home in Somerset, William Ewart Gladstone and Thomas Babington
Macaulay. As well as working among the poor, Hannah More continued her connections with polite
society, and produced a series of conduct books, of which the most famous was Strictures on the
Modern System of Female Education (1799). Its many proto-feminist overtones led at least one
commentator to compare it with Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792).
The message of Strictures was that women had been short-changed, fobbed off with a trivial education
that left them unfitted to be companionable wives, rational mothers, or moral examples to the wider
society. It was a message reinforced by her most ambitious conduct-book, Hints Towards Forming the
Character of a Young Princess (1805) written anonymously for the young Princess Charlotte and in
her only novel, Coelebs in Search of a Wife (1808).
Schley, William. A DIGEST OF THE ENGLISH STATUTES OF FORCE IN THE STA TE OF
GEORGIA CONTAINING ALL THE STATUTES OF A GENERAL NATURE WHICH WERE
"USUALLY IN FORCE ON THE FOURTEENTH DA Y OF MA Y, 1776, AND NOT REPUGNANT TO
THE CONSTITUTION, LA WS. AND FORM OF GOVERNMENT SINCE ESTABLISHED IN THE
STA TE"-------------AND AN APPENDIX-—WITH A COPIOUS INDEX COMPILED BY THE
APPOINTMENT AND UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. Philadelphia,
Pa., 1826
Adams, John Quincy. John Quincy Adams Speaks Out on The Right of Women to Political Activity
- Debate in The House of Representatives of the United States; on the Resolutions of Seven State
Legislatures. Speech upon right of the people, men and women, to petition; on the freedom of speech
& House of Representatives of the United States and of the Debate in the House of Representatives of
the United States; on the Resolutions of seven state legislatures, and petitions of more than one
hundred thousand petitioners, relating to the annexation of Texas to this Union. Washington, 1838.
Bishop, George. Every Woman Her Own Lawyer. New York: 1858. Every Woman Her Own
Lawyer. A Private Guide In All Matters Of Law, Of Essential Interest To Women, And By The Aid
Of Which Every Female May, In Whatever Situation, Understand Her Legal Course And Redress,
And Be Her Own Legal Adviser.
Packard, Mrs. E.P.W. [Elizabeth]. MARITAL POWER EXEMPLIFIED IN MRS. PACKARDS
TRIAL, AND SELF-DEFENCE FROM THE CHARGE OF INSANITY; or Three Years'
Imprisonment for Religious Belief by the Arbitrary Will of a Husband, with An Appeal To The
Government To So Change The Laws As To [etc.etc.] Hartford: Published by the Authoress, 1866.
With additional material: "Mrs. Packard's Address to the Illinois Legislature" dated Feb. 12, 1867 + 5
pages of "Actions of Illinois Legislature on this Subject.”
Brockett, L.P., M.D. Woman: Her Rights, Wrongs, Privileges and Responsibilities. Hartford, Ct. L.
Stebbins, 1869. Anti
Mill, John Stuart. The Subjection of Women. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott & Co., 1869. First
American Edition. “The object of this Essay is to explain as clearly as I am able, the grounds of an
opinion which I have held from the very earliest period when I had formed any opinions at all on
social or political matter, and which, instead of being weakened or modified, has been constantly
growing stronger by the progress of reflection and the experience of life: That the principle which
regulates the existing social relations between the two sexes? - the legal subordination of one sex to
the other? is wrong in itself, and now one of the chief hindrances to human improvement; and that it
ought to be replaced by a principle of perfect equality, admitting no power or privilege on the one
side, nor disability on the other" (p. 1). "In The Subjection of Women [Mill] stuck to a simple task,
that of showing that there was evidence that the legal inferiority of women and their legal and political
dependence on men stemmed directly from their natural inferiority He| ends with two arguments
which sum up his enthusiasm for freedom in a way that even the essay on liberty did not. Addressing
the man who observes that women seem happy enough in their dependent state, and, anyway that he
cannot see why he should disturb them, Mill replies first than |sic| men are bored with women as they
are, but would not be bored by genuinely independent beings, and second, that freedom does not need
to be argued for? everyone remembers how pleased he was to leave school, nobody would voluntarily
live under parental tutelage once having escaped it, no country would trade its freedom for any
amount of prosperity; even if women are happy as they are, they would, once free, never regret the
change. In that claim, Mill sums up not only the emotional mood behind his Autobiography and
Liberty, but all that has made most commentators say that he is a better defender of liberty than of the
implausible proposition that liberty is itself one of the elements in utility.
Women and the Law
Burks, M.P. Notes on the Property Rights of Married Women In Virginia. Lynchburg, Virginia,
1883. Before the Civil War, married women's property laws were concerned with equity procedures,
focusing on the appropriate pleadings a wife should use to file a suit but not altering a husband's
privileges granted by prior common law principles. After the Civil War, laws were concerned with
equalizing property relations between husband and wife. These laws “ranged from the simple ability
of wives to write wills with or without their husbands' consent, to granting feme sole status to
abandoned women, to allowing women some control over their own wages, to establishing separate
estates for women, to protecting land inherited by widows from their husbands' creditors, to allowing
widows legal access to their husbands' personal estates."
At the turn of the twentieth century, it was the effectiveness rather than the language of the
law that diminished the rights of females. Some state legislatures began enacting laws that
recognized women's separate and inherited estates as part of family income, granting creditors
the right to claim women's property to pay family debts. As estates, trusts, and succession
laws were passed, the rights of dower were abolished. Even after these laws had been
repealed, many states kept portions of the older laws. For example, intestate succession
(succession without a will) generally allowed a widow to take one-third of the husband's
estate as earlier rights of dower had specified.
Gamble, Ezra Burt. The Evolution of Woman. An Inquiry Into the Dogma Of her Inferiority to
man. New York, 1894. Having determined that female organization is nowise inferior to male,
Gamble set forth the principal data brought forward by naturalists bearing on the subject of the origin
and development of the two lines of sexual demarcation, and, by means of the facts observed by
explorers among peoples in the various stages of development, to trace, as far as possible, the effect of
such differentiation upon the individual, and upon the subsequent growth of human society.
Bayles, George James. Woman and The Law. Discusses domestic relations, property relations and
public relations. New York. 1911. "The need of American women for some convenient means of
securing a definite knowledge of their legal rights and obligations has been recognized by the General
Federation of Women's Clubs, the most representative body of educated American women.".
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
American First Wave: 1849-1949
In the United States, leaders in the first wave included Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony,
who each campaigned for the abolition of slavery prior to championing women’s rights to vote. Other
important leaders include Lucy Stone, Olympia Brown and Helen Pitts. American’s first wave feminism
involved a wide range of women, some belonging to conservative Christian groups (Frances Willard and
the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union), others resembling the diversity and radicalism of much of
the second wave feminism - Stanton, Anthony, Stone, Paul, Gage, and the National Woman Suffrage
Association. American’s first wave of feminism is considered to have ended with the passage of the 19th
Amendment to the United States Constitution (1919) granting women the right to vote.
The following letters and pamphlets illustrate the courageous efforts by the early leaders and supporters
of Women’s Rights who attempted to persuade the public and to work within the Government to effect
change. Many of these pamphlets were printed by the Government Printing Office.
*The Letters of Susan B. Anthony - side by side with these printed pamphlets, offers a unique and
invaluable witness to the intrepid efforts, the intellect and the vision for an American woman with equal
rights.
A. American Pamphlets timeline with Susan B. Anthony’s letters: 1853-1914.
B. American Pamphlets: 1849-1970.
Susan B. Anthony - 35 Letters - 1869-1914
Chronological:
1869. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph quotation signed. [1869]. “Principal Not Policy “Justice not
Favors”. April 2, 1869”.
1873. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Note Signed. Jan 20, 1873. “[At] last my first United States
Citizen’s Note - In the 8th Ward of the city of Rochester and State of New York, Nov. 5th, 1873. / Susan B.
Anthony”. Verso side: Matilda Gage. “Citizen Suffrage is to-day the battle ground of State Rights and
the denial of Woman’s Constitutional Right To Vote and of National Protection in Voting, Is the weapon
it uses against the nation. Matilda Joslyn Gage, Fayetteville, New York.
1873. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Written at the Office of the Democrat and Chronicle
- Rochester, New York. September 19, 1873. Addressed To : “Mr. Fitch. I find you not In - came here to
say to you that my brother Col D.C. Anthony arrived on the Erie Train - Saturday midnight and is
stopping at his mother's No. 7 Madison - He can hardly climb these stairs else I would have invited him
to accompany me - instead of inviting you to call on him - As I now do most cordially - he will be home
this evening, Respectfully, Susan B. Anthony”. Written 8 years after the end of the Civil War.
1873. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. April 18, 1873 shows Anthony angry and indignant
over the Supreme Court's decision against Myra Bradwell's application to the Illinois Bar. Mrs.
Blackwell had obviously written Anthony about her case before the Supreme Court. She says, "I am fired
to white heat”. Bradwell-Anthony Archive.
1873. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. July 20, 1873, is, perhaps, the most extraordinary
letter in the lot. After thanking Mrs. Bradwell for the copy of Bradwell's publication, Legal News, she
notes (indignantly) that she had read Judge Hunt's opinion and encloses her counsel's) argument, praising
him (Mr. Seldon). "We have nothing to hope from them but endorsement of dead men’s actions.
Bradwell-Anthony Archive.
1876. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Addresses to “Dear Friends”.
1876 Nov. 13. Tenafly, N.J. 2 pages. Written on the stationary of The National Woman Suffrage
Association Centennial Headquarters “Woman wants Bread - and the Ballot”. Framed.
Anthony, Susan B. Typed Letter Signed in typed with pencil corrections by S.B.A.
Written on The Riggs House, Washington, D.C. stationary. Dec. 22. 1880. “Dear Miss Walton, Yours of
21st awaited me at my home - Rochester, N. Y. - but this is my first moment to reply to it —I, too, was
sorry to lose sight of The Chain Party after my darling traveling companion left me in London. And now
very glad To know that each of you is in your own home and work - where one loves best to be. - Mrs.
Stanton and I sailed Nov. 17th on the Servia - and landed the 27th, the first three days everyone
pronounced the Servia 'The Champion Rocker' - but after that she glided over the water like a Duck and everybody became good natured -I had a splendid month in Scotland And another Equally so in
Ireland and then nearly a month in London again. Miss Foster is at Florence...Don't let the enemy
imagine our Woman's Suffrage Cause at all set back because of 122 Democrats and 21 Republicans
voted against allowing the re-appointment of our Woman Suffrage Select Committee in the House of Rep.
Our 16th Amendment bill is in the House.... I am very Sincerely, Susan B. Anthony. P.S. Miss Walton, will
you please send the enclosed to Miss Willard." Miss Walton was Electra Noble Lincoln Walton who was
of the three women who formed the West Newton, Massachusetts Women's Club.
1880.
Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Aug. 20, 1881 asking Mrs. Bradwell to give some
comfort to Miss Leonard, mentioning the decision of the Judge in the case of Mary Hall's admission to
the bar in Connecticut. She follows with another Anthony salvo, "I hope you will give her all the
ammunition you can to fire at those professional idiots!!" Bradwell-Anthony Archive.
1881.
Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. June 22, 1882 asking Mrs. Bradwell how she likes
the first print of her engraving. This refers to the illustrations that Stanton and Anthony were including in
their monumental THE HISTORY OF WOMEN SUFFRAGE. John Chester Buttre was a renowned
engraver whose lifetime work included nearly 3,000 plates, including Martha Washington, Anthony and
Stanton. His portrait of Myra Bradwell appears in Vol. II, p. 616; where the narrative of her case before
the Supreme Court appears. She talks about her work with regard to the Sixteenth Amendment.
Bradwell-Anthony Archive.
1882.
1885. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Addressed to Hon. George F. Edmunds.
1885 Feb 1st. Washington, D.C., 1 page [double sided]. Written on the stationary of The National
Woman Suffrage Association Centennial Headquarters. “Dear Sir, the Committee on Women Suffrage
Promised to bring our bill before the Senate early this week...May I not ask you to give the weight of
your influence in its favor... and thus help to life the discussion of our question in the state from the vote
of the masses into that of their representatives in the Legislatures...” Framed.
1885. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. 1885 May 11. Rochester, N.Y. 3 pages. Written on
the stationary of The National Woman Suffrage Association. “Will you please tell me the plan upon
which you began the indexing? Was it to make a separate index for each volume? Or was it to make one
index for all three volumes? I hope to have Vol. Ill done by October at the latest...” [Re: the writing of
The History of Suffrage]. Framed.
1885. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Addressed to the Hon. J. A. Sherman.
1885, Dec. 14th. Tenafly, N.J. 3 pages. Written on the stationary of The National Woman Suffrage
Association. “Enclosed a petition...East Liberty, Ohio. Mrs. Margaret gathered the 102 signatures... Will
you please present it to the Senate and have it referred to our Women’s Suffrage Committee... Allow me
to congratulate you on the election to the Senate...".
Susan B. Anthony & Bones, Autograph Letter Signed. With response on back of original letter
from Susan B. Anthony. Written on the Stationary of the National Woman Suffrage Association for the
Territory of Dakota. Mariette M. Bones, Vice President - April 5, 1886 - addressed to Susan B. Anthony
complaining about a engraving received from Mr. Buttre. On the back: Ms. Anthony replies: April
1886.
9,1886 to Mr. Buttre asking if he can fix the picture or she will refund the money to Mrs. Bones and not
include her picture in the book.
1887. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Addressed to Senator H. W. Blair.
1887, March 26th. Washington, D.C. Written on the stationary of The National Woman Suffrage
Association. With original envelope. “Senator Blair, Will you please send 20 copies of your full report of
The Discussion of the 16th Amendment... ”.
Anthony, Susan B. Autograph Letter Signed. 4 pages. Written on National Woman Suffrage
Association stationary. “Chetopa, Kansas Oct. 21,1887. “Dear Sir - Please direct package of Speeches
on Woman Suffrage -30-of them - and 20 copies of the Report of the Session. As follows: Susan B.
Anthony- Care [of] Mrs. Hornbrook, Evansville, Indiana and after that to Susan B. Anthony Care [of]
Woman Suffrage Convention [in] New Albany, Ind., Madison-Bloomington- Terre Haute - KokornsLogansport-Mabash-Fort Wayne-La Porte-. I am to attend The W.L. Convention at each of these places
in the 13 Congressional districts of Indiana - Hoping this may reach the proper person. 2 packages [to
be] mailed to Each point. Respectfully yours, Susan B. Anthony. P.S. The packages sent to
My Kansas meeting have all been received in good order. [Signed with her initials] S.B.A. ” SBA
effort’s paid off - For the first time, the full Senate votes on the women's suffrage amendment.
It lost 34 to 16 -but it set the stage.
1887.
1888. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Feb. 14, 1888 concerns Miss Anthony's attempts to
secure Mrs. Bradwell's presence and a speech — "asking you or your brave Bessie to make a 10-minute
speech on Women as Lawyers'..." at the fortieth anniversary celebration of Seneca Falls. Mrs.
Bittenbender evidently had volunteered to do this, but Miss Anthony notes there is still room for you.
Ada Matilda Cole Bittenbender was Nebraska's first woman attorney, a reformer active in the
temperance movement as well as women's rights. Again, Anthony shows herself to be the great organizer
and motivator, closing with, "It is a mammoth undertaking - this of bringing together the women of all
lines of work to better themselves & the world. But if each one will give a little lift we shall tug through
splendidly." Bradwell-Anthony Archive.
Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. 1888, October 1st. Rochester, N.Y. Addressed to
“Dear Friend...The National Woman Suffrage Association presents each of its friends a bound volume of
the Council Report...Enclosed you will fine sundry Congressional Documents also the Final Report...”.
1888.
1891. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. 1891, June 12. Rochester, New York.
1/2 page. Addressed to: “Dear Friend, Thanks for your lovely note...I shall be most happy to bring my
sister Mary - to the Club party... [regarding her lecture] -I think "Old Roots of Prejudice” will allow me
all the latitude necessary...”
Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter signed. Addressed to Adelaide [Johnson].
November 7. Chicago, Illinois. 2 pages. Written on the stationary of The National Woman
Suffrage Association. "Dear Adelaide, She and Mrs. Willard are to arrive in Chicago A.M. to talk over
the World’s Fair monies... ”.
Adelaide Johnson. American sculptor in stone of subjects for the feminist movement - she portrayed
portraits bust of Anthony, Stanton, and Lucretia Mott The high point of her career was the monument in
Washington, D.C. - honoring the leaders of the women’s movement. She also exhibited at the 1893’s
World’s Columbian Exposition Fair in Chicago.
Frances Willard. President of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union from 1879 until 1898, Willard
rallied support for temperance as well as many other important reform movements including woman's
suffrage, women's economic and religious rights, prison reforms, education reforms and labor reforms
The World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893 marked the country's coming of age as a political
and industrial power. It represented the change from a predominately agricultural America concerned
with domestic problems to a modern urban and industrial nation involved in world economy and politics.
1892.
1892.
1895. Susan B. Anthony. Typed letter Signed written on the stationary of Rachel Foster Avery,
Somerton, Philadelphia, Pa. April 16,1895. "My Dear Miss Allen- At my Seventy-Fifth Birthday Dinner
at Ebbitt House - Washington D.C. My loving and first adopted Rachel Foster Avery, surprised and
delighted me by the announcement that she had secured an $800 annuity for me - And now, a month
later, in her lovely country home, she has read to me the names of the dear friends who contributed to
this generous gift. Among them was yours and I hasten to thank you for thus helping to lift me financially
above the need of earning the necessary sum to meet my simple home expenses for myself and my only
surviving sister, Mary S. Anthony, who has ever made it possible for me to go and do and be for our
good cause. lam, Most Gratefully yours, Susan B. Anthony. Dictated March 10th”. Signed in full: Susan
B. Anthony. Letter is typed in blue ink.
1895. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Addressed to Hon. H.P. Greenleaf. 1895, October 17.
Rochester, N.Y. SBA writes of her sister’s participation in the Suffrage movement, "...to aid the great
work of rolling up the mammoth Petition of 625,000 names...to the Constitutional
Convention of1894...asking for the enfranchisement of the women of the state on the Equal Rights with
Men...from the Representative Constituents... ”
[Despite 600,000 signatures, a petition for woman suffrage is ignored in New York].
1895. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Addressed to the Hon. H. L. Greenleaf.
1895. October 17th. Rochester, N.Y. “From your friend and Co-Worker for Equal Rights for Women...”
1890. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. 1890 September 25. Aberdeen, South Dakota. 8
pages. Addressed to Mrs. [Philena Everett] Johnson, President of the South Dakota Equal Suffrage
Association. Written on the stationary of the South Dakota Equal Suffrage Association, “...the Madison
action...had there a fat pig on exhibition at Madison...every paper in the nation would have herald this
face, but 2 or 3 or 4 women non voters assembled there to study how to make this world better, are not
worthy of a mention!! Such an ignoring of women and their ought to teach all of us the powerlessness of
a disfranchised class...I have spent the afternoon writing begging letters... I shall meet the aristocrat
H.M. Barker as innocent of all South Dakota W.C.T.U. [Women’s Christian Temperance Union] facts as
any child need be without the help of the churches and parties we are compelled to do double and
triple...party men and officials lent us a helping hand...the M.E. [Methodist Episcopal] ministers are not
even preaching or praying a word for our acc ’t...last year every
one of them was shouting for this Prohibition Act E.S.A. [Equal Suffrage Association] ...fail to
issue an appeal to every minister of every church in the state to preach at length...the work of helping to
convert voters... ”.
1891. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed written on National-American Woman Suffrage
Association. Rochester, New York, June 6, 1891. Dear Adelaide [Johnson]. Terms received -I think proposes to charge me $10 a dozen...table fixtures, etc., etc. The Political Equality Club was here
yesterday and voted $21 out of the Treasury to $25 To be raised among the members… So here is the
first installment. Yours, Susan B. Anthony.” Adelaide Johnson. (1859-1955) An early advocate of the
women's movement, Johnson showed busts of suffragists Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and Anthony at the
1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. All her professional life, Johnson fought public
skepticism and lack of funds to achieve her dream of a museum honoring the women's movement.
Although she never did manage to bring it about, she did create an impressive sculpture to commemorate
the movement, featuring new versions of her busts of Mott, Anthony, and Stanton, new York suffragist
Alva Belmont helped her secure funding for the project from the National Women’s Party, and the
seven-ton white marble sculpture was unveiled on Anthony's birthday in 1921.
Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Rochester, New York, October 17, 1893. To Hon.
H.L. Greenleaf. In grateful recognition of his generous contribution - not only of cash-but of his ‘wife's
Services’ to the New York Women Suffrage Association [Anthony writes of] “Mary P. Anthony, for the
great work with the Constitutional Convention of1894- asking the enfranchisement of the women of the
State on equal terms with men...from his sincere friend, Susan B. Anthony, Rochester,
N. Y., October 17, 1893 ”. Jean Brooks Greenleaf was an active Rochester clubwoman and community
organizer. She chaired the organizational meeting of the Women’s Ethical Club (WEC), an association
inspired by Mary Gannett and formed in 1889 so that members might discuss issues of ethics and
1893.
philanthropy. Greenleaf also chaired the committee that drafted the constitution of the Woman’s
Educational and Industrial Union (WEIU). The WEIU, an organization which provided activities and
services for working women, was initiated by Mary Gannet and Susan B. Anthony in 1893. Rochester’s
WEIU offered classes in homemaking, childcare and stenography, a lecture program, an employment
bureau, a lounge and lunchroom, and legal services. In 1893, Greenleaf was also a member of the
committee that organized and raised money for the Domestic Science Department of the Mechanic’s
Institute (later to become Rochester Institute of Technology). Greenleaf is mainly remembered for her
work as a suffragist leader. Shortly after her husband’s first term in Congress, she joined the Women’s
Political Club (later to become the Political Equality Club), which had been organized by Mary Anthony
and others in late 1885 and early 1886. Greenleaf became its second president in May, 1888.
Historically important association. Jean Brooks Greenleaf was a General in SBA’s Army.
1897. Susan B. Anthony. Typed Letter Signed written on the stationary of National American Woman
Suffrage Association. January 8, 1897. With Additional line in manuscript by S.B.A. Addressed to
Parker Pillsbury. Concord, N.H. “My Dear Friend, I am very glad to hear from you and pen tracks look
just as good as of old. You always did carry a pretty steady hand and write clearly too. I shall paste the
little slip upon the inside cover of Volume I. so that everybody who takes up the book will know that is a
present From Parker Pillsbury - the Veteran Abolitionist. ” With original envelope initials and date
signed by S.B.A. Parker Pillsbury (1809-1898) was an American minister and advocate for abolition and
women’s rights. With the encouragement of his local Congregational church, Pillsbury entered
Gilmanton Theological Seminary in 1835, graduating in 1839. His work in the ministry suffered after he
made a number of sharp attacks on the churches' complicity with slavery. His Congregational license to
preach was revoked in 1840. However Pillsbury became active in the ecumenical Free Religious
Association and preached to its societies in New York, Ohio, and Michigan. Pillsbury's dislike of slavery
led him into active writing and lecturing for the abolitionist movement and other progressive social
reform issues. He became a lecturing agent for the New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and American
antislavery societies, and held these posts for over two decades. He edited the Concord (N.H.) Herald of
Freedom in 1840, and again in 1845 and 1846. In 1854, he served as an emissary from the American
Anti-Slavery Society to Great Britain. He earned a reputation for successfully dealing with hostile
crowds through nonresistance tactics. His support for nonresistance led to service on the executive
committee of the New Hampshire Non-Resistance Society. Consequently, Pillsbury was not an active
supporter of the Union war effort. However, he did applaud Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation and
defended the actions of John Brown after the raid on Harpers Ferry. In 1865, Pillsbury broke with
longtime associate William Lloyd Garrison over the need for continued activity by the American AntiSlavery Society. Parker Pillsbury helped to draft the constitution of the feminist American Equal Rights
Association in 1865. and served as vice-president of the New Hampshire Woman Suffrage Association.
With feminist Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Pillsbury served as co-editor for the women's rights newsletter
The Revolution, founded in 1868. [A historically important association].
1897. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed written on the National American Woman Suffrage.
December 22,1897, From the Office of the President, Rochester, N.Y. “Dear Friend, the National
Woman Suffrage Association asks your co-operation in a new department Which it hopes to inaugurate
at its Fiftieth Anniversary next February in Washington. D.C.; viz: A PRESS BUREAU. Such has been
the growth of public sentiment on the question of women’s enfranchisement that it now may be regarded
as one of the prominent issues of the day, there is no difficulty in securing ample spaces for its respectful
consideration in the leading Newspapers throughout the country, the only hindrance in the way of
reaching millions of readers, every week, is the lack of a central office for collection and distribution
arguments and practical illustrations in its favor... ” Signed by Susan B. Anthony in full. [A form letter
sent by the National American Woman Suffrage Headquarters in Rochester, New York soliciting funds.]
1900. Susan B. Anthony. Typed Letter Signed written on the stationary of National American Woman
Suffrage Association. Typed with blue ink. 2 pages. Addressed to Carrie A. Whelan, President &
Recording Secretary for the Oakland Woman Suffrage Association - California Woman Suffrage
Association. April 18, 1900.
“Your letter is full of the loveliest spirit, not only in his words, but as we are wont to say:
“under the ink and between the lines". I remember you so well in the Club at East Oakland of which you
were President and our meeting in the widow's parlor whose name I cannot recall.
I think we all felt that under the circumstances Mrs. Chapman Catt was the only young woman
upon whom it would be wise to for the delegate to concentrated their votes for President, and / hope time
will prove that we were right - proof of the pudding".
Carrie Lane Catt, became a close colleague of Susan B. Anthony, who selected Catt to succeed Her as
head of the NAWSA. Catt led the woman suffrage movement over the next twenty years. From her first
endeavors in Iowa in the 1880s to her last in Tennessee in 1920, Catt supervised dozens of campaigns,
mobilized numerous volunteers (1 million by the end), and made hundreds of speeches. After the passage
of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Catt retired from NAWSA. Catt
founded the League of Women Voters in 1920.
1900. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. New York, [1900]. "With hope and faith that full
equality of rights will very soon be guaranteed to all United States citizens - Women included, I am very
Sincerely yours, Susan B. Anthony. N. Y. 1820-Feb. 15, 1900”. Framed.
1900. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed written on the stationary of National American
Woman Suffrage Association. December 24, 1900. “Addressed to: "Dear Doctor, Here is a check for
past favors. I am trying to screw up my courage to come To you the last part of the old century and have
all my teeth so as to begin with a clean plate the twentieth century. Susan B.
Anthony”.
1901. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Addressed to Mrs. Smith Eaton.
1901. April 12. Rochester, N.Y. 2 pages. Written on the stationary of The National Woman Suffrage
Association. "No - on the note of VOTE - Say NO!” With information on Anna Howard’s Shaw Lecture:
“Miss Shaw, of course, you will get the biggest church for her lectures…” Anna Howard Shaw (18471919). Minister, Lecturer and Suffragist. Ms. Shaw was the National Lecturer of the United National
American Woman Suffrage Association, and when Miss Anthony became its president in 1892, Anna
Howard Shaw became her vice president, a position she held until 1904.
1903. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed. Feb. 4, 1903 to Judge Bradwell acknowledging
receipt of the portrait plate by John Chester Buttre. The second paragraph is a teasing Anthony, noting
that Judge Bradwell, at age 75, is "quite a young man yet" Anthony was 83, turning 84- just 11 days after
the date of this letter. She writes, "Yes there is nothing for us to do but to 'keep our courage up and face
the music”. She goes on to tell Judge Bradwell that she is sending her papers to the Library of Congress
Bradwell-Anthony Archive.
1903. Susan B. Anthony. Typed Letter Signed. 1903. July 8tb Rochester, N.Y. Addressed to “Dear
Friend”. Written on the stationary of The National Woman Suffrage Association.
Miss Anthony is replying to a prospective buyer of The History of Woman’s Suffrage. “When ordering
Volume IV-please state whether you wish a cloth or leather binding... ”
1914. Susan B. Anthony. Autograph Letter Signed written on the stationary of National American
Woman Suffrage Association. [1914]. “My Precious Friend... ”As I am on the Committee - the word
comes to me that Mrs. Coonly is the only one on the Committee that opposes the purchase of little Miss
Johnson’s bust of Miss Anthony. [Anthony speaks of herself in the 3rd person-she is seeking support to
purchase this Bust of Susan B. Anthony]. Adelaide Johnson. (1859-1955) An early advocate of the
women's movement, Johnson showed busts of suffragists Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and Anthony at the
1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago. All her professional life, Johnson fought public
skepticism and lack of funds to achieve her dream of a museum honoring the women's movement.
Although she never did manage to bring it about, she did create an impressive sculpture to commemorate
the movement, featuring new versions of her busts of Mott, Anthony, and Stanton, new York suffragist
Alva Belmont helped her secure funding for the project from the National Women's Party, and the seventon white marble sculpture was unveiled on Anthony's birthday in 1921.
[No Date] Susan B. Anthony. Typed letter signed. Addressed to Mrs. Sarah M. Bentley. No date.
Fluvanna, N.Y. Written on the stationary of The National Woman Suffrage Association. “Owning to the
fact that my health is not such as to warrant a great outlay of strength.”
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
American Pamphlets
Chronological:
A.
American pamphlets time-line with Susan B. Anthony’s letters: 1853-1918.
B.
Complete List of American Pamphlets: 1849-1970.
A. American pamphlets timeline with Susan B. Anthony’s Letters: 1853-1918.
1837: Young teacher Susan B. Anthony asked for equal pay for women teachers.
July 14,1848: call to a woman’s rights convention appeared in a Seneca County, New York, newspaper.
July 19-20,1848: Woman's Rights Convention held in Seneca Falls, New York. October, 1850: First
National Woman's Rights Convention was held in Worcester, Massachusetts.
1849. Lucretia Mott. A Sermon to The Medical Students Delivered by Lucretia Mott, At Cherry Street
Meeting, Philadelphia, on First Day Evening - Second Month, 11,1849. Philadelphia, T.E. Chapman,
1849. Mott viewed Philadelphia as a conservative city for women’s rights and abolition, but she was a
strong supporter of the women’s medical school in Philadelphia and other educational developments,
which she believed were central to women’s advancement.
1853. Official Report and Debates and Proceedings in The State Convention. The State Convention
Assembled May 4th 1853. To Revise and Amend the Constitution of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts. Boston, White & Potters -Printers to The Convention, 1853.
1861. Peter Featherstone. The Influence and Power of Woman: A Lecture Delivered by the Rev. Peter
Featherstone. London, J. Mason, 1861. 32 Pp.
Universal Suffrage and Complete Equality in Citizenship, The Safeguards of Democratic
Institutions: Shown in Discourse by Henry Ward Beecher, Andrew Johnson and Wendell Phillips.
Boston. Press of Geo. C. Rand & Avery, 3 Corn hill, 1865. Charles W. Slack, The Commonwealth.
Original printed front self-wrapper consists of a letter from George Stearns, announcing his intention "to
organize the radical force of the country" and urging purchasers to buy 300 copies of this item for five
dollars. This pamphlet was financed by George Stearns, the Boston Brahmin and one of the Secret Six
who had underwritten John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry. It includes Beecher's Speech delivered on
February 12, 1865, advocating universal suffrage; a summary of Andrew Johnson's speech in Nashville
in 1864, upon his nomination for the vice- presidency, based upon which Stearns wrongly predicts
Johnson's receptiveness to Negro Suffrage; and Phillips's hopeful speech asserting that Johnson's
hostility to the planter class makes him a natural ally in the struggle.
1865.
George S. Boutwell. Speech of Hon. George S. Boutwell, of Massachusetts, On Suffrage in the
District of Columbia, Delivered in the House of Representatives, January 18, 1866. Pp. 7. Washington,
D.C., 1866. Stamped: Historical and Philosophical Society of Ohio. Uncut
1866.
New York State Convention. Equal Rights for All - Charles Sumner- George William Curtis in
New York State Constitutional Convention, 1867. New York State's Constitutional Convention of 1867
is held. Black suffrage is recommended but is defeated by convention.
1867.
1869. Rev. Francis E. Abbot. The Sunday Question: An Evening Lecture Delivered in Toledo [Ohio].
On Sunday August 1st. 1869.16 Pp. The Unity Church Association. Book stamp: The New York State
Library.
1869. The Legal Condition of Women in Massachuetts-1869. With the Constitution of the New
England’s Woman’s Suffrage Association of Woman’s Suffrage and an Enumeration of Woman’s
Suffrage Tracts. For Sale by C.K. I. Whipple, 43 Bowdoin Street, Boston,1869. Woman Suffrage Tracts
No. 5.
1873. George F. Hoar. Women Suffrage Essential to The True Republic. An Address Delivered by
Hon. George F. Hoar. At the Annual Meeting of the New England Woman Suffrage Association, May
27,1873. Woman Suffrage Tracts No. 8. 23 Pp. Boston. The Woman Journal Office, 1873.
1884. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady & Susan B. Anthony. Editors. March 4,5,6, and 7th. 1884. Report of the
Sixteenth Annual Washington Convention, with Reports of the Forty-eighth Congress. This pamphlet
includes reports on progress toward suffrage in individual states and territories, as well as a speech by
May Wright Sewall, "The Forgotten Woman." Also included is a report on the 48th Congress, which
considered a proposal for a 16th Amendment to the Constitution enfranchising women. Rochester, N.Y.
Charles Mann. 1884.
1884. Thomas W. Palmer. In the Senate of the United States. 48ih Congress, 1st Session, Report No. 399.
March 28, 1884. Ordered to be Printed, Mr. Palmer. From the Committee on Woman Suffrage,
submitted the following report (To accompany Report 19). Washington, D.C. 1884.
J.E. Brown. In the Senate of the United States. 49th Congress, 1st Session, Report No. Part 2.
April 23, 1884. Ordered to be Printed, Mr. Brown, from the Committee on Woman Suffrage, submitted
the following Views of the Minority. (To accompany S. Res. 19).
1884.
Thomas W. Palmer. Universal Suffrage Speech of the Hon. Thomas W. Palmer, of Michigan,
Senate of the United States, Friday, February 6,1885.
1885.
Hon. George F. Hoar. WOMAN’S COOPERATION ESSENTIAL TO PURE POLITICS.
[Boston: American Woman Suffrage Association. 1885].4pp, folded folio sheet, triple columns. 9.5"x
10.5". Caption title [as issued]. The liberal Massachusetts Senator's speech includes two letters from
Western officials endorsing suffrage for women: Chief Justice Greene of Washington Territory— who
says "ambi-sexual suffrage" there has been successful— and Governor Warren of Wyoming Territory.
1885.
Henry W. Blair. In the Senate of the United States. 49th Congress, 1st Session, Report No. 70.
February 2,1886. Ordered to be Printed, Mr. Blair, from the Committee on Woman Suffrage, submitted
the following report (To accompany S. Res. 11). Washington, D.C. 1886.
1886.
1886. J.E. Brown. In the Senate of the United States. 49th Congress, 1st Session, Report No. 70. Part 2.
April 29,1886. Ordered to be Printed, Mr. Brown, from the Committee on Woman Suffrage, submitted
the following Views of the Minority (To accompany S. Res. 5). Washington, D.C. 1886.
1886. Women Suffrage in Utah. U.S. Senate. Angie F. Newman: petition on woman suffrage by the
women of Utah, 1886. As noted in the Congressional record. G.P.O Printing. Washington, D.C. 1886.
1888. Woman Suffrage and The Liquor Interests - Some Exhibits. Papers presented by Alice Stone
Blackwell, et al. to the Association of Collegiate Alumnae at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York on
October 19, 1888. 15 Pp. Book stamp of University of California.
1888. Patriotism As An Aim of Collegiate Training. Papers presented by Alice Stone Blackwell, et. al.
to the Association of Collegiate Alumnae at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York on October 19,
1888.15 Pp. Book stamp of University of California.
1888. Bell Street Chapel. Constitution and By Laws of the Religious Society, Providence, R.I.. A quote
by the Rev. James Eddy on front and inside. [James Eddy left the church building to the care of three
trustees (his two daughters and a friend) along with $100,000. With instructions to create a religious
society devoted to Eddy’s own religious outlook. Anna Garlin Spencer, an American educator, feminist
and Unitarian minister, was hired to bring this about. 15 Pp.
1888. Report of Hearing Before the Committee on Woman Suffrage. 50fh Congress. 1st Session. Senate
Document No. 114. April 2, 1888. Includes Statement By Elizabeth Cady Stanton. U.S. Senate.
International Women's Council: hearing before the Committee on Woman Suffrage, 2 April 1888 U.S.
Senate. Committee on Woman Suffrage: report on the joint resolution proposing an amendment to the
Constitution for the enfranchisement of women, 1889 U.S. House of Representatives. Committee on the
Judiciary: report on the resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution for the enfranchisement
of women (Incl. dissenting opinion), 1890 U.S. Senate. Committee on Woman Suffrage: petition from
the National Woman's Suffrage Association, 1892.
1888. National Woman Suffrage Association. Report of the International Council of Women. March
25 to April 1, 1888. Washington, D.C., Rufus H. Darby, 1888. This meeting featured speeches and
workshops on all aspects of female life:
Henry W. Blair. In the Senate of the United States. 50 Congress, 2nd Session, Report No. 2543.
February 7, 1889. Ordered to be Printed, Mr. Blair, from the Committee on Woman Suffrage, submitted
the following report (To accompany S. Res. 11). Washington,
D.C. 1889.
1889.
1889. Mr. Cockrell. In the Senate of the United States. 50 Congress, 2nd Session, Report No. 2543.
February 22 1889. Ordered to be Printed, Mr. Cockrell From the Committee on Woman Suffrage,
submitted the following report (To accompany Report 2543.) Washington, D.C. 1889.
In the Senate of the United States. 53rd Congress, 2nd Session. Miscellaneous Doc. No. 121.
Hearings Before the Committee on Woman Suffrage - February 21, 1894. March 14, 1894. Ordered to
be Printed. Washington, D.C. 1894.
1894.
1895. May Wright Sewall. Address of May Wright Sewall, President, Washington, D.C., Stormont &
Jackson, 1895. At the Opening of the Second Triennial Session of the National Council of Women Held
in Washington. D.C., February 18th to March 2nd, 1895.
Report of Hearing Before the Committee on Woman Suffrage. 54th Congress - lst Session Senate Document No. 157. January 28, 1896. Remarks by Elizabeth D. Bacon of Connecticut, and Mary
E. M. Milligan of Delaware as well as others. No. 3353 — Senate Document No. 157. Report of
hearing before the Committee on Woman Suffrage, January 28, 1896. Also heard in this session: No.
3470 — Senate Document No. 123 -Free Kindergartens. [Mrs. Elizabeth D. Bacon was a lifelong
worker in behalf of woman suffrage and Vice President of the Hartford Equal Rights
Club. Duplicate.
1896.
1900. National American Woman Suffrage Convention - Proceedings of 32nd Annual Convention held
at The Church of Our Father, Washington, D.C., February 8th-14, 1900. While attending the convention
of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in Washington, during which Susan B. Anthony
celebrated her 80th birthday and retired from the presidency of the organization, Park became convinced
that, in addition to the right to an equal education won for women by such pioneers as Anthony and
Lucy Stone, women of her own generation should win the right of equal suffrage.
1903. National American Woman Suffrage Convention - Proceedings of 33rd Annual Convention held
in New Orleans, Louisiana, March 15th to 25th, 1903. Published By W.M. Riesel & Co. This Conference
is remembered for the speech given by Belle Kearney. Belle Kearney, a Mississippi temperance
reformer, suffragist, teacher, and state legislator, born on her parents' plantation in Madison County,
Mississippi on March 6, 1863. As a wealthy plantation owner, Belle's father, Walter Guston Kearney,
briefly studied law and dabbled in state politics prior to the Civil War. After the war, however, his
plantation Suffered serious financial losses, and, like many members of the old southern aristocracy, he
had to curtail his lavish lifestyle as his plantation shrank to 400 acres of unprofitable land. When Belle's
father could no longer afford her five-dollar monthly tuition at the Canton Young Ladies' Academy, she
educated herself, and eventually opened a private school in a spare bedroom of the plantation house as a
means of income. Deeply concerned about the growing need for public education in the South, Belle
began teaching in the newly established public school system despite her father's protests. Her interest in
education and women's roles in the New South led her to accept a position as superintendent in the
Women's Christian Temperance Union in 1889. Guided by her mentors, Frances Willard and Susan B.
Anthony, Kearney became an acclaimed orator and traveled on the national and international circuits
advocating temperance and women's suffrage. She was also a white supremacist and used these
speaking opportunities to forward her ideas about race relations in the South and the nation. In 1903, she
made her most famous speech in support of white supremacy at the National American Woman Suffrage
Association Convention. While bring about "immediate and durable white supremacy, honestly
attained." Following in her father's footsteps, Belle entered the southern political arena, becoming the
first woman elected to the Mississippi state senate in 1923. Historically important speech.
1906. The College evening of the 38th Annual Convention of the National American Woman Suffrage
Association held in Baltimore, February 8, 1906. A Tribute of Gratitude From Representatives of
Women's Colleges. With Address of Mary Wooley, President of Mount Holyoke College.
1909. Charles H. Parkhurst. Woman, An Addressed Delivered by Rev. Charles H. Parkhurst, D.D. in
Mendelssohn Hall, December 17, 1909. Given Under the Auspices of the National League for Civil
Education of Women. Irving Press [1909]. 14 pp. Book stamp: “Duplicate” August 11, 1932. N.Y.S.L.
1911.
National American Woman Suffrage Convention - Proceedings of the Forty Third Annual
Convention. The Convention was held at Louisville, Kentucky. October 19th to 25, 1911. The National
American Woman Suffrage Association held its national convention in Louisville at the Seelbach Hotel,
attended by Jane Addams of Hull House in Chicago; Sophonisba Breckinridge, Professor at Chicago
University; M. Carey Thomas, President of Bryn Mawr College; and Emmaline Pankhurst, leader of
British suffragists. Previous owners signature: Mrs. M. F. Blake who was also active in the Michigan
Equal Suffrage Association and other Suffrage Associations.
1912. State of Oregon. Containing a copy of all the Measures: “Referred to the People by the
Legislative Assembly-for vote by the legal voters of Oregon at the Regular General Election on
November 5, 1912. Printed by Willis S. Duniway, 1912.
1912. In the Senate of the United States. Woman Suffrage Hearings: Before A Joint Committee of the
Committee on the Judiciary and the Committee on Woman Suffrage- 62nd Congress, 2nd Session,
Document No. 601. Presented by Mr. Smoot April 23, 1912. Washington, D.C., 1912.
Senate Documents Volume I. Miscellaneous. 63 Congress: Special Session Of Senate. March
4-17 1913. Reports on the Suffrage Parade in the District of Columbia, March 3, 1913. Including a letter
from the Board of Commissioners Of the District of Columbus, transmitting copies of the official orders
and a statement by The Superintendence of Police relating to the interference with the Suffrage Parade.
1913.
1913. Woman Suffrage Report and Hearings, GPO 1913. 62nd Congress, 3rd Session. Senate Document
1035. Woman Suffrage Reports and Hearings Relative to Joint Resolutions proposing amendments to
the Constitution of the United States providing The Rights of the Citizens. Surgeon General’s Office.
April 8, 1913.The woman suffrage amendment was introduced in 1878 and went unchanged until 1919.
It was ratified by the states as the 19th Amendment in 1920.
1915. House of Representatives. Woman Suffrage- Speeches before the House of Representatives,
January 12, 1915. Washington, D.C., 1915.
1915.
George Creel. What Have Women Done With the Vote? Published in Century Magazine for
March 1914. Reprinted by special permission. Revised 1915. National American Woman Suffrage
Association. N.P., 1915.
1916.
Thomas Benton Cartron. Woman Suffrage Introduced in the United States Senate by Hon.
Thomas B. Carton, Senator from the State of New Mexico. March 28, 1916. Washington, D.C., 1916.
1917.
John F. Shafroth. Equal Suffrage Speech of Hon. John F. Shafroth of Colorado in the United
States Senate of the United States. Tuesday, April 25, 1916. As amended by Permission of the Senate.
January 24, 1917. Washington, D.C., 1917.
1917. Alego, Sara M. Algeo, Rhode Island Chairwoman of Americanization of the National American
Woman Suffrage Association. Price. 15 cents - 1917 Rhode Island’s General Assembly the right for
women to vote in presidential elections. This pamphlet calls for Women to register in order to vote in
the 1920 election. Very scarce.
What President Wilson Says. President Wilson Wants Woman Suffrage - Writing to Mrs. Catt
Jan 27, 1917. Hon. Crabtree, March 3, 1917. Address to Congress April 3, 1917.
Address to Suffragists at the National Convention Sept. 8, 1916. Stand by Our President And Make Our
Own Glorious Country A Democracy.
1917.
Women and Citizenship. Explains citizenship, What is Suffrage, Under the Amended
Constitution, the Women of New York State May Vote in Accordance with the Following regulations.
Record of the Republican Party Enrollment Day. May 25, 1918. Join the Fight For Good Government.
Enroll Now!. Albany County Republican Commission, May 25, 1918.
1918.
Frank B. Brandgree. Woman Suffrage Speech of Hon. Frank B. Brandgree of Connecticut in the Senate
of the United States. Thursday, June 27, 1918. Washington, D.C. 1918.
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
B. American Pamphlets: 1849-1970.
Lucretia Mott. A Sermon to The Medical Students Delivered by Lucretia Mott, At Cherry Street
Meeting, Philadelphia, on First Day Evening - Second Month, 11, 1849. Philadelphia, T.E.
Chapman, 1849. Mott viewed Philadelphia as a conservative city for women’s rights and abolition, but
she was a strong supporter of the women’s medical school in Philadelphia and other educational
developments, which she believed were central to women’s advancement. “In the beginning, man and
woman were created equal. "Male and female created he them, and blessed them, and called their name Adam." He
gave dominion to both over the lower animals, but not to one over the other. "Man o'er woman He made not lord,
such title to himself Reserving, human left from human free." The cause of the subjection of woman to man, was early
ascribed to disobedience to the command of God. This would seem to show that she was then regarded as not
occupying her true and rightful position in society”.
1853. Official Report and Debates and Proceedings in The State Convention. The State Convention
Assembled May 4th, 1853. To Revise and Amend the Constitution of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts.
1861 Peter Featherstone. The Influence and Power of Woman: A Lecture Delivered by the Rev. Peter
Featherstone. London, J. Mason, 1861. 32 Pp.
1865
Universal Suffrage and Complete Equality in Citizenship, The Safeguards of Democratic
Institutions: Shown in Discourse by Henry Ward Beecher, Andrew Johnson and Wendell Phillips.
Boston, 1865.
1866
George S. Boutwell. Speech On Suffrage in the District of Columbia, Delivered in the House of
Representatives, January 18, 1866.
1867
New York State Convention. ‘Equal Rights for All’ - Constitutional Convention, New York
State's Constitutional Convention of 1867 is held. Black suffrage is recommended but is defeated by
convention.
1869
Rev. Francis E. Abbot. The Sunday Question: An Evening Lecture Delivered in Toledo |Ohio|.
On Sunday August 1st, 1869. The Unity Church Association. 1869. 16 Pp. Book stamp: “The New York
State Library”.
1869 The Legal Condition of Women in Massachuetts-1869. With the Constitution of the New
England’s Woman’s Suffrage Association of Woman’s Suffrage and an Enumeration of Woman’s
Suffrage Tracts. Boston, 1869. Woman Suffrage Tracts No. 5.
1871 Charles H. Parkhurst. Woman. An Address Delivered by Rev. Charles H. Parkhurst, D.D. in
Mendelssohn Hall, December 17th 1909. Given Under the Auspices of the National League for Civic
Education of Women. Irving Press [1909]. 14 Pp. Book stamp: “Duplicate” August 11, N.Y.S.L.
1873 George F. Hoar. Woman Suffrage Essential to The True Republic. Address Delivered by the
Hon. George F. Hoar. At the Annual Meeting of the New England Woman Suffrage Association. May
27, 1873. Woman Suffrage Tracts No. 8. 23 Pp. Boston. The Woman Journal Office.
1884 Stanton, Elizabeth Cady & Susan B. Anthony. Editors. March 4,5,6, and 7th. 1884. Report of the
Sixteenth Annual Washington Convention, with Reports of the Forty-eighth Congress. Reports on
progress toward suffrage in individual states and territories. Also included is a report on the 48th
Congress, which considered a proposal for a 16th Amendment to the Constitution enfranchising women.
1884 Thomas W. Palmer. In the Senate of the United States. 48th Congress, 1st March 28, 1884. From the
Committee on Woman Suffrage. The House of Representatives debates Women Suffrage.
1884
J.E. Brown. In the Senate of the United States. 49th Congress, 1st Session.
April 23, 1884. From the Committee on Woman Suffrage, submitted the following Views of the
Minority.
1885. Hon. George F. Hoar. Woman's Cooperation Essential to Pure Politics. [Boston: American
Woman Suffrage Association, 1885]. 4pp. Folded folio sheet, triple columns. 9.5” x 10.5”. Caption title
[as issued]. The liberal Massachusetts Senator's speech includes two letters from Western officials
endorsing suffrage for women: Chief Justice Greene of Washington Territory - who says: ambi-sexual
suffrage” there has been successful - and Governor Warren of Wyoming Territory.
1885
Thomas W. Palmer. Universal Suffrage Speech of the Hon. Thomas W. Palmer, of Michigan,
Senate of the United States, Friday, February 6,1885.
1886. Women Suffrage in Utah. U.S. Senate. Angie F. Newman: petition on woman suffrage by
the women of Utah, 1886. As noted in the Congressional record.
1886
Henry W. Blair. In the Senate of the United States. 49th Congress, 1st Session, Report No. 70.
February 2, 1886. From the Committee on Woman Suffrage, Washington, D.C. 1886. Suffrage
amendment reaches the US Senate floor, it is defeated two to one.
1886 J. E. Brown. In the Senate of the United States. 49th Congress, 1st Session, April 29
1886. Ordered to be Printed, Mr. Brown, from the Committee on Woman Suffrage, submitted the
following Views of the Minority. Washington, D.C. 1886.
1888. Woman Suffrage and The Liquor Interests - Some Exhibits. Papers presented by Alice Stone
Blackwell, et al. to the Association of Collegiate Alumnae at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York on
October 19, 1888. 15 Pp. Book stamp of University of California.
1888 National Woman Suffrage Association. Report of the International Council of Women. March
25 to April 1, 1888. Washington, D.C., Rufus H. Darby, 1888. This meeting featured speeches and
workshops on all aspects of female life
1888 Report of Hearing Before the Committee on Woman Suffrage. 50th Congress. 1st Session. April
2,1888. Includes statement By Elizabeth Cady Stanton. U.S. Senate. International Women's Council:
hearing before the Committee on Woman Suffrage, 2 April 1888 U.S. Senate. Committee on Woman
Suffrage: report on the joint resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution for the
enfranchisement of women, 1889 U.S. House of Representatives. Committee on the Judiciary: report on
the resolution proposing an amendment to the Constitution for the enfranchisement of women (Incl.
dissenting opinion). 1890 U.S. Senate. Committee on Woman Suffrage: petition from the National
Woman's Suffrage Association. 1889 Mr. Blair, from the Committee on Woman Suffrage, submitted
the following report (To accompany S. Res. 11). February 9th 1889. Washington, D.C. 1889.
1889
Mr. Cockrell. In the Senate of the United States. 50 Congress, 2nd Session February 22 1889.
LHD/Pamphlets/Summary/June I”, 2008.
8
Ordered to be Printed, Mr. Cockrell From the Committee on Woman Suffrage.
1894 In the Senate of the United States. 53rd Congress, 2nd Session. Miscellaneous Doc. No. 121.
Hearings Before the Committee on Woman Suffrage - February 21, 1894. March 14, 1894.
1895 May Wright Sewall. Address of May Wright Sewall. President. Washington, D.C., Stormont &
Jackson, 1895. At the Opening of the Second Triennial Session of the National Council of Women Held
in Washington, D.C., February 18 to March 2nd, 1895.
1896
Report of Hearing Before the Committee on Woman Suffrage. 54th Congress - 1st Session Senate Document No. 157. January 28, 1896. Remarks by Elizabeth D. Bacon of Connecticut, and Mary
E. M. Milligan of Delaware as well as others. No. 3353 -- Report of hearing before the Committee on Woman
Suffrage. Also heard in this session: Senate Document No. 123 - Free Kindergartens.
1911. State of Oregon. Containing a copy of all the Measures: “Referred to the People by the
Legislative Assembly - for vote by the legal voters of Oregon at the Regular General Election on
November 5, 1912. Printed by Willis S. Duniway, 1912.
1912. In the Senate of the United States. Woman Suffrage Hearings: Before A Joint
Committee of the Committee on the Judiciary and the Committee on Woman Suffrage- 62nd Congress,
2nd Session, Document No. 601. Presented by Mr. Smoot. April 23, 1912. Washington, D.C., 1912.
[Theodore Roosevelt's Progressive (Bull Moose/Republican) Party becomes the first national political
party to adopt a woman suffrage plank.]
1913. Senate Documents Volume I. Miscellaneous. 63 Congress: Special Session Of Senate. March 417 1913. Reports on the Suffrage Parade in the District of Columbia, March 3, 1913. Including a letter
from the Board of Commissioners Of the District of Columbus, transmitting copies of the official orders
and a statement by The Supt. of Police relating to the interference with the Suffrage Parade. [Members
of the Congressional Union organize a suffrage parade, carefully scheduling it for the day before
President Wilson's inauguration (it is said that when Wilson arrived in town, he found the streets empty
of welcoming crowds and was told that everyone was on Pennsylvania Avenue watching the parade).
Not all of the parade observers are suffrage supporters. Hostile members of the crowd swarm and insult
the marching women. The publicity resulting from this incident instigates an investigation by District of
Columbia Commissioners and provides further momentum for the suffrage campaign.]
1913. Woman Suffrage Report and Hearings, GPO 1913. 62nd Congress, 3rd Session. Woman Suffrage
Reports and Hearings Relative to Joint Resolutions proposing amendments to the Constitution of the
United States providing The Rights of the Citizens. April 8, 1913.
1915. House of Representatives. Woman Suffrage-Speeches before the House of Representatives,
January 12, 1915. Washington, D.C., 1915. |Anna Howard Shaw's tactical conservatism culminates in a
loss of support from the National American members. She resigns and Catt replaces her as president|
1915.
George Creel. What Have Women Done With the Vote? Published in Century
Magazine for March 1914. Reprinted by special permission. Revised 1915. National American Woman
Suffrage Association. N.P., 1915. [Creel explains how enfranchised women have positively affected
legislation in their states.]
1916. Thomas Benton Cartron. Woman Suffrage Introduced in the United States Senate by Hon.
Thomas B. Carton, Senator from the State of New Mexico. March 28, 1916.
1917. John F. Shafroth. Equal Suffrage Speech of Hon. John F. Shafroth of Colorado in the United
States Senate of the United States. Tuesday, April 25, 1916. As amended by Permission of the Senate.
January 24, 1917. Washington, D.C., 1917. | Police begin arresting women who are picketing outside the
White House. Some, including Paul and Lucy Burns, go on hunger strike while in jail; their militancy
earns them sympathy from some quarters and disdain from others. The U.S. enters W.W.I. Under the
leadership of Catt, the National American association aligns itself with the war effort in order to gain
support for women's suffrage|.
1917. What President Wilson Says. President Wilson Wants Woman Suffrage - Writing to Mrs. Catt Jan
27,1917. Hon. Crabtree, March 3,1917. Address to Congress April 3,1917.
Address to Suffragists at the National Convention Sept. 8,1916. Stand by Our President And Make Our
Own Glorious Country A Democracy.
1917.
Alego, Sara M. Rhode Island Chairwoman of Americanization of the National American
Woman Suffrage Association. -1917 Rhode Island’s General Assembly the right for women to vote in
presidential elections. This pamphlet calls for Women to register in order to vote in the 1920 election.
[The Arkansas legislature grants women the right to vote in primary, but not general elections. The result
of this partial suffrage is that white women win the vote, but black women do not. Five midwestern
states and Rhode Island grant women the right to vote in presidential elections only. New York State is
the first eastern state to fully enfranchise women.
1918. Women and Citizenship. Explains citizenship, What is Suffrage, Under the Amended
Constitution, the Women of New York State May Vote in Accordance with the Following regulations.
Record of the Republican Party Enrollment Day. May 25,1918. Join the Fight For Good Government
Enroll Now!. Albany County Republican Commission, May 25,1918.
1918. Frank B. Brandegee. Woman Suffrage Speech of Hon. Frank B. Brandegree of Connecticut in the
Senate of the United States. Thursday, June 27,1918. Washington, D.C. 1918.[BRANDEGEE WANTS
SUFFRAGE RATIFIED; Urges Favorable Action by Connecticut Legislature at Session Opening
Today. - SAYS IT IS NOW INEVITABLE - Tennessee Antis Will Attend Sessions in Hartford &
Baltimore.]
1920. Anna Howard Shaw. Memorial of the National American Woman Suffrage AssociationResolutions Passed at the Victory Convention Held in Chicago, February 12 to 18th 1920. 6 Pp.
[1920]. In Memory of Anna Howard Shaw. Prepared by A Committee Appointed from the Board of
Directors of the National American Suffrage Association. With photographic image of Anna Howard
Shaw. 26 Pp. N.D.
1923. Plan of work and Program for the National League of Women Voters Adopted in Convention at
Des Moines, Iowa, April 1923. From National Headquarters, 532 Seventeenth St. N.W. Washington,
D.C. Lists the Board of Directors, Regional Directors, Standing Committee Chairman, names with City
and State. National League of Women Voters, 1923.
1932. Seventh International Conference of American States. Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Committees:
Social Problems, Intellectual Cooperation, Transportation — Minutes and Antecedents Montevideo
1933. Tall 4to, Original paper wrappers.
LHD/Pamphlets/Summary/June I “,2008.
10
1938. Sara L. Buchanan. The Legal Status of Women in the United States of America. January 1, 1938.
Report for Indiana. United States Department of Labor, Frances Perkins, Secretary: Women's Bureau,
Mary Anderson, Director; An Advance printing of individual State material, constituting part of a
compilation now being prepared to show the present legal status of women in the United States of
America. Bulletin of the Women's Bureau. No. 157-13. Washington, D.C. 1938.
1943. Opposing the So-Called Equal Rights Amendment. Statement of the Women's Trade Union
League In Opposition to the proposed Amendment of the National Woman's Party to amend the U.S.
Constitution by Blanch Freeman, Exec. Sec. New York Women's Trade Union League. 1943.
1949. Congressional Record. Proceeding and Debates of the 8 Ist Congress, First Session - Vol. 95.
Washington. September 27, 1949. No. 179. Pros and Cons of Amendment. With remarks of Hon.
Donald L. Jackson.
1970. Jordan, Joan. Protective Legislation. San Francisco, 1970. Amend The Equal Rights Amendment
To Extend the State Protective Laws to Men - Co-publishers: Women Incorporated & San Francisco
Women's Liberation Inter-Group Council, San Francisco, 1970. Marked: 25 cents.
1970. Discrimination Against Women: Hearings Before the Special Committee On Education and
Labor. Part I & Part II. House of Representatives, 91st Congress. 2nd Session. On Section 805 of H.R. To
prohibit discrimination Against Women in federally assisted programs. And in employment in
education; to extend the Equal Pay Act. Washington, D.C. 1970.
1970. Amend the equal rights amendment to extend the state protective laws to men. Co-publishers,
Women Incorporated & San Francisco Women's Liberation Intergroup Council, San Francisco 1970 Gold wrappers stapled and printed in Black ink. 8-1/2 x 7 - paper cover - marked .25 cents.
1970. 'Women and the Equal Rights Amendment'. 15 pgs. - First printing. Printed self-wrappers
(stapled) in orange, black, gray and white. Light overall wear. Very good. Picture of women marching at
both of covers. Sections include 'Introduction'; 'What are Equal Rights?', 'The ERA and the Trend
Toward Women's Rights' etc..- 8-7/16 x 5 3/8 - Paper cover - marked .25 cents.
1973. 'Why Women Need the Equal Rights Amendment'. 15 pgs. - First Printing May 1973 - Black
cover with yellow and white writing with a picture of marchers holding signs - This is an abridged
version of an article that was first published in the April 1973 International Socialist Review c. 1973 paper cover - marked .35 cents.
LHD/Pamphlets/Summary/June I", 2008.
11
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
First Wave Feminism refers to a period of feminist activity during the 19th and early 20th Century in the
England, France and the United States, where the participants focused primarily on gaining the right of
women’s suffrage.
Great Britain:
In 1889, Emmeline Pankhurst founded the Women's Franchise League, but her campaign was interrupted by
her husband's death in 1898. In 1903 she founded the better-known Women’s Social and Political Union, an
organization most famous for its militancy which began in 1905. |2] Its members included Annie Kenney,
Emily Wilding Davison who was killed by the King's horse in the 1913 Epsom Derby as the result of a
suffragette protest Pankhurst was joined in the movement by her daughters, Christabel Pankhurst and Sylvia
Pankhurst, both of whom would make a substantial contribution to the campaign in different ways but
then were arrested. Pankhurst's tactics for drawing attention to the movement led to her being imprisoned
several times but, because of her high profile, she did not at first endure the same privations as many of
the imprisoned working-class suffragettes. However, she did experience force-feeding after going on
hunger-strike on various occasions.
1871. The Debate In the House of Commons on the Women’s Disabilities Bill on May 3rd 1871. Printed
for the National Society for Women’s Suffrage. London. Messrs. Trubner & Co., 43 pages.
1884 Franchise Demonstration Badge This 4" x 2" metal badge relates to a major demonstration held in
Glasgow on September 6, 1884 in support of expanding the rights to vote to a greater percentage of
citizens. This included women as photographs exist that show posters with this date and women asking
for the right to vote. This wonderful badge has the Glasgow Coat of Arms, and the GLA at the top stands
for "Glasgow Liberal Association. 50,000 women and men marched in this demonstration as part of a
country wide wave of marches and planned demonstrations asking for "Suffrage or the Franchise for
All”. Earlier women's suffrage agitation can be traced in Chartism. A woman weaver from Glasgow
argued in 1838 that women deserved the vote. The anti-slavery movement, in which Glasgow Quakers
were prominent, led some women to consider equal rights. The cause was championed by the socialist
newspaper Forward and the poet Marion Bernstein. The city council passed a resolution of support other
key organizations were the Scottish Churches League for Woman Suffrage, and the Men's League for
Women's Suffrage started by playwright Graham Moffat after his wife, the actress Maggie Moffat,
became the first suffragette to be imprisoned in Scotland. Many campaigners were also involved in labor
politics. The first women's suffrage society in the city was formed ca.1870 and a large open-air women's
suffrage meeting was held in April 1872 on Glasgow Green - an unusual event for the time.
Campaigning included the sustained, law-abiding efforts of the Glasgow and West of Scotland
Association for Women's Suffrage, such as drawing room meetings and petitions to Parliament. After
1906 the militant suffragettes of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) and the breakaway,
non-violent Women's Freedom League (WFL) made headlines.
1885. Dilke, Mrs. Ashton. Women’s Suffrage. Introduction by Wm. Woodall, M.P., The Imperial
Parliament edited by Sydney Buxton, M.P. Swan Sonnenschein & Co., 1885.
1903. The Women’s Social and Political Union Membership card. Cream colored stock card printed with
black ink. In 1903 a group of former members of the NUWSS in Manchester left to form a new
organization, the Women's Social and Political Union. Led by Emmeline Pankhurst, this new organization
pointed out that it was no longer willing to restrict itself to the constitutional methods favored by the
NUWSS. The National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies also known as the Suffragists (not to be
confused with the suffragettes) was an organization of women's suffrage societies in the United
Kingdom. Millicent Fawcett, like other members of the NUWSS, feared that the militant actions of the
Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) would alienate potential supporters of women's suffrage.
1903. Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. Save Mothers- A Plea for Measures to Prevent the Annual Loss Of About
3000 Child Bearing Mothers and 20,000 Lives In England Wales. N.Y. Alfred Knopf, 1903.
1907. Women’s Freedom League: In the autumn of 1907, some former members of the Women’s
Freedom League, Teresa Billington-Greig, Elizabeth How-Martyn, Dora Marsden, Margaret Nevinson and
Charlotte Despard Hon. Treasurer of the Women’s Freedom League and seventy other members of the
WSPU left to form the Women's Freedom League.
1908. Souvenir of the Women’s Suffrage March and Mass Meeting at the Albert Hall - Saturday, June
13, Embankment: 2:30 P.M. Albert Hall 4 P.M. Speakers: Lady Henry Somerset, Lady Frances Balfour,
Mrs. Fawcett, Mrs. Anna Shaw, Mrs. Despard. London. Mrs. S. Burgess Publication. Colorful print on
thin crepe paper. Purple violets with green shamrocks - Images of speakers. By the beginning of the First
World War marches and demonstrations were acceptable to most members of the British and American
suffrage movements, provided the appropriate permits were obtained. Among the most significant mass
public meetings was the "Great Demonstration" at Hyde Park, London, June 21, 1908.
1909-1916. Emily Duvall-British Suffragette Archive. An Important Family Archive comprising of
family photographs, correspondence and government documents. Ms Duval was an active participant in
the British Suffrage movement, and retained the documentation of her hunger strikes, imprisonment and
force feeding. [57 entries]. See Individual Collections.
1910. Official Program of the Great Suffragette Demonstration. Votes for Women - Demonstration to
Hyde Park on Saturday July 23,1910. Including A list of speakers on the 40 platforms. BA historical
important Artifact from a ‘Monster Meetings’ held in Hyde Park, London, England by the W.S.P.U.
To attain the goal of universal suffrage, The Women's Social and Political Union engaged in acts of protest
such as the breaking of windows, arson, and the "technical assault" (without causing harm) of police
officers. Many WSPU members were jailed for these offences. The "Cat and Mouse Act" (formally the
Prisoners (Temporary Discharge for III Health) Act 1913) was an Act of Parliament passed in Britain
under Herbert Henry Asquith's Liberal government in 1913. It made legal the hunger strikes that
Suffragettes were undertaking at the time and stated that they would be released from prison as soon as
they became ill. After the act was introduced suffragettes were no longer force fed during their time in
prison. Although this had previously been common practice to combat the hunger strikes it was assumed
all would commence upon arrest. Instead they were kept until a point of extreme weakness before being
released. This created a scapegoat for the government who could claim that any harm (or even death)
that resulted from the starvation could be blamed entirely on the suffragette. Of course this meant women
who had been released were too weak to actively protest and thus were kept from trouble. However,
these women were kept under a watchful eye and arrested again for the most trivial reason, restarting the
whole process. This is how the government attempted to control many of the more committed activists.
1910. Lawrence, Frederick W. Pethick. Women’s Fight for the Vote. A Chronicle of the Campaign
which is still in Progress. London: The Woman’s Press. 1910.
1911. Pankhurst, Sylvia E. The Suffragette, The History of the Women’s Militant Suffrage Movement
1905-1910. London, England, Gay and Hancock Ltd., June 1911. Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst (1882-1960)
was the youngest daughter of Emmeline Pankhurst, who with her daughters Estelle and Christabel surged
the British suffrage movement forward from the shadows with a more militant response to the indignities
foisted upon women in England. This book, published in America later the same year, sparked a more
militant approach there as well. The author was imprisoned repeatedly along with her mother for her
efforts during and after World War I. After helping women gain the right to vote, this ardent feminist,
who believed unmarried women were entitled to enjoy motherhood, shocked society when as a spinster
of 45 she announced the birth of a son in 1927. An important book in the history of women's rights, quite
scarce in the true first edition.
1912. Fawcett, Millicent Garrett. LL.D. Women’s Suffrage. A Short History of A Great Movement
London, T.C. & E.C. Jack, 1912. Mrs. Henry Fawcett [Millicent Garrett Fawcett] British reformer,
feminist, suffragist. Mrs. Fawcett was known for her "constitutional" approach: a more peaceful, rational
strategy, in contrast to the more militant and confrontational strategy of the Pankhursts.
Margaret MacDonald (nee Gladstone), A British reformer, feminist, activist. She joined the Women's
Industrial Council.
1914. Pankhurst, Emmeline. My Own Story. London, Eveleigh Nash, 1914. Previous Owners signature.
1931. Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. The Suffragette Movement. An Intimate Account Of Persons And ideals.
London, Longman, Green & Co., 1931.
The Primrose League. The great Conservative auxiliary political organization, owes its main success to
women, and the Women's Liberal Federation. Founded in 1883 to promote the Tory Democracy of the
Fourth Party among working class workers.
Beatrice Harraden. Suffragette Writer. Beatrice Harraden was a popular novelist who was heavily
involved in the Suffragette tax resistance campaign
Louise Garrett. British Suffragist. Vice President of the United Suffragists and a member of several
National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies.
Mrs. [Charlotte] Despard- Hon. Treasurer Women’s Freedom League.
Emily Faithful. First woman to join the Women's Trade Union League and first secretary of the Society
for Promoting the Employment of Women in 1859.
1908. Souvenir of the Women’s Suffrage March and Mass Meeting at the Albert Hall - Saturday, June
13,1908. Embankment: 2:30 P.M. Albert Hall 4 P.M. Speakers: Lady Henry Somerset, Lady Frances
Balfour, Mrs. Fawcett, Mrs. Anna Shaw, Mrs. Despard. London. Mrs. S. Burgess, Publication. Colorful
print on thin crepe paper. Purple violets with green shamrocks - Images of speakers. By the beginning of
the First World War marches and demonstrations were acceptable to most members of the British and
American suffrage movements, provided the appropriate permits were obtained. Among the most
significant mass public meetings was the "Great Demonstration" at Hyde Park London, June 21, 1908.
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
Great Britain:
Pamphlets: 1852-1921.
1852. Second Report of the St, Paul and St. Barnabas Dispensary. By W.F. Higgins (Honorary
Secretary) - Subscriptions by St Paul & St Barnabas Clergy. J.T. Hayes, Printer. Burton Street - Eaton
Square [London] 1852.
1871. The Debate In the House of Commons on the Women's Disabilities Bill on May 3rd 1871. Printed
for the National Society for Women's Suffrage. London. Messrs. Trubner & Co., 1871.43pages.
1896. National Divorce Reform League. Samuel W. Dike (Corresponding Secretary).
A Review of 15 years Report of the Corresponding Secretary of the National Divorce Reform League at
the Annual Meeting, January 21,1896. Reprinted from The Annual Reports. 19 Pp.
1896. Eleanor Marx Aveling. The Working Class Movement in England. Preface by Wihelm
Liwebknecht Translated by Edward Eveling. Historical sketch originally written for the “Voles
Lexicon”. N.P. Twentieth Century Press. 1896.
1900. [The Church League for Women’s Suffrage]. Ursula Roberts. The Cause of Purity and Women’s
Suffrage. When read: “Pass It On”. A penny sheet No.5. Talks about demand, Working wages for
women, the feeble minded, depraved homes, white slave traffic, Legislative possibilities, reason for the
present apathy. N.D., ca 1900 Gt. Br.
1907. Israel Zangwill. One and One Are Two. “Being A Verbatim Report of the Speech Delivered at
Exeter Hall on February 9ib at the Demonstrations of Women’s Suffrage Societies.
Ca. 1907. 9 Pp. London: The Women’s Freedom League. [1907| Very rare.
1910. Official Program of the Great Suffragette Demonstration. Votes for Women - Demonstration to
Hyde Park on Saturday July 23,1910. Including A list of speakers on the 40 platforms. By special
arrangement with the Women’s Social and Political Union. 4 pages. 8 Vi” x 5”. Print is in green and
purple on white [cream] colored paper. The East London Printing Co., 1910. A historical important
Artifact from a ‘Monster Meetings’ held in Hyde Park, London, England by the W.S.P.U.
By 1900, women had been campaigning for the right to vote in parliamentary elections for over
half a century. In 1903 the 'votes for women' campaign was energized by the creation of the Women's
Social and Political Union (W.S.P.U). Founded in Manchester by Emmeline Pankhurst and her
daughters, the W.S.P.U. aimed to 'wake up the nation' to the cause of women's suffrage through 'Deeds
not Words'. The decision to relocate the headquarters to London in 1906 transformed the suffrage
movement. For the next eight years, the fight to win the vote became a highly public and, at times,
violent struggle played out against the backdrop of Edwardian London. By taking their campaign to the
streets, the Women's Social and Political Union attracted maximum publicity. Identifiable by their
purple, white and green color scheme, the suffragettes became a familiar sight in central London. The
move to the political heart of the nation enabled the suffragettes to maintain a constant presence in
Whitehall, petitioning Downing Street, heckling M.P.s and chaining themselves to government
buildings.
A London base also provided opportunities for staging spectacular demonstrations. Women's
Sunday in June 1908, the first 'monster meeting' to be held by the W.S.P.U, brought suffragettes from
all over the United Kingdom to march in seven different processions through central London to Hyde
Park. The highly choreographed demonstration attracted a crowd of up to 300,000, drawn by the
spectacle of the delegates dressed in the suffragette tri color and carrying over 700 banners.
The suffragette campaign was masterminded from W.S.P.U. headquarters, initially established
at 4 Clement's Inn, Strand and, from 1912, at Lincoln's Inn, Kingsway. Both salaried and volunteer
office staff organized fund-raising events, public meetings and demonstrations and produced the weekly
newspaper, Votes for Women, which had a circulation of 22,000 by 1909. The W.S.P.U. established 90
branches throughout the United Kingdom but London remained the chief area of support with 34 local
offices. As the campaign became increasingly militant, over a thousand suffragettes, including
Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters Christabel, Sylvia and Adela, received prison sentences for their
actions. Many were sent to Holloway jail in north London where they protested against prison
conditions by enduring hunger strike and force-feeding.
1912. Report of Lecture by Miss Pott. Report on the Anti-Suffrage Movement Delivered at 67,
Westbourne Terrace, W. On Tuesday, December 12, 1912. Sir Bartie Frere, Presiding - Report also
included questions asked of Miss Potts. Published by The National League Opposing Woman Suffrage.
Gt. Br.
1912. Scott A. MacCallum. M.P. Equal Pay for Equal Work. A Woman Suffrage Fallacy. Equal Pay for
Equal Work. Published by The National League Opposing Woman Suffrage, London, McCorquodale &
Co. 1912. Gt. Br.
1920. “Ministry of Health,, Memorandum by the Government Actuary on the Washington Draft
Convention Concerning the Employment of Women Before and After Childbirth.” 5 pages. London:
Published by His Majesty's Stationary Office. Folio. Alfred W. Watson, June 28,1920. London:
Published by His Majesty' Stationary Office by Darling & Son, Ltd. Bacon St, E.2. Gt Br.
1928. “Ministry of Reconstruction, Women's Advisory Committee. Report of the Subcommittee. Report
of the Sub-Committee Appointed to Consider the Positions After the War Of Women Holding
Temporary Appointments in Government Departments. Presented to Parliament. June 28,1928. UKGPO. Gt Br.
[No date].
Why Women Should Not Have the Vote. The Key to the Whole Situation.
To Fellow Working Men - Socialist, Liberal and Torry. N.D. N.P. Fragile ephemera. Gt. Br.
[No date]. Elizabeth Abbot, and Katharine Bompas. The Woman Citizen and Social Security. A
Criticism of the Proposals made in the Beveridge Report As They Affect Women. London, The Rydal
Press. N.D. 20 Pp.
[No date].
Jane Hume Clapperton. What Do We Women Want? For It is Certain the
discontent or a spirit of unrest has taken possession more or less of us all. [London] W.H. Reynolds. 7
Pp. Library stamp on upper left corner.
[No date].
Women’s Liberation in Labour History. A Case Study from Notthinham.
By Jo O'Brien. Pamphlet Number 24: “Spokesman”. The Bertrand Russell Peach Foundation.
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
Letter, autographs, notes, etc. U.S. & U.K. 1807-1985
Addams, Jane. Typed Letter Signed. Written on the stationary of Hull-House 800 South Halsted Street,
Chicago, Illinois. November 26, 1909. “My Dear Mrs. Evans, I find to my deep regret that I have an
engagement at Hull House on Saturday which makes it impossible for me to go to Mrs. Young's
luncheon. Hastily yours, Mrs. Jane Addams".
Addams, Jane. Typed Letter Signed written on Hull-House, 800 South Halsted Street, Chicago
letterhead. Addressed to Mr. Ihider. October 18, 1911. “My Dear Mr. Ihider, I shall be very glad to
attend the meeting of the National Housing Committee between November 16th and 18th. Sincerely
yours, Jane Adams.
Addams, Jane. Autograph Letter Signed. 2 pages written on Hull House stationary 800 South Halsted St,
Chicago, Illinois stationary. March 28. N. D. Social content.
Alcott, Louisa May. Autograph Note Signed with framed image of Ms. Alcott:. “Mr. Barrows, Dear Sir, I
am not allowed to visit just now so cannot reply to your Request as you desire. Yrs truly. LM. Alcott
Nov. 28. [N.D].
Barton, Clara. Autograph Letter Signed. Addressed to Enola and Doctor. Glen Echo, MD. July 16, 1891.
“Dear Enola and Doctor. I would to have written you ten days ago, I couldn't Get the minute - nor the
strength unwearied. Enough to do anything - I am not Doing...Always, Clara Barton". Clarissa Harlowe
Barton. Clara Barton, pioneer, teacher, nurse, and humanitarian. She has been described as having had an
"indomitable spirit" and is best remembered for organizing the American Red Cross.
Barton, Clara. Typed Letter Signed. Addressed to the various organized bodies of women in Europe.
Washington, D.C. April 18th 1892. Clara Barton writing to the Second International Congress- Suffrage
was not on the agenda.
Barton, Clara. Autograph Letter Signed. February 5, 1904. “I am glad to know your home again in safety
for I am getting apprehensive about When will you be in Washington? I am to have a party on the
afternoon of the 15th of February - The Suffrage Convention is going to do me the honor to come out to
call one me - After calling at the White House-1 do know John Hooker and Isabelle Hooker-were
especial friends of mind. They were both remarkable people... Truthfully yours, Clara Barton”.
Barton, Clara. Typed Letter Signed Glen Echo, Maryland, March 3rd, 1904. Addressed to her sister:
Harriette L. Reed at Dorchester, Massachusetts. Written on the stationary of The American National Red
Cross. With original envelope. With manuscript annotations. “My Dearly Beloved sister Harriette... "
Balch, Miss Emily G. Autograph Letter Signed. March 26, [N.D.], N.P. 4 pages.
“Dear Mr. Planes. I am writing to replace the photograph that you sent me With one that is more like me.
Sincerely yours, Emily G. Balch“. Emily G. Balch- 1946 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate - Formerly
Professor of History and Sociology -Honorary International President Women's International League for
Peace and Freedom.
Balch, Emily Greene (1867-1961). Autograph Card Signed. January 21,1953. Wellesley, Mass.
Bates, Katharine Lee. Typed Letter Signed. Wellesley College, Department of English Literature,
Wellesley, Massachusetts. Addressed to: Mr. F.H. Green, West Chester State Normal School, West
Chester, Pa. September 15, 1914. “What others claim from us is not our thirst/And our hunger, but our
Bread and our gourd/ Amie" A quotation from Henri Frederic Amiel. Katharine Lee Bates, (August 12,
1859 - March 28, 1929), is remembered as the author of the words to the anthem "America the
Beautiful". This quote is from Amiel's "Intime Journal". Henri Frédéric Amiel (September 27,1821 May 11,1881) was a Swiss philosopher, poet and critic.
Bethune, Mary McLeod. Business Card with Autograph Signature. N.P., N.D.
Mary Jane McLeod Bethune 1875- 1955. was born in Mayesville, South Carolina and died in Daytona
Beach, Florida. A tireless educator born to former slaves, she is most well-known for founding a school
in 1904 that later became part of Bethune-Cookman College in Daytona Beach. She was president of the
college from 1923-42 and 1946-47, one of the few women in the world who served as a college president
Bethune worked for the election of Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932, and attempted to get him to support a
proposed law against lynching. She was also a member of Roosevelt's Black Cabinet among other
leadership positions in organizations for women and African Americans. Upon her death, columnist
Louis E. Martin said, "She gave out faith and hope as if they were pills and she some sort of doctor".
Blackwell, Alice Stone. Autograph Letter Signed. December 27th 1845. Addressed To Ellen: “I was very
glad to receive your long letter in Manchester and to hear how delightfully you were located. From Alice
Fisher House. December 27, 1845”
Burke, Yvonne Bathwaite. Typed Letter Signed written on the letterhead Of Congress of the United
States, House of Representative, Washington, D.C. May 21,1975. “Dear Mr. McKean- Smith, I hope you
and Mrs. McKean-Smith are doing well. If you are in Washington- please fell free to visit my office.
Yvonne Bathwaite Burke, Member of Congress”.
Yvonne Braithwaite Burke (born 1932) is a politician from Los Angeles, California, U.S.. She is the Los
Angeles County Supervisor from the 2nd district, a position she has held since 1992. During this time
she has served as the Chair of the Board of Supervisors in 1993.
Calderone, Mary Steichen. Autograph Letter Signed. July 31,1973. New York. Addressed to Professor
Edward G. Olson. Mary S. Calderone, M.D. internationally recognized as a pioneer in the field of human
sexuality. The former President of the Sex Information and Education Council of the United States,
which she co-founded in 1954, and for which she was Executive Director and President until 1982. From
1953-1964, she was Medical Director for Planned Parenthood Federation of America.
Catt, Carrie Chapman. Autograph Quotation Signed.
“When I was born no Woman in all the World could vote: not they vote in many lands. It was an Army
of Women that brought the change. Carrie Chapman Catt”.
Catt. Carrie Chapman. Autograph Letter Signed. July 4 1893. New York. Addressed to Mrs. Wardall.
The subject of the letter is the World's Columbian Fair.
World's Columbian Commission, |WCC] was created. The WCC was composed of two commissioners
from each state, territory, and the District of Columbia. There were also eight-at- large commissioners.
The state and territorial commissioners were selected by their respective governors, and the
commissioner from the District of Columbia was selected by the President All the appointed WCC
commissioners met in Chicago. The WCC was required to appoint a Board of Lady Managers.
Catt, Carrie Chapman. Autograph Letter Signed. February 25,1896. New York. Written on the letterhead
of the National Woman Suffrage Association. “Dear Sir, This is the signature of Carrie Chapman Catt”.
Catt, Carrie Chapman. Typed Letter Signed. March 12,1925. Written on the letterhead of the National
Woman Suffrage Association. Addressed to the Executive Council of the National American Suffrage
Association. Framed.
Catt, Carrie Chapman. Typed Letter Signed. Written on the stationary With the address: 171 Madison
Avenue New York. July 15, 1926. Addressed to Rev. Elizabeth Towne. Holyoke, Massachusetts. “My
Dear Dr. Towne: There is a loosely organized American Committee in Geneva whose business is to look
after Americans. All applications for tickets and favors are turned over to this Commission by the
Secretariat. It seems that the American visitors nearly overwhelmed the League before this institution
was started There is no one more influential in that Commission than Manley Hudson who, probably,
you know. If you do not, I will give you a letter to him. I think he can do for you anything that is
possible...Cordially yours, Carrie Chapman Catt”.
Catt, Carrie Chapman. Autograph signature. On a card mounted with the Turkish stamp from the Xllme
Congress Suffragette International - Istanbul - 1935. Stamp has the image of Catt
Chisholm, Shirley. Autograph Signature. First Day Issue envelope - In God We Trust. Regular Postage
Series of 1954. Albany N.Y., June 24, 1954.
Shirley Anita St. Hill Chisholm, 1924 - 2005) was an American politician, educator and author. She was
a Congresswoman, representing New York's 12th District for seven terms from 1968 to 1983. In 1968,
she became the first African American woman elected to Congress. On January 23, 1972, she became the
first African American candidate for President of the United States. She won 162 delegates. To date she
is the closest any woman has ever come to winning the nomination for president by a major party.
[Churchill, Helen]. March 29. Letterhead reads: 2 Connaught Place, W. “Madam, In answer to your letter
of the 16th March, which I regret I have not been able to answer before...If you are desirous of belonging
to the Primrose League... contact the Ruling Councilor for all the information... Very truly yours, Helen
Churchill ” The great Conservative auxiliary political organization, the Primrose League, owes its main
success to women, and the Women's Liberal Federation, on the opposite side, has done much for the
Liberal party. The Women's Liberal Unionist Association, which came into being in 1886 at the time of
the Irish Home Rule Bill, also played an active part in defense of the Unionist cause.
Dickinson, Anna E. Autograph Letter Signed. March 24th 1869. St. Louis, Missouri.
“A very slight request - You Ask of me, One soon and very gladly granted. And I am, Yours very truly”.
Dickinson, Anna E. was born in Philadelphia, Pa., on October 28, 1842. She grew up in poverty. Her
form education took place mainly at the Friends' Select School of Philadelphia, but she was an avid
reader and very early developed the habit of expressing herself on public questions.
At the age of 14, she published an article in William Lloyd Garrison's The Liberator. In 1860, she
addressed the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society, and early in 1861, she held a position at the U.S. Mint
in Philadelphia, but she was fired for publicly accusing General George B. McClelland of treason in the
loss of the Battle of Ball's Bluff. Thereafter she devoted herself to the speaker's platform.
Dickinson, Anna E. Autograph Letter Signed. October 4th, 1872. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. “My
lectures are “What’s to Hinder? & Things Hoped For”. The first deals with some phases of the woman
question. The second with strikes, cooperation & - assort of sequel to the one made last win. Truly
yours/Anna E. Dickinson".
Dickinson, Anna E. Autograph Letter Signed. To Rand Avery & Co. October 17, 1875. "Dear Sir; I have
just returned here from an absence to find The proof...and forward it Respectfully yours, Anna E.
Dickinson.".
Dickinson, Anna E. Autograph Quotation Signed. “Before All Things Justice/ Truly Yours, Anna
Dickinson, 1.5.1883".
Dickinson, Anna E. Autograph note signed. “Thank you for the friendly note.... Anna E. Dickinson”.
Anne E. Dickinson 1842-1932. Lectured against slavery and for woman suffrage and other reforms.
Dorothy Dix. Autograph Note Signed. With a Christmas card. Japan, 1919. The Note reads: “November
18 is my birthday. It happened so long ago even my father forgot the day of the week. Thanks you for
fitting me in your schedule. Dorothy Dix".
Dorothy Dix (November 18, 1861 - December 16, 1951) was the pseudonym of U.S. journalist Elizabeth
Meriwether Gilmer. As the forerunner of today's popular advice columnists, Dorothy Dix was America's
highest paid and most widely read female journalist at the time of her death. Her advice on love and
marriage was syndicated in newspapers around the world. With an estimated audience of 60 million
readers, she became a popular and recognized figure on her travels abroad.
Dix, Ida. Autograph Note Signed. N.P.,N.D. Noted American philanthropist
Drier, Mary E. & Mary Harriman Rumsey. Typed Letter Unsigned. January 2, 1918. New York.
Addressed to Mrs. Fairfield. [New York City]. Written on the stationary of the Americanization
Committee, New York State Woman Suffrage Party. With manuscript annotations by Mrs. Fairfield:
“Correct Copy", A policy statement.
Elder, Ruth. Autograph Note Signed. Addressed to Madelyn Brower. “Sincerely, Ruth Elder, Nov. 20,
1927".
Faithful, Emily. Autograph Letter Signed. December 22nd 1883. Chicago, Illinois. Written on the
stationary of the Palmer House [Hotel], Chicago, Illinois. Addressed to “Dear Sir".
Emily Faithful. English philanthropist, businesswoman, publisher, suffragette and lecturer. In the early
1870’s she was the only full-time lecturer on woman’s suffrage in England.
Fawcett, [Mrs]. Millicent Garrett. Autograph Note Signed. November 12. N.D. 18 Brookside Cambridge“My Dear Mrs. Hodgkin, It gives me very great pleasure to stay with you on .... With Many thanks
Believe me, Sincerely yours, Mrs. Fawcett“. Addressed to Mrs. Hodgkin - Broswelledene,- Newcastle.
N.D. With original envelope. Gt.Br.
Ferraro, Geraldine. “Walter Mondale” Inauguration Day Envelope. Signed by Geraldine Ferraro on front
Left side of envelope, blue and black, is a Printed sketch of Walter Monday and the writing: “Marking
the Inauguration of Vice President Walter Mondale / Jan 20, 1977. Running mate with Jimmy Carter,
39th President. N.D.
Fitzherbert, Maria A. Autograph letter signed. Oct. 23,1807. 1 page. Written on both sides. [Name
illegible!. Regarding finances and receipt of money.
Maria Anne Fitzherbert, nee Smythe-1756 -1837, was the first woman with whom the future King
George IV of the United Kingdom undertook a wedding ceremony, his companion for a large part of his
adult life. However the marriage was invalid under English civil laws concerning royal marriages and
she never became queen or acquired any other title.
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. Autograph Sentiment Signed. With black and white reproduction of original
photograph of Ms. Gilman. Framed together: 9 7/8’ x 14 1/4'. “Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 1913. Votes
For Women”.
Greer, Germaine. Autograph Card signed.
Germaine Greer (b.1939) is an Australian-born writer, journalist and scholar of early modern English
literature, widely regarded as one of the most significant feminist voices of the 20th century.
Greer, Germaine. Autograph Letter Signed. No date. No place. Written on the stationary of The Tulsa
Center for the Study of Women’s Literature. “For Paula, with best wishes, Germaine Greer".
Harraden, Beatrice.1864-1936. Autograph Note Signed. Written on stationary from 78 Clarence Gates
Garden, N.W. London, England. 29th March, 1915. Arguably one of the best- known Suffragette writers,
Beatrice Harraden was a popular novelist who was heavily involved in the Suffragette tax resistance
campaign. During the 1900s she became increasingly involved in the Suffragette cause. A friend of the
Pankhursts, she was one of the first members of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) and a
vice-president of the Women Writers' Suffrage League. Her short stories and factual reports were
published in the Suffragette newspaper, Votes for Women. Her Suffragette play, Lady Geraldine's
Speech was performed to raise funds for the WSPU.
Howe, Julia Ward. Autograph Letter Signed to her cousin, H.E. Turner. March 28,1864. “Dear Henry, I
write to ask you frankly, whether my two eldest girls, coming down to the Ball On Friday evening, can
have a bed in your house. In tremendous haste, your friend and cousin, Julia Ward Howe”. Julia Ward
Howe is taking care of her daughters.
Howe, Julia Ward. Autograph Note Signed. “In the House of Labor best can I build the House of rest.
Julia Ward Howe, April 1887. Framed.
Howe, Julia Ward. Autograph Sentiment Signed. “Be Thankful for life in a free-Country, in a Christian
community, in a period of general education and intelligence. Julia Ward Howe. May 23, 1903. If I live
until the day of your meeting, May 27th, I shall be eighty-four years of age. J.W.H”. With original
envelope.
Howe, Julia Ward. Autograph Letter Signed. June 1, 1908. Addressed to Mrs. David A. Kimball: “Your
kind note with cheque enclosed was not given to me until after the close of my Birthday reception I thank
you very much for your cheque and the flowers and for all your great kindness to me and mine. Believe
me your’s cordial regard, Julia Ward Howe”.
Howe, Julia Ward. Autograph Letter Signed. June 7, 1909. Addressed to Mrs. David A. Kimball: “I write
to thank you rather late in the day for the cheque which you so kindly sent me with your birthday
greeting. You have already more than once charmed the passage of time for me by sending me such
marks of kind remembrance and affectionate good will, which are beyond all price. I do indeed thank
you very earnestly for this last, as for all your kind gifts, And pray you to believe me cordially and
gratefully. Yours, Julia Ward Howe”. With original envelope.
Howe, Julia Ward. Autograph Letter Signed. April 28. N.D. Addressed to: Mrs. Bradford. Dear Mrs.
Bradford, I am writing a few friends for Friday coming to hear -It is called an “Animation For the
Advancement of Women - it is not a suffrage meeting. Yours Sincerely, Julia Ward Howe”.
Hughes, Sarah T. Autograph Signature of Ms. Hughes- U.S. District Judge.
Sarah Tilghman Hughes 1896 -1985 was the United States District court judge who swore Lyndon
Johnson into the office of President on Air Force One after the Kennedy assassination, becoming the first
woman in U.S. history to swear in a U.S. President (a task usually executed by the Chief Justice of the
United States.
Hutchinson, Anne. Autograph Letter Signed. Dec. 6, 1915, Written on the stationary of the Votes for
Women stationary. Addressed to “My Dear Girl”.
A letter of sympathy and encouragement from one suffragist to another. The letter was written a month
after the defeat of a Woman-Suffrage Referenda in Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York and
Pennsylvania. If dismayed by this defeat, the Suffragists refused to be disheartened and quickly fell to
work analyzing what they needed to do to win the next time.
Ingalls, Laura. Autograph Signature on an envelope with newspaper clippings describing her arrival in
Miami pasted onto the envelope. Envelope is postmarked April 23, 1934.
Laura Ingalls Wilder 1867-1957, was an American author, who wrote Little House series of children's
books based on her childhood in a pioneer family. Her best-known book is Little House on the Prairie.
Jordan, Barbara. Autograph signature Black and white envelope - First Day of Issue: Mary McLeon
Bethune- American Educator - Founder of Daytona Normal and Industrial School For Girls - BethuneCookman College. Postmarked: Washington, D.C., Mar 5, 1985. Barbara Charline Jordan 1936 -1996
was an American politician from Texas. She served as a congresswoman in the United States House of
Representatives from 1973 to 1979.
Keller, Helen. Autograph Signature. First Day Cover Signed. “Helen Keller”.
Kilbreth, Mary G. Typed Letter Signed. August 13,1918. New York City. Addressed to the Senators
opposing the Suffrage Amendment Written on the stationary of the Women Voters' Anti Suffrage Party.
Highlighted with red crayons. Contemporary copy of the above letter.
Kirkpatrick, Jeane. Autograph Signature. Written on U.N. stationary with the Seal of United States.
Printed: From the Permanent Representative.
Larcom, Lucy. Autograph Letter Signed. Feb. 14th 1882. [Boston, Massachusetts]. Addressed to Harriet
Robinson.
Lucy Larcom 1824-1893. Mill girl, author, seminary teacher and magazine editor. A poet of some
popularity.
Little, JoAnne. Autograph Note Signed. “Peace and Blessing to you Michael/ JoAnne Little”. 1034
Bragg, Raleigh, North Carolina. 3/31/77. African -American Women whose own incarceration brought
attention to women’s rights in prison.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph Letter Signed. April 11, 1877. Melrose,
Massachusetts. Addressed to Miss Channing, discussing her lecture at Miss Channing’s college. Mary A.
Livermore 1820-1905. American reformer, Suffragist and Lecturer who founded and edited The Agitator
and The Woman's Journal.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph Note Signed. “Mary A. Livermore. January 22, 1878. Melrose, Mass”.
Verso reads: “Very Respectfully, H.C. Cabot".
H.C. Lodge. 1850-1924. Member of Congress (1887-1893). In 1893, he was elected to the Senate and
remained there for the rest of his life.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph Manuscript Signed. 5 lines. Poem: “I slept and Dreamed that Life Was
beauty - I woke and found that life is duty. Is thy dream then a shadowy lie?...oh, sad heart, unfailingly.
And thou shalt find Thy dream to be. A noonday light and truth to thee. Mary A. Livermore, March 29,
1881. ”
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph Letter Signed. January 13, 1884. Melrose, Massachusetts. Addressed to
O.J. Adams of Chicago, Illinois discussing her writings: “Pen Pictures” and “Thirty Years Too Late” and
other publishing matters.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph Letter Signed. December 11,1891. Ludington, Michigan. Addressed to:
“Dear Madam”. Declining an invitation.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph quotation-signed. “Truth for Authority and Not Authority For Truth”
Mary A. Livermore.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph quotation signed. “Character is Destiny”. Melrose, Mass., July 12,
1873”.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph quotation signed. “Character is Destiny”. Melrose, Mass. No date.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph quotation signed. “Character is Destiny”. No place, No date.
Livermore, Mary A. Autograph quotation signed. “As there are very few large pleasure let on a long
lease, it is wise to cultivate a large undergrowth of small pleasures, accessible to all Mary A. Livermore /
Melrose, Mass/ December 12, 1901.”
Lockwood, Belva. Autograph Quotation Signed: Life is an Open Book in which we read in age what we
write in youth. Belva A. Lockwood. Washington, D.C. Sept. S. [18]89. ”
Belva Ann Bennett Lockwood 1830 -1917) was a United States attorney, politician, author, and noted
feminist, although she never used that word. Lockwood overcame many social and personal obstacles
related to gender restrictions of her time, to gain a good education. After college, she became a
schoolteacher and was actively involved in working towards equal pay for women teachers.
Lockwood, Belva. Autograph Quotation Signed. “Great Opportunities Come But Once/Belva A.
Lockwood”
Mott, Lucretia. Autograph signature. No place. No date. “Lucretia Mott”
Mott, Lucretia. Autograph signature. “Lucretia Coffin Mott”. 1840”
Mott, Lucretia. Autograph Quotation
Signed: “Truth for Authority-Not Authority for
Truth”. With an image of Lucretia Mott in her 88ih year, 1880. Framed.
Mott, Lucretia. Autograph Letter Signed to James A. Wright Philadelphia, 5th mo -12th - 1850. 2 pages.
Wishing her correspondent well on his visit to London. This was the year Mott wrote Discourse on
Woman, a book about restrictions on women in the United States.
Mott, Lucretia. Autograph note signed. “Dear Elisa, Wilt Thou Take Tea With Us This Evening In the
company of Dr. Channing and [his] wife. Signed/Affectly, L. Mott. ” With a black and white
Reproduction photograph of Lucretia Mott. Very rare autograph.
Nation, Carrie. Autograph Note Signed on postcard. Sept 16th 1907. El Paso, Arkansas. Addressed to
Belle Gilham, St Louis, Missouri. Partly printed colored lithographed postcard. Very rare.
Carrie Nation 1846 - June 1911, was a member of the temperance movement—the battles against alcohol
in pre-Prohibition America—particularly noted for promoting her viewpoint through vandalism. On
many occasions, Nation would enter an alcohol-serving establishment and attack the bar with a hatchet.
Opie, Mrs. Amelia Anderson. Autograph Note Signed. August 27, 1847. Addressed to: “Dear Friend, I
hope thou will do me the favor to accept this Book as a wedding present From men and a proof of respect
and regard. If thou hast one already - return it please - I will send something else...” Amelia Opie”.
[Book not included]. Amelia Opie (1769-1853). Novelist, poet and close friend of Mary Wollstonecraft
Godwin.
Owens, Helen B. Typed Letter Signed. October 21, 1914. Ithaca, New York.
Addressed to unidentified Suffrage Supporter outlining fund raising in her district Written on the
stationary of Votes for Women-Empire State Campaign Committee. Dr. Owens outlines the goals of the
Empire State Campaign and the role of the 6th Campaign District in Ithaca, New York has been asked to
play. A primary source for the Empire State Campaign.
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. Typed Letter Signed written on the stationary of “Germinal: A Monthly Magazine
of Modernity. London, 1923 November 23. On letterhead of "Germinal/A Monthly Magazine of
Modernity" to Mr. Shipley. In part: "I have sent you a copy of 'Germinal' in which some of your work
appears. Thank you very much for sending the poems. You told me that the 'New York Call' had given it
a good review. I am very pleased to hear that and should like to see the review. I hope you will be able to
give them a good notice of this issue and subsequent issues which will now come out regularly. I should
be very glad if you would become a regular contributor...If you have any thing a little more bearing on
the movement for advancement I should like to see diem...." The daughter of militant British suffragette
Emmeline Pankhurst and Dr. Richard Pankhurst, a radical lawyer, Sylvia Pankhurst largely made her
mark on the women's movement through her writings. Very rare.
Parks, Rosa. First Day Cover Signed. 1988. “Rosa Parks”.
Rosa Louise McCauley Parks 1913 - 2005, was an African American civil rights activist whom the U.S.
Congress later called "Mother of the Modern-Day Civil Rights Movement".
Perkins, Frances. 3" x 5” card with black silhouette profile signed by Frances Perkins.
Pillsbury, Parker. Autograph note signed. Written on the stationary “The Revolution” displaying
Elizabeth Cady Stanton as Editor and Susan B. Anthony As Proprietor. "New York, 10 May 1870. We
are a population of more than thirty million, But how many have vote to voice in the government! The
National Woman Suffrage Association meets today in New York. Are you not mistaken? Yours, to make
it such a Home, Parker Pillsbury”. Parker Pillsbury (September 22, 1809 - July 7, 1898) was an
American minister and advocate for abolition and women's rights.
Plasket, E. Fry. Autograph note signed. January 11, 1825. “My Dear Katharine, I am anxious to hear of
dear Sarah, also to say that I cannot think how I forgot to ask / Thee to remember kindly to Nurse, & I
wish to know how the goes on. I am truly thy Loving cousin. E. Fry Plasket 1/11/1825”.
Putnam, Mrs. William Lowell. Typed letter written on Women's Anti-Suffrage Association of
Massachusetts. Addressed to Miss Hennessy: “Dear Miss Hennessy, I am so glad to hear also that you
are going to organize a Special Aid Branch and that the Public Safety Committee is at Work there.
Cordially, Mrs. William Lowell Putnam”.
Pyle, Gladys. U.S. Senator-South Dakota - 1938-1939. Gladys Pyle (October 4,1890 - March 14,1989)
was a South Dakota politician and the first woman elected to the United States Senate without having
previously been appointed to her position; she was also the first woman senator to serve as a Republican
and the first woman senator from South Dakota.
Rankin, Jeanette. Typed Letter Signed. Ca. 1972. Carmel, California. Addressed to Douglas Voegler of
Schuyler, Nebraska. With original envelope.
Jeanette Pickering Rankin (1880-1973) was Congresswoman, Suffragist and pacifist Jeanette Rankin was
the first women elected to the House of Representatives and the only member of Congress to oppose the
entry of The United States into both World Wars.
Roosevelt, Eleanor. Signed Coupon Trading Card.
Anna Eleanor Roosevelt (October 11, 1884 - November 7,1962) was First Lady of the United States
from 1933 to 1945. She supported the New Deal policies of her husband, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, and assumed a role as an advocate for civil rights. After her husband's death in 1945, she
continued to be an internationally prominent author and speaker for the New Deal coalition. She worked
to enhance the status of working women, although she opposed the Equal Rights Amendment because
she believed it would adversely affect women.
Ross, Nellie Taylor. Note Card Signed. “Many good wishes- Nellie Taylor Ross”.
Nellie Taylor Ross (1876 - 1977) was an American politician, the governor of Wyoming
from 1925 to 1927, and director of the National Mint for many years. She was the first woman to serve
as governor of a U.S. state. She is also to date the only woman to have served as governor of Wyoming.
Rowe, Charlotte E. Typed Letter Signed. June 30th 1919. Washington, D.C. Addressed to Senator
William H. King. Washington, D.C. Written on the stationary of The Woman Patriot Verso of chart
reads: Diagram of official New York vote, proving woman suffrage carried by New York City converts
to Socialism and that the majority of Democrats and Republicans, in City and State voted against
Suffrage.
Sand, George. Autograph Signature written on printed card. 1 Juiliet, 1869.
Amandine Aurore Lucile Dupin, Baronne Dudevant (July 1,1804 - June 8, 1876), best known by her
pseudonym George Sand, was a French novelist and feminist
Sanger, Margaret. Typed Letter Signed. September 3rd 1929. New York. Addressed to J.W. Poling.
Written on the stationary of The Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau. Margaret Sanger writes to her
publisher.
Margaret Higgins Sanger (1879 -1966) was an American birth control activist, an advocate of negative
eugenics, and the founder of the American Birth Control League (which became Planned Parenthood).
Initially met with fierce opposition to her ideas, Sanger gradually won some support, both in the public
as well as the courts, for a woman's choice to decide how and when, if ever, she will bear children. In her
drive to open the way to universal access to birth control, Sanger was ahead of her time. However, her
racist ideology and advocacy for eugenics are positions which have not survived her.
Sanger, Margaret Typed Letter Signed. October 29th 1941. New York City. Addressed to Amram
Scheingeld. Written on the stationary of The Birth Control Clinical Research Bureau. Sanger, Margaret.
Typed Letter Signed written on the International Planned Parenthood Federation - President: Emeritus,
Mrs. Margaret Sanger. LL.D. 65 Sierra Vista Drive, Tucson, Arizona. January 11, 1960. Addressed to
Mr. Norman Thomas. “Dear Norman Thomas. Thanks so much for your suggestions relative to a letter to
Senator Kennedy. I have done it; mainly the contents of your letter, with copy enclosed. Of course, he
will have a ‘cozy” answer. Most Cordially yours, Margaret Sanger”.
Sewell, May Wright. Autograph letter signed. April 2nd, 1892. Addressed to Hon.
W.E. Ambler. 263 The Arcade, Cleveland, Ohio. Written on the stationary of Girls Classical
School. 343 North Pennsylvania, Ind. Indiana. “My Dear Sir, In response to your of February 13th, 1
send you her with a short original paragraph (not included), with my autograph and photograph and
remain. Yours my Sincerely, May Wright Sewall”. Dictated. See # 147.
May Wright Sewall (1884-1920) Educator, Suffragist and Clubwoman, was born in Wisconsin. Moving
to Indianapolis with her second husband- it was here with Theodore Lovett Sewall - they founded Girls
Classical School of Indianapolis. Sewall resigned as head of the school in 1907. At the same time, she
was active in local suffrage organizations, and later, on the national level, becoming chairman of the
Executive Committee of the National Woman Suffrage Association. She worked with the International
Council of Women and Women’s Congress of The Chicago Columbian Exposition. Under her
leadership, the World’s Congress of Representative Women was held in conjunction with the Columbia
Exposition in May 1983.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph note signed. 5 lines. Small cream colored paper with writing on
front with Stanton’s signature on back. “I sent you a number to supply your friends who may be also
making a collection.” N.D., N.P.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph quotation signed with framed image of Ms. Stanton: “Man &
Woman a simultaneous creation, equal in the Godhead with equal dominion over the earth and all that is
there on. Gen. 1. 27th & 28th. Elizabeth Cady Stanton”.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Double Autograph Quotation Signed. “Nov. 8th 1868 - “Taxation Without
Representation is Tyranny. /Elizabeth Cady Stanton ” [2nd] “Bread and the Ballot/ Elizabeth Cady
Stanton”. Addressed to Sir William of Tenafly. Written on the stationary of The Revolution - Susan B.
Anthony's newspaper.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph Manuscript written on the back of eight blank Omaha National Bank
Checks while Mrs. Stanton was President of The National Woman Suffrage Association (1869-1890),
while in Omaha, Nebraska, in December of 1888 to attend the organization’s state convention. “Would I
vote if the rights of Suffrage were secured by me? This is the Question a symposium of women are
invited to answer... ”
[Transcript] Would I vote if the right of suffrage was secured to me? This is the question a symposium of
women are invited to answer. Having most perniciously] demanded this right for half a century, it is fair
to suppose that I appreciate the power of the ballot, & would use it when granted. Like all other human
beings, I prefer self-government to that of Czars, Kings, Emperors or "white male citizens.” I prefer to
belong. 2. to the aristocracy, rather than the only ostracized class in a republic. The ballot represents
sovereignty; the right of individual conscience & judgment; the crown & scepter of royalty; a privileged
aristocracy; the only recognized class & caste in the United States. There is no form of aristocracy do
degrading, as that based on sex, exalting as it does, every type, shade & nationality of men, above all
women making 3. making one half the people sovereigns, the other half subjects. I heartily detest the
spirit of class & caste in the state, especially, when all women belong to the lowest grade. It is still more
humiliating in the family, exalting fathers, husbands, brothers & sons, above their mothers, wives, sisters
& daughters, thus poisoning the very fountains of family life, creating an antagonism in sex, that
demoralizes all our social relations. 4. Whenever women have had political power, they have availed
themselves of its privileges. As heirs to throne in the old world, they have gladly accepted the honors of
the position, & maintained their rights to the spectra & crown at the point of the sword. Whenever
women have had an opportunity to vote, they have done so, & why should I prove an exception? From
time immemorial women have votes & held office in England. 5. & in the thirteen original states in the
early days of the colonies, & they are voting to day in Great Britain & America wherever the right is
accorded. Yes, most emphatically I want to vote on all the vital issues of the hour, on parties & party
platforms, on state, national & international affairs, pre-eminently on education, temperance, the moral &
sanitary conditions, on hones school houses, churches theatres, jails & prisons 6. halls of legislation,
courts of justice, & all charitable institutions, I want to vote for street inspectors too, who will maintain
order & cleanliness in our cities, I am ashamed of hearing foreigners dilate on the filth & general dilated
condition of our sidewalks and streets. It is high time that we educate our people into habits of decency,
that we teach good manners in our schools. The boys of the next generation should be freed from
bondage their. 7. fathers now suffer bound wherever they go to the omnipresent cuspidor because of the
continuous expectorations. Our beautiful cars, the marble floors in our Capitols, the carpets in our
churches, all alike proclaim the necessity of more stringent laws & customs, to compel us as a nation of
observe the decencies of life. I want a voice in the laws regulating marriage & divorces & on the 8.
whole criminals code. If it is decided that the best use of the make of a criminal is to “send him with pack
horse speed to heaven," I prefer a gentle anesthetic that he may make the journey in pleasant dream,
rather than through the horrors of the gallows. In fact, there is not a social, religious, or political question
on which I have not decided opinions, & which I should like to express at the ballot box Elizabeth Cady
Stanton
Elizabeth Cady Stanton. (1815-1902) was an American social activist and leading figure of the early
woman's movement Her Declaration of Sentiments, presented at the first women's rights convention held
in 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York, is often credited with initiating the first organized woman's rights
and woman's suffrage movements in the United States.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph Letter Signed. Ca. 1895. No place. Addressed to Rev. Henry N.
Cobbe. “The Bible Rightly Interrupted Places Woman on an even platform with Men”.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph Letter Signed. Ca. 1898. Feb. 2nd. Addressed to Rev. William
Hayes Ward. Writing about “Eighty Years of Mine”.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph Quotation Signed. “In every soul, there is bound up some truth and
some error, and each one brings to this world of thought what no-other one possesses /Elizabeth Cady
Stanton ” Framed.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph note signed. 5 lines. Small cream colored paper with writing on
front with Stanton’s signature on back. “I sent you a number to supply your friends who may be also
making a collection.” N.D., N.P.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph quotation signed with framed image of Ms. Stanton: “Man &
Woman a simultaneous creation, equal in the Godhead with equal dominion over the earth and all that is
there on. Gen. I. 27th & 28lh. Elizabeth Cady Stanton”.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Autograph Sentiment Signed. Addressed to H.B. Hall, Jr. “With Kind Regards,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton ”. Framed.
Stone, Lucy. Autograph Letter Signed. January 15th No date. New York. Addressed to Mr. Kinnicutt,
arranging a Speaking date...A succinct letter touching upon a significant aspect of Lucy Stone's advocacy
on behalf of women.
Lucy Stone. (1818 -1893) was a prominent American suffragist. She was the wife of abolitionist Henry
Brown Blackwell (1825-1909) (the brother of Elizabeth Blackwell) and the mother of Alice Stone
Blackwell, another prominent suffragette, journalist and human rights defender. Stone was best known
for being the first recorded American woman to keep her own last name upon marriage and being the
first woman in Massachusetts to receive a college degree.
Stone, Lucy. Autograph Note Signed on postcard. March 21, |187?]. Dorchester, Massachusetts.
Addressed to the Editor of the Denver Tribune regarding the speech of the Catholic Bishop's speech
against Woman Suffrage which was spoke at all churches and published in his paper.
Stone, Lucy. Fragment of letter signed by Lucy Stone. Written from The Office of The Woman's Journal.
No. 4 Park Street, Boston: “February 23, 1879. Dear Miss Ives, I meant to say to you in my note of more
than a month ago -I am sure the Journal will be always grateful for your share of valuable times...Ever
Truly, Lucy Stone.”
Stone, Lucy. Fragment of letter signed. Feb. 12, 1890. Boston, Massachusetts. Addressed to Mr. Osgood.
Written on the stationary of The Woman's Journal. Regarding a ticket of membership.
[Lucy Stone]. Sophie A. Licbker. Autograph letter signed written On the stationary of National Woman
Suffrage Association. Addressed to: Mr.C. Gallup, Coxsackie, Green County, New York. Feb. 14, 1911
from Alice Stone Blackwell's Secretary. With a cut signature of Lucy Stone included.
Stowe, Harriet Beecher. Autograph quotation with framed image of Mrs. Stowe: “Trust In the Lord and
Be A Good from your Friend Harriet Beecher Stowe”.
Tarbell, Ida M. Autograph letter signed. Addressed to Miss Mary Day. Museum of Science and Industry,
Chicago, Illinois. “‘Thank you for recalling The days I spent in the Library of the National Safety
Council. It shames me that I did not remember the name of the Librarian who was so kind to me. One of
these days when I am in Chicago, it that ever comves, I want to see you, the Museum of Science and
Industry. Thank You for your letter, believe me Very Truly yours, Ida M. Tarbell. ”
Tarbell, Ida M. Autograph Letter Signed. Ca. 1900's. New York. Addressed to Mr. Ferguson. Written on
the stationary of 'The Portsmouth”. Regarding a lunch appointment.
Tarbell, Ida M. Autographed calling call. "Ida M. Tarbell”.
Taylor, A.M. Autograph manuscript note. A promissory note written and signed on January 1, 1863 for
$40,000 payable to Lehr. Tippett.
Truth, Sojourner. (Ca 1797-1883]. Autograph manuscript initials: “S.O’I”. With first day cover issues of
Sojourner Truth stamps cancelled “First Day of Issue" and postmarked New Paltz, N.Y. Febr. 4, 1886.
Framed with image of Sojourner Truth.
Sojourner Truth (1797-November 26, 1883) was the self-given name, from 1843, of Isabella Baumfree,
an American abolitionist and women's rights activist. Truth was born into slavery in Swartekill, New
York. Her best-known speech, Ain’t I a Woman? was delivered in 1851 at the Ohio Women's Rights
Convention in Akron, Ohio.
Walker, Mary E. Autograph Letter Signed. April 20, 1875. Oswego, New York. Addressed to Mr. H.B.
Myers. “My Book 'Hit' has received many flattering notices, and I am encouraged to published such a
book as all men should read. Yours Very Truly: Dr. Mary E. Walker. Dr. Mary Edwards Walker
(November 26, 1832 - February 21, 1919) was an American feminist, abolitionist, prohibitionist, alleged
spy, prisoner of war, surgeon, and the only woman to receive the Medal of Honor.
Walker, Mary E. Walker. Autograph Letter Signed. September 8, 1884. Oswego, New York. Addressed
to Mr. Parker. “Your favor has been rec'd. Thanks for the same. I am very proud to receive a letter from
one so old. I trust you have both grand and great-grandchildren to bless your last years. Please tell me
how you are situated. Yours sincerely, Mary E. Walker, M.D.”
Whitehouse, Vera Boarman. Typed Letter Signed. Ca. 1918. New York. Addressed to “Dear Sir”.
Written on the stationary of The New York State Woman Suffrage Party. Carbon. Policy statement.
Willard, Frances E. Autograph Letter Signed. July 3, 1880. Derby Line, Vermont. Addressed to Miss
Servoss. With a typed biography of Miss Willard and a transcript of a letter. Included is a small handmade book 3” x 5”, written in pencil: “Temperance Music”.
Frances Elizabeth Caroline Willard (September 28, 1839-February 17, 1898) was an American educator,
temperance reformer, and women's suffragist. She was born to a schoolteacher in Churchville, New York
but spent most of her childhood in Janesville, Wisconsin. She moved to Evanston, Illinois when she was
18. Willard was elected president of the United States Woman's Christian Temperance Union in 1879, a
position which she held for life. She created the Formed Worldwide W.C.T.U. in 1883, and was elected
its president in 1888. She founded the magazine The Union Signal, and was its editor from 1892 through
1898. Her tireless efforts for women’s suffrage and prohibition included a fifty-day speaking tour in
1874, an average of 30,000 miles of travel a year, and an average of four hundred lectures a year for a ten
year period. Her influence was instrumental in the passage of the Eighteenth (Prohibition) and
Nineteenth (Women Suffrage) Amendments to the United States Constitution.
Willard, Frances E. Autograph Letter Signed. February 16, 1884. Evanston, Illinois. Addresses
unidentified. Written on Woman’s National Christian Temperance Union stationary. Stating the goals of
the temperance movement important primary source.
Willard, Frances E. Autograph Letter Signed. December 2nd 1891. Written on the World and National
Woman Christian Temperance Union Stationary. Single page written on both sides.
Willard, Frances E. Autograph Letter Signed. Oct 2nd 1895. Addressed to Dr. Ward, Castile, New York.
Written on Woman’s National Christian Temperance Union stationary.
Willard, Frances. Typed Letter Signed. Written on the stationary of the National Women's Christian
Temperance Union - N.D., Chicago, Illinois - dictated; 'My Dear Friend: l am glad that you are the
President of the Chicago Woman’s Club, And / should be glad to go and see you for a little. Your happy
home made a most Pleasant impression upon Lady Henry Somerset and me. I am soon to leave the City
And spend the winter in the South at work for the W.C. T. U. Miss Gordon is with Me, and we have been
making our home with my dear cousin and childhood friend, Mrs. Henry Lemon, 927 Jackson Blvd.,
which is our present address. I rejoice every Time I think of your loving kindness to our great hearted
Susan B. Anthony. I know That you brightened her life when I was in Castile. We remained there but a
few Days in much seclusion working on addresses, etc. for the Baltimore Convention. I should be glad to
visit Wyoming some day for I have heard much of its beauty And have
never seen the place.. Perhaps some such good things are in store some Of these years when I am not so
steadily "on the go”. Believe me dear friend, Ever yours with high regard, signed Frances Willard,
Evanston, Illinois.”
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
INDIVIDUAL COLLECTIONS:
1.
Myra Bradwell Correspondence Archive. Susan B. Anthony correspondent 1873-1903.
These letters by Anthony to Bradwell are on the subject of legal issues which were to have
profound implications for women for the next 100 years!
2.
The Emily Duval Collection British Suffragette With Family Archive. 1890-1925.
3
Alberta Martie Hill Suffrage Collection. With Miscellaneous Family material
“Woman’s Suffrage-Votes for Women- Historical Photographic Archive. 1900’s.
4.
N.O.W. Collection. West Point ‘8’. Photographs. 1970-1980.
(1). Anthony-Bradwell Archive.
Myra Colby Bradwell (1831-1894), suffragist and Sanitary Commission veteran studied law with her
husband. She started the influential weekly, the Chicago Legal News, which ran reviews and advocated
legislation. She also started a legal publishing firm. To be the chief executive officer of both these
companies, and be a married woman, she had to obtain a special charter from the state, which she did. In
1869 she applied to the Illinois bar for the right to practice law, but was denied because, as a married
woman she had no right to enter into a contract The court opined that the "hot strife of the bar, in the
presence of the public" would destroy femininity. She took her case to the Supreme Court and in 1873
— Bradwell v. State of Illinois — the Court upheld the judgment of the lower court, declaring the
question a matter of state jurisdiction. Further, the decision stated that the delicacy and timidity of the
female sex "unfit it for many of the occupations of civil life." [Referring to the Supreme Court, Anthony
tells Bradwell in her 7/20/73 letter, quite accurately, that, "we have nothing to hope from them but
endorsements of dead men’s actions-". By 1872, Illinois passed legislation that secured for its citizens,
regardless of sex, freedom in selecting an occupation. In 1890, acting on her original motion of 1869, the
Illinois Supreme Court admitted her to the practice of law in that state. Two years later, she was admitted
to practice before the Supreme Court Long recognized as the nation's most eminent woman lawyer, she
had been since 1872 an honorary member of the Illinois State Bar Association, which she served four
terms as vice president Myra Bradwell spent her entire life advancing the cause of women's rights, not
only through her own career as a lawyer and publisher, but as a member of the Illinois Woman Suffrage
Association. She particularly worked to remove women's legal disabilities. She drafted, lobbied for
(along with Mary Livermore, Mrs. Stanton, and Catherine and Judge Charles Waite) a bill giving women
the right to their own earnings. She secured passage of a law giving a widow an interest in her husband's
estate in all cases (Anne Royall would have been pleased!) Equal guardianship for children, female
eligibility for school offices, and female eligibility for notary public office were all bills that Mrs.
Bradwell helped secure. In fact, Mrs. Bradwell was the key figure) in securing Mary Todd Lincoln's
release from Bellevue. Mrs. Lincoln had become a friend of Mrs. Bradwell, both sharing the loss of three
of their four children. In 1872, Mrs. Lincoln asked the Bradwell's to assist her in drawing up her will. In
1874, she turned to them again in a crusade for her freedom. Mrs. Bradwell had recently analyzed the
Illinois lunacy statutes in the Legal News and she put the case back in the newspapers. After a series of
public and private moves, Robert Lincoln secured the services of Dr. McFarland (the same Dr.
McFarland who had incarcerated Elizabeth Packard). Despite this, the Bradwell's prepared for a court
hearing and the ensuing publicity led to Mrs. Lincoln's freedom. Both Miss Anthony and Mrs. Bradwell
were attempting to secure the rights accorded to citizens of the United States under the Fourteenth
Amendment passed in 1868. Both were defeated. In fact, until 1971 there was no successful challenge to
sex-biased law. But in 1869, the suffrage movement was pointed in a new direction by Francis Minor.
The Revolution published a set of resolutions adopted by the National Women Suffrage Association,
drawn up by attorney Francis Minor, whose wife, Virginia, was president of the Missouri Women
Suffrage Association. Essentially, Minor argued that the Fourteenth Amendment already gave women
the right to vote and no "enabling" legislation by the states was necessary. Further, no state could make
or enforce laws which would abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States. And,
as women were citizens of the United States they were entitled to all immunities and privileges. Anthony
tested her right to vote; Bradwell tested her right to an occupation. Both were defeated. Further, Virginia
and Francis Minor, in Minor v. Happersett, the Supreme Court, in 1875, decided against this
interpretation. By these decisions, the Court pushed the suffrage movement in the direction of securing
the vote for women state by state and on the federal front by attempting to pass an amendment to the
Constitution, the Anthony amendment.
Letter dated April 18,1873 shows Anthony angry and indignant over the Supreme Court's decision
against Myra Brad well's application to the Illinois Bar. Mrs. Blackwell had obviously written Anthony
about her case before the Supreme Court. She says, "I am fired to white heat", Then she asks Mrs.
Bradwell for support — to write and to come to the May 6 suffrage meeting in NY. She adds, "Our
convention will pour hot shot into that old Court Again, she asks for Mrs. Bradwell's presence,
especially in Rochester to, "see our trial through the following week...". Now she is referring to her
(Anthony's) court case. Anthony at her indignant best!
Letter dated July 20, 1873, is, perhaps, the most extraordinary letter in the lot. After thanking Mrs.
Bradwell for the copy of Bradwell's publication, Legal News, she notes (indignantly) that she had read
Judge Hunt's opinion and encloses her counsel's) argument, praising him (Mr. Seldon). She adds that she
wished President Grant "had the sense & the honesty to put such a man — such a judge — in the chair of
the Chief Justice. What a spectacle will be either Conklin or Howe?" [In fact, President Grant did
appoint Judge Ward Hunt to the Supreme Court in 1873!] And then her gives her masterful (and most
probably wholly accurate) summation of the character of Judge Hunt, "Hunt is small & pettifogging &
pitiable in his outlandish actions." She goes on to discuss Mrs. Bradwell's case, Bradwell v. Illinois,
adding that she thought Senator Carpenter, gave a "school-boy pettifoggery speech...but still the Courts
are so entirely controlled by prejudice & procedures." She adds, "We have nothing to hope from them but
endorsement of dead men's actions”. She closes with a reference to Mrs. Jones (Jane Elizabeth Hitchcock
Jones, antislavery and woman's rights lecturer, one of the key first generation militants in those causes).
She refers to the Chicago Fire of 1871 saying she has heard nothing from "your Chicagoans — any more
than if you were all dead & buried or burned up."
Letter dated Aug. 20,1881 asking Mrs. Bradwell to give some comfort to Miss Leonard, mentioning the
decision of the Judge in the case of Mary Hall's admission to the bar in Connecticut She follows with
another Anthony salvo, "I hope you will give her all the ammunition you can to fire at those professional
idiots!! ”
Letter dated June 22, 1882 asking Mrs. Bradwell how she likes the first print of her engraving. This
refers to the illustrations that Stanton and Anthony were including in their monumental THE HISTORY
OF WOMEN SUFFRAGE. John Chester Buttre was a renowned engraver whose lifetime work included
nearly 3,000 plates, including Martha Washington, Anthony and Stanton. His portrait of Myra Bradwell
appears in Vol. II, p. 616; where the narrative of her case before the Supreme Court appears. She talks
about her work with regard to the Sixteenth Amendment, but returns to Vol. II of HISTORY OF
WOMAN SUFFRAGE, asking both Mrs. Bradwell and her husband Judge Bradwell to review carefully,
suggesting errors and omissions. The closing reflects the friendship shared by Susan Anthony and Myra
Bradwell. She fondly asks after Bessie Bradwell - Myra's child who eventually would take over her
mother's legal publishing company and continue publication of Legal News.
Letter dated Feb. 14, 1888 concerns Miss Anthony's attempts to secure Mrs. Bradwell's presence and a
speech - "asking you or your brave Bessie to make a 10-minute speech on Women as Lawyers'..." at the
fortieth anniversary celebration of Seneca Falls. Mrs. Bittenbender evidently had volunteered to do this,
but Miss Anthony notes there is still room for you. Ada Matilda Cole Bittenbender was Nebraska's first
woman attorney, a reformer active in the temperance movement as well as women's rights. Again,
Anthony shows herself to be the great organizer and motivator, closing with, "It is a mammoth
undertaking - this of bringing together the women of all lines of work to better themselves & the world.
But if each one will give a little lift we shall tug through splendidly." Her additional postscript is cajoling
and playful,) urging Mrs. Bradwell's attendance.
Letter dated. Feb. 4, 1903 to Judge Bradwell acknowledging receipt of the portrait plate by John Chester
Buttre. The second paragraph is a teasing Anthony, noting that Judge Bradwell, at age 75, is "quite a
young man yet." Anthony was 83, turning 84- just 11 days after the date of this letter. She writes, "Yes
there is nothing for us to do but to 'keep our courage up and face the music.'" She goes on to tell Judge
Bradwell that she is sending her papers to the Library of Congress — four large boxes!. Included will be
one volume of the Legal News. She notes she is sending Vol. IV (HISTORY OF WOMAN
SUFFRAGE) as soon as she gets it, explaining a delay by a fire in the bindery so that all the covers and
part of the printed sheets had to be printed over.
This is a small but extraordinary archive, set against the background of the attempt to secure women's
rights under the Fourteenth Amendment by the two participants of the two key legal suits. Apparently
unpublished.
(2). Emily Duval - British Suffragette Archive. 1909-1916. Plus Family Archive.
An important collection comprising of family photographs, correspondence and government
documents. And an active participant in the British Suffrage movement and the documentation of her
imprisonment and force feeding.
Women were not formally prohibited from voting until the 1832 Reform Act and the 1835
Municipal Corporations Act. It was in 1832 that re-instating women's suffrage became on some level a
political topic, although it would not be until 1872 that it would become a national movement with the
formation of the National Society for Women's Suffrage and later the more influential National Union of
Women's Suffrage Societies. Little victory was achieved in this constitutional campaign in its earlier
years up to around 1905. It was at this point that the militant campaign began with the formation of the
Women's Social and Political Union.
In July, 1909, an imprisoned suffragette, Marion Dunlop, refused to eat Afraid that she might die and
become a martyr, it was decided to release her. Soon afterwards other imprisoned suffragettes adopted
the same strategy. Unwilling to release all the imprisoned suffragettes, the prison authorities force-fed
these women on hunger strike. In one eighteen month period, Emmeline Pankhurst, who was now in her
fifties, endured ten of these hunger-strikes. Kitty Marion was also a leading figure in the WSPU arson
campaign and she was responsible for setting fire to Levetleigh House in Sussex (April 1913), the
Grandstand at Hurst Park racecourse (June 1913) and various houses in Liverpool (August, 1913) and
Manchester (November, 1913). These incidents resulted in a series of further terms of imprisonment
during which force-feeding occurred followed by release under the Cat & Mouse Act It has been
calculated that Kitty Marion endured 200 force-feedings in prison while on hunger strike. Emmeline
Pankhurst's sister, Mary Clarke, was a member of the WSPU in Brighton. Mary was force-fed at
Holloway Prison in December, 1910. Emily Duvall was imprisoned and force-fed during the six weeks
she spent in prison. In 1913 the WSPU increased its campaign to destroy public and private property.
The women responsible were often caught and once in prison they went on hunger-strike. Determined to
avoid these women becoming martyrs, the government introduced the Prisoner's Temporary Discharge
of III Health Act. Suffragettes were now allowed to go on hunger strike but as soon as they became ill
they were released. Once the women had recovered, the police re-arrested them and returned them to
prison where they completed their sentences. This successful means of dealing with hunger strikes
became known as the Cat and Mouse Act.
Items in this archive directly related to the British Suffrage Movement.
Photograph. 3 1/4: x 2 1/4 Black and white photograph of a man standing in front of A fence. Man is
dressed in suit with hat and cane. N.P., N.D. Family.
Photograph. 2 1/5” x 4”. Black and white photograph of two women and a baby. One woman is standing
with her right hand on the back of the chair and the other women is sitting holding a baby in a white
dress. Both women are wearing black dresses and hats. Verso: J.S. Hazard - 6 Pavement Claphan
Commons, London. (Grandmother, Mother, and Child (Emily)|. N.P., N.D. Family.
Postcard. 5 1/5” x 3 1/5”. Black and white photographic postcard of four women and one man. Three
woman are sitting and one woman and the man is standing. The back is addressed to: Mrs. O’Connell 82 Turners Road, Burdell Rd. Bow, [England]. Postmarked May 26,1916.
Postcard. 3 1/5” x 5 1/2”. Black and white photographic postcard of Emily Duval sitting with a white
cap on her head. She looks to be sewing. Verso writing states: “Mrs. Duval who
did 6 weeks in Halloway prison with Lady Constance Lytton who served one month & mentions Mrs
Duval in her book": Prisons and Prisoners London, 1914. N.P., N.D.
Lady Constance Lytton a.k.a: Jane Warton: Heinemann,, London: 1914. A militant suffragette, Lytton
(1869-1923) was a member of the Women's Social and Political Union and was frequently imprisoned
for her activities. As an upper class woman, she received preferential treatment and was released
whenever she went on a hunger strike. She therefore, disguised herself and was arrested as Jane Warton,
a seamstress, being force fed so violently, that she suffered a stroke that partially paralyzed her. British
Suffrage Movement.
Photograph. 4 1/4” x 6 1/5”. Black and white photograph of Emily Duval. As a young girl with her hair
at waist length, standing holding object in her hands. Verso: Charles E. Treble / 270 Lavender Hill London, S.W. Station - Clapham Junction. #22452. British Suffrage Movement.
Photograph. 3 1/2” x 5 1/2”. Black and white photographic postcard of two women. One woman is
sitting and the other is standing on her left Both are wearing hats with feathers. Emily Duval and her
mother. British Suffrage Movement.
Photograph. 2 1/2” x 3 1/2”. Black and white photograph of two women sitting and a man standing
behind him. Photograph is taken outside. Verso: #421. Family.
Photograph. 3 1/4” x 4”. Black and white photograph of a young lady standing in front of a bush. Emily
Duval as a teenager. British Suffrage Movement.
Photograph. 4 1/4” x 6 1/2”. Black and white photograph of a child standing up In a chair.
Girl has a white dress on. Verso: Miss E.. Duval / 37 Park Road. St Johns Hill- Wandsworth Sh.
Photographer: Charles F. Treble. British Suffrage Movement
Photograph. 4 1/4” x 6 1/2”. Black and white photograph of the head and shoulders of a woman.
Photograph is by American Photo. Co., 29 St. John Road / Clapham Junction S.W. N.D. Family.
Photograph. 3” x 4”. Black and white photograph of a man and woman - man is sitting and is dressed in
a long black jacket and top hat holding a cane. Woman is dressed in a long white coat and bonnet
wearing black gloves. Verso: Photographer: J. White. 32 High Street Littlehampton. England. N.D.
Family.
Photograph. 4 1/2” x 6 1/2”. Black and white photograph of a young lady standing - She is wearing a
long white dress with cap and holding flowers in her hand. She also has flowers in her hair. Verso: Emily
Duval and Barbara Duval. Photographer: American Photographic Co. N.D. British Suffrage Movement
The Women’s Social and Political Union Membership card. Cream colored stock card printed with black
ink. A membership card and application that has been separated at the perforated edges. 2 items. A
separate card stating the Objects, Methods And Membership of WSPU. British Suffrage Movement.
In 1903 a group of former members of the NUWSS in Manchester left to form a new
organization, the Women's Social and Political Union. Led by Emmeline Pankhurst, this new
organization pointed out that it was no longer willing to restrict itself to the constitutional methods
favored by the NUWSS. The National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies also known as the
Suffragists (not to be confused with the suffragettes) was an organization of women's suffrage societies
in the United Kingdom.
Millicent Fawcett, like other members of the NUWSS, feared that the militant actions of the
Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) would alienate potential supporters of women's suffrage.
However, Fawcett and other leaders of the NUWSS admired the courage of the suffragettes and at first
were unwilling to criticize members of the WSPU
The Liberal Party won the 1905 General Election. The NUWSS believed that women would
now be granted equal rights with men. However, this did not happen and although Millicent Fawcett had
always been a Liberal, she became increasing angry at the party's unwillingness to give full support to
women's suffrage. Herbert Asquith became Prime Minister in 1908. Unlike other leading members of the
Liberal Party, Asquith was a strong opponent of votes for women. In 1912 Fawcett and the NUWSS
took the decision to support Labour Party candidates in parliamentary elections. Even at its peak in
1914, the WSPU only had about 2,000 members. The NUWSS was a much larger organization and in
1914 had 500 local branches and over 100,000 members.
Small Collection of British Suffragist Postcards
Postcard. “Rights of Women”. Black and white postcard with woman standing holding A baby in the
street looking at a man in the doorway. Card reads: “Rights of Women, Mother. “Please Mr. Burns, my
baby ain't fit to be vaccinated.” John Burns: “No good for you to come here. Where's your husband?”
Mother. “At Sea”. John Burns: “Well, be off with you - Mother don't Count as parents”. Marked: “For
Sale at Women’s Freedom League Office. 18th Buckingham St., Strand, W.C. London, England. N.D.
Created by The Artists’ Suffrage League. The Artists Suffrage League, formed in 1907, designed
banners for the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies and produced postcards and illustrated
pamphlets to facilitate its campaign. While the Artist's Suffrage League was open to professional artists,
the Atelier (founded in 1909) encouraged non-professionals to submit work. The Atelier was most
closely associated with the Women’s Freedom League and the Women’s Social and Political Union.
Visually great.
Postcard. A Grand Members Concert Cream colored postcard with red and black printed on front: New
Copyright Act. In red ink: “ A Grand members Concert will shortly be given in the House of Commons.
In black ink: Admission by insurance card. Programme: Mr. McKenna, Mr. John Redmond, Mr.
Asquith, Mr. Bonar Law, Sir Rufus Issacs and Mr. Lloyd George., Mr. Winston Churchill and Mr. Kier
Hardie. Not Postmarked. The Printeries. Gorton Lane, Manchester, S.E. N.D. Visually great
Postcard. Result of the Suffragettes. Color postcard of woman standing on top of a stage holding a pair
of pans and suspenders - she is dressed in a black skirt and red jacket with red hat She is talking to a
crowd of women. There is a woman seated at a desk behind her on a stage. The Sign reads” “Great Sale Relics of the Last Man”. Copyright No. 42. H.Q. 92 Burrows Rd. N.W. No. 42. Addressed to: Middie
Maud Williams. N.D. Visually great
Postcard. Mrs. Longtongue on Woman’s Rights. Cream colored postcard with black ink. The text on the
front starts with Mrs. Longtongue, addressing a meeting of the “Blab and Scandal Society,” said “In my
opinion Ladies that the time has arrived when We must buck up and put our foot down on that
insignificant insect called man!” Addressed to Mrs. A. Hunt. The Croft, York Avenue, Hunstanton.
N.D. M & Co. Registered. London, E.C. Visually great. Very rare.
Postcard. Bah Ah Ah. Color postcard of little girl in white and red dress crying in the middle of the
picture - at bottom left is a man and woman walking; top left: man and woman and woman in red dress
skating, top right: man at bar drinking with woman behind the bar - bottom: right boy with thumb up.
Reads: “Balt-ah-ah! Mammy’s Rinking. Sister Linking, Brothers Winking, Ise a thinking. Ise a
Suffragette”. Addressed to: Miss Josephine Wall / One Camden Rd / Dublin, Ireland. Visually great
Postcard. “The Suffragette”. Color postcard of woman in a green suit and black Hat with feather. She is
standing in front men drinking from a glass. Alfred Liebel & Co. Modern Humor Series -#4332 London, England. N.D.
Postcard. “Votes for Women” Black and white photographic postcard of nine Women sitting and
standing. Man dresses as a policeman is standing. All the women are wearing sashes and one women is
holding a banner that reads” “Votes for Women”. Not Postmarked. N.P. [London, England]. N.D.
Historically important
Postcard. Hyde Park Demonstration, Sunday 21, 1908: Mrs. Pankhurst, Mrs. Wolstenholme Elmy.
Photograph of women standing with flag and policeman in front right side. Addressed to: N. Shochel,
Esq. Sunderland, England. Postmarked: Leeds, May 6,1910. Historically important
Postcard. Votes for Women. Black and white photographic postcard of Mrs. E. How- Martyne. ARCS
BS. Hon. Sec. Women’s Freedom League. 1 Robert Street, Adelphia, London, WC. Photograph is oval
shaped. Top reads: “Votes for Women” The London Council of Women’s Freedom League.
Photographer: Ridsdale Cleare, Lower Clafton Rd. N.E. [London, England].
N.D.
Postcard. Mrs. Pankhurst Black and white photograph of Mrs. Pankhurst being arrested in Victoria Street
on Feb. 13, 1908. She is surrounded by police. Addressed To Mrs. Marriott. London, England.
Photographer: Photochrom Company Ltd. London, and Detroit Printed in London. Verso: pencil writing
on back. Historically Important - this image was published throughout the world. Very desirable. Pivotal
event in the History of Women Suffrage.
Postcard. “Comparisons Are Odious. Color postcard with man sitting on left side of table holding a
bottle of liquor and glass. Writing under (I. The male political prisoner - on right is woman sitting with
apron - holding a plate. Writing under (2. The female political prisoner. Valentine’s Series. N.D., N.P.
[London, England]. Gt. Br. Very desirable.
Postcard. “Feeding A Suffragette By Force. Color postcard of woman in red dress Wearing a bib being
feed by a needle-like-plunger with the words: “Milk On The Tube”. She is being held by one man
wearing black and another man is holding the plunger. Woman Is grabbing this man’s hair. The scene
takes place in a prison cell. Addressed to: Miss Morris. National Series. Made in Great Britain. Very
rare.
Postcard. “The Suffragette Proudly Goes to Glory!” Color postcard of woman dressed In red holding a
“Votes For Women” flag in the back of a paddy wagon driven by two policemen. Read: The Suffragette
Proudly Goes to Glory!”. Postmarked: Maida Hill, W. [London], March 16, 1910. Raphael Tuck & Sons.
“Oilette”. The Suffragette Postcard #9498. Very rare.
Postcard. “Women Writers’ Suffrage League”. Color postcard of Woman Justice Standing blind folded
with scales in left hand and sword in right. A halo is around her head- She is dressed in white and gold.
There is a woman at her feet in a pink dress with brown material Draped around her and she is holding
on. Addressed to: Mrs. Bailey Belmont Ramsey- Isle of Man- “Just been to the House of Commons.., ”.
Postmarked: July 21. [Ca. 1910]. W.W.S.L. 53 Goschen Building, 12 Henrietta Street. London, W.C.
[England]. Seldom seen.
Postcard. “Girls I Didn’t Marry”. Color postcard of man being booted out by Women with “Votes for
Women” pins. The signs on the front of the building say: “Man? The Missing Link, Down with the Men,
No Men Admitted, Home for Lost, Stolen or Strayed Suffragettes, Man Disgraces the Animal World.
Addressed to Mrs. E. Reid. Belfast [Northern Ireland]. Addressed to: “Mother”. N.P. N.D. [Ca. 1910].
Postcard. “Yes Madam”, color postcard of a woman in blue dress (looking like a man) Sitting with a
rolled up paper that reads: “Votes for Women”. Man in red vest and black Jacket is standing behind her
with his hand in her hair. Reads: “Yes Madam, by your bump of Perseverance, you will live another
1000 years - you might become prime ministeress!”. Addressed to: Arthur Squires. N.P., N.D. Very rare.
Visually great
Holloway Prison:
The first suffragettes to be sent to prison were Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kenney, in Manchester in
1905. Suffragettes were first sent to Holloway Prison in October 1906. Once inside Holloway
suffragettes were stripped and made to wear dark green dresses with white arrows marking them as
prisoners. (A brooch in the shape of a white arrow was given to suffragettes emerging from prison as a
badge of honor.) Their cells were 5x7 feet big, and they were confined there for 23 hours a day, with half
an hour chapel and half an hour of exercise. They could not speak to one another, and could have no
visits or letters for the first 4 weeks - after which they were allowed one letter, and one visit They were
given knitting and sewing to do, a book about house - keeping, and little else.
Emily Duval spent 6 weeks in Halloway prison with Lady Constance Lytton who served one month and
mentions Emily Duval in her book “Prisons and Prisoners”.
Lady Constance Lytton a.k.a: Jane Warton: Heinemann, London: 1914. A militant suffragette, Lytton
(1869-1923) was a member of the Women's Social and Political Union and was frequently imprisoned
for her activities. As an upper class woman, she received preferential treatment and was released
whenever she went on a hunger strike. She therefore, disguised herself and was arrested as Jane Warton,
a seamstress, being force fed so violently, that she suffered a stroke that partially paralyzed her.
Emily Duval Statement to the Women’s Social & Political Union after her Release from Holloway
Prison. June 30th 1912. 7 pages. Legal size paper. The Women’s Social & Political Union, 97 John
Bright Street, Birmingham. Contemporary copy of a typed Report of Emily Duval’s verbatim report of
her treatment during her 6 months imprisonment in H.R. [Her Majesty’s] Prison, Winson Green,
Birmingham, for the part she took in the militant Action of the W.S.P.U. on March 1st, 1912.
Emily Duval Statement to the Women’s Social & Political Union after her Release from Holloway
Prison. June 30th 1912. First paper of above statement.
Printed Document State Inebriate Reformatories Dietary. Single sided - Copy of food for prison meals Reads: Dietary, Ordinary Class. Daily - Cocoa, with bread - Dinner - Sunday - Bread, potatoes, fat bacon
and beans. Tuesday- Bread, potatoes. Wednesday - Bread, potatoes, Cooked meat (beef)- Thursday Bread, potatoes, soup, cheese 2oz. Friday - Bread, potatoes, Cook meat Saturday - Bread, potatoes,
cooked meat (mutton). Supper and Tea List - Daily - Butter or Margarine. Supper and Tea List - Daily Tea, with bread. Oatmeal gruel At bedtime to those who wish it Historical document.
Printed Document Abstract of the Regulations Relating to the Treatment and Conduct of Convicted
Prisoners. 2 pages. N.P., N.D. Birmingham, England, 1906. Copy of the regulations of how prisoners are
treated. The list contains reasons on the first page With a set of sub numbers totally another 23
regulations included in Number 11. On the 2nd Page continues with Number 12 and its 2 additional
regulations and ends with Numbers 13 & 14. [Sample of rules from list: 1). Prisoners shall preserve
silence. 2). They shall not communicate, or attempt to do so, with one another, or with any Strangers or
others who may visit the Prison. 6). A prisoner may, if required for purposes of justice, be photographed
and measured On reception and subsequently. Etc. Etc. Historical document.
Printed Document. The Kings Chapel of the Savoy - Service for Victor Duval. 4 pages. 5 1/4” x 8 1/4”.
Cream colored paper folded in half. Victor Duval Memorial Service held November 8th, 1945. - The
King’s Chapel of the Savoy - Victor Duval - March 16th 1885 - October 4th, 1945. Victor Duval was the
father of Emily Duval.
Printed Document. Newspaper article of the Memorial Service of Mr. Victor Duval. “The Late Mr.
Victor Duval - November 1945. The John O’Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster Chapel, Of the King’s Chapel,
Savoy, Strand. London was the scene of an impressive memorial Service held last week for the late Mr.
Victor Duval of Lancaster, who died October 4, 1945.
Duplicate of above.
Magazine: The Vote: November 14th 1924. One Penny. The Organ of The Women’s Freedom League.
Non-Party Vol XXV. No. 786. Friday 14, 1924. Lead article Is a story on Mrs. Emily Duval by Margaret
Wynne Nevinson, J. P. L.L.A. A marvelous in-depth article on the participation of Emily Duval as a
member of the Women’s Freedom League:
“Many of us remember with an ache of the throat even to this day, how many Rowdy meeting
we addressed in South London Parks and street comers, and the personal Violence with which our
gospel was received, but she [Emily Duval] as organizer, never Failed, nor faltered nor wearied in well
doing.
Later, February 13th, 1909, Mrs. Duval was again arrested for doing absolutely Nothing, and received,
six weeks, second division, on the charge of “creating an obstruction ”...
Mrs. Duval's son and four daughters also went to goal and later, Mrs. Duval joined in the Windowsmashing campaign of the Women s Social and Political Union, received a long Sentence, and went
through the horrors of the hunger strike and forcible feeding
The banner of the Women's Freedom League covered her coffin, and the yellow And white
chrysanthemums were conspicuous in the many wreaths brought by friends And old Comrades”.
Photograph. 4” x 3 1/2”. Black and white photograph of Emily Duval. Sitting on beach with her dog.
Photographer: Elliott V. Fry, 55 Baker Street, London. W. [England]. Front cover has the word “Novah”
written in ink.
Fragment 4” x 2” Cream colored paper which reads: "Mrs. Despards - friend - Miss Mausell...” With
miscellaneous words and numbers. Found in envelope.
Genealogy. The Duval Family and its branches - Written by Victor Duval - Father of Emily Duval.
Cream colored paper written on both sides. “1858- I was born in Mayence on The Rhine in my
parentage is Alasaton, so I was at once registered as a French Citizen. Curiously from boyhood I had a
wish to go to England, which in time became an obsession.... ”
Genealogy. The Duval Family and its branches. - Written by Victor Duval - Father Of Emily Duval. 5
pages - double sided. . Cream colored paper written on both sides. 1858- I was born in Mayence on The
Rhine in my parentage is Alasaton, so I was at once registered as a French Citizen. Curiously from
boyhood I had a wish to go to England, which in time became an obsession.... ” A much more detailed
and elaborate family record.
Genealogy. The Duval Family and its branches. - Written by Victor Duval - Father of Emily Duval.
Typed 4 pages - double sided. . Cream colored paper written on both sides.
1858-I was born in Mayence on The Rhine in my parentage is Alasaton, so I was at once registered as a
French Citizen. Curiously from boyhood I had a wish to go to England, which in time became an
obsession.... ". Includes tales about Mr. George Ash and Mr. Duval’s Interviews for a job at Mr. Ash’s
company. Number #4 written in upper right corner.
Genealogy. The Duval Family and its branches. - Written by Victor Duval - Father Of Emily Duval.
TYPED 4 pages - double sided. . Cream colored paper written on both sides.
1858- I was born in Mayence on The Rhine in my parentage is Alasaton, so I was at once registered as a
French Citizen. Curiously from boyhood I had a wish to go to England, which in time became an
obsession....". Includes tales about Mr. George Ash and Mr. Duval's Interviews for a job at Mr. Ash's
company. Number #4 written in upper right corner. Duplicate of #1071.
[Fragment]. One sided page. Part of the Inventory sheet containing hand-written notes regarding this
collection.
[Fragment]. Right half sheet of list of names. Names listed for a dinner party- Seating arrangements. Mr.
& Mrs. Duval are listed. N.D., N.P/
Duplicate of above.
[Letter]. Copy of part of a letter from unidentified sender to Mrs. Duval. May 12, 1891.
[Letter]. Copy of part of a letter from unidentified sender to Mrs. Duval. “My Dead Mrs. Duval, Your
son Victor is spending the weekend with us and he has been Telling me about this long illness form
which you have been suffering for so long. I had Just realized my dear friend that you had been ill like
this, and I need to try to tell you How very sorry I am to have learn't of this.... "
[Cartoons]. Black and white copies of two pictures. One is a man standing with a roll in his left hand that
says: “Petition Votes for Women. The man has his hand over His mouth. Reads: Male Suffragist Bravo!!! Keep on
Whistling - Young Man, you fill My heart with joy as Women's votes your advocates. So when you want to take a wife I'll not decline to be your mate.". Other cartoon is a man carrying a woman wearing a big Hat. Reads: “She like this
sort of things to pet. That's why she is a Suffragette".
[Manuscript List]. Copy of a list of books pertaining to the Suffragettes. (18). A primer and guide for the
Suffragettes to study and follow by example. Beginning with “Letters of Constance Lytton by Betty
Balfour. 1925” and ending with Sir Almroth E. Wrights ‘The Unexpurgated Case against Woman
Suffrage. London, 1913. A very primary source for students and scholars to learn about the books that
influenced The pro and cons of British suffragettes.
[Note]. Autograph note signed [Unidentified]. To Mrs. Duval. Sender lived at Broadway Street, London,
W.I. December 30, 1938. Thank you note. Family.
[Note]. Autograph note signed [Unidentified]. To Mrs. Duval. Sender lived at Broad Street, Golden
Square. London, W.I. March 3, 1921. Thank you note. Family.
[Duval Family Genealogy ]. Autograph manuscript unsigned. Listing the Family members. No Place, No
date. Family,
[Letter]. Typed Letter Signed. Written on cream colored paper of the Secretary of the State Department
Any further communication on the subject of this letter should be addressed to: The Under Secretary of
State Home Office / London, S.W. England. April 6, 1904. Regarding a statement of the names and
nationality of your parents in your Memorial for a Certificate of Naturalization. Family.
[Document]. Naturalization of Alien. Document of Certificate of Naturalization to an Alien. No. 14577
given to Ernest Charles Augustus Diederichs Duval residing at 97 Lavender - Battersea in the County of
London. Mr. Duval having been born at Mayence of the age of 46 years as a foreign correspondent
Regarding a statement of the names and nationality of your parents in your Memorial for a Certificate of
Naturalization. Family.
[Document]. Drederichs Duval. Burial Certificate. 1 page. Printed on cream one sided paper. Modern
Cemetery - Battersea Borough - Council Edwin Austin, Town Clerk- Paid six pounds chillily's. Do
hereby grant this 25th day of March 1925, Unto the grantee the exclusive right of Burial of ground six
feet six inches in length and Two feet six inches in breadth. Family.
[Document]. Drederichs Duval. Burial Certificate. 1 page. Printed on cream one sided paper. Modern
Cemetery - Battersea Borough - Council Edwin Austin, Town Clerk, Paid six pounds chillily's. Do
hereby grant this 25th day of March 1925, Unto the grantee the exclusive right of Burial of ground six
feet six inches in length and Two feet six inches in breadth.
[Ephemera]. Envelope addressed to E. Duval Esq. at One Ash Melrose Road West Battersea Essex,
England. N.D. Family.
Mrs. Emily Duval and the Duval Family Archive: Ca.1890’s to 1925. Additional Information. 2nd
Generation of Activists:
Elsie Duval was born in 1892, the daughter of suffragists
Ernest and Emily Duval. She
joined the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) in 1907, the year after her mother.Unlike her
mother, however, she did not leave the organization to join the Women's Freedom League when the
Pankhursts changed the constitution, but the mother and daughter did work together for three years in the
Men's Political Union for Women's Enfranchisement which Victor Duval, Elsie's brother, founded. Elsie
Duval was arrested on the 23rd November 1911 for obstructing the police. After this event, she was
officially accepted by the WSPU as a militant protest volunteer. In July 912, she was arrested once more
for the smashing of a Clapham Post Office window. She was imprisoned for one month, during which
time she was force fed nine times before being released on the 3rd August. She was arrested Elsie Duval
gain in April of the following year for loitering with intent and was again sent to prison for a month. The
cases of force feeding which she underwent this time were recorded in her diary. She was the first
suffragette prisoner to be released under the 'Cat and Mouse' Act, as the Prisoner's Temporary Discharge
for Illness Act was commonly known and which allowed for their return to prison on recovery. She
narrowly avoided arrest on her final release, as a case was being prepared against her for burning houses
and stations, acts for which her colleague Olive Beamish was imprisoned for five years. Instead, she and
her fiancé Hugh Franklin left for France to avoid the re-imprisonment that her terms of temporary
release had demanded. She spent several months working as 'Eveline Dukes' in Germany, Belgium and
Switzerland armed with false testimonials provided by friends. She was only able to return to Britain at
the outbreak of World War One when a general amnesty was granted to suffragettes. After this she
became active in the war work of the WSPU. She and Hugh Franklin were finally married in the London
Synagogue in September 1915. Two years later, she joined the Pankhursts' Women's Party, but died on
the 1st January 1919 of heart failure, a victim of the influenza epidemic.
(3). Alberta Martie Hill Suffrage Archive. 1900’s - With Miscellaneous Family material “Woman’s
Suffrage-Votes for Women- Historical Photographic Archive.
Alberta Martie Hill - Life in Photographs. Original photographs.. A recently discovered collection of one
woman who actively participated in the American Suffrage Movement. The first photographs shows
Miss Hill with Harriet Stanton Blatch; another with English Suffragist - Mrs. Pankhurst There are
numerous photographs showing AMH participating in important and pivotal parades; Including the 1913
Washington D.C. Parade; the New York Parade and other rallies. All photographs are identified. The
images size range from 8” x 9 1/2” to 4” x 5 1/2".
Alberta Martie Hill was born into the wealthy family of Alberta Theresa Hill & Marcus Stowe Hill. This
archive includes photographs while she traveled to Australia and Japan with her parents. Miss Hill was
The Executive Secretary of the Women's Political Union. She worked on the First Presidential Election
Campaign for Woodrow Wilson. Photograph shows Miss Hill in the General Office at Wilson
Headquarters working with her colleagues. Another shows Miss Hill’s desk prominently displaying a
photograph of President Wilson. The Women’ Political Union. In 1906, Harriot Stanton Blatch,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s daughter, founded the Equality League of Self- Supporting Women (later the
Women’s Political Union) to organize working-class suffragists, primarily in New York City. In 1910,
they organized the first large-scale suffrage march in the United States, in New York City. Eventually,
the Women's Political Union began working with the National Woman's Party, the new radical wing of
the woman suffrage movement.
AMH = Alberta Martie Hill
[Photograph]. Black and white. Photograph of AMH on the York & Women Trolley. A small crowd of
men of women standing around the trolley.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH standing in front of a wagon with a gentleman. AMH wearing a
summer straw hat and holding a bag.
[Postcard]. Black and white postcard of AHM sitting at her desk. Desk with Phone with vase of flowers
in background. This is at The General Office at Wilson Headquarters where AMH worked.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH dressed in a long black dress wearing an oversized hat standing on
a busy street in front of the Suffrage Headquarters, June 1909. 43 East 22nd Street. New York City.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH walking along a busy street dressed in a long black dress with coat
and oversized hat Wagons in the street.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH dressed in a long black dress wearing an oversized hat standing on
a busy street. Writing on back -the Suffrage Headquarters June 1909. 43 East 22nd Street New York
City.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH at her desk at the National Democratic Head- quarters. AMH is
standing by a table with a pad and pen in her hand. Copyright by the American Press Association.
William J. Hearfield American Press Association.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 8x 10. Headshot of AMH. Verso: Alberta Hall - W.J. Hearfield American Press Association - Copyright by American Press Association.
[Photograph].Black and white. 6”x 8”. AMH with here hair down in a corn field with a another women
bending down. Verso: 'Mother at B. S.I. [Staten Island]. With stamp of Underwood and Underwood,
New York.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 6” x 8”. AMH skipping rope - her hair flowing down. Photograph as a
paper attached at bottom which reads: Look for our for your credit notice when you publish this picture Photograph by Underwood and Underwood, New York. Verso: Alberta Hills and Suffragette Friend Enjoying Walks...Staten Island - Alberta Hill enjoys walks in the Dew at Staten Island - Miss Hill
skipping rope.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 6”x8”. AMH skipping rope - verso: Mother In Staten Island for ‘country
air’.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 6” x 8”.AMH riding a horse in Suffrage Parade 3/13/13. Verso: The
Washington Parade - Stamped ‘Please credit the Bain News-New York.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 6” X 8”. AMH riding a black horse. AMH wearing a long black dress
with ‘suffrage' sash - straw hat. Embossed stamp: Underwood and Underwood. New York. Verso: "Ann
Hill".
[Photograph].Black and white. 7” X 9”. AMH with Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatch. AMH is holding a book.
Verso: List of names.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 6” x 8”. AMH with a woman holding a white folding umbrellas. Verso:
AMH with an British Suffragette [Mrs. Pankhurst].
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH in white dress with oversized hat Writing On front identifying
AMH. Verso: Stamp: Please credit the Bain News Service from George S. Bain. 82 Union Square East New York.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 7” x 9”. Headshot of AMH on horse. Verso: AMH New York Parade.
Stamp: Photographed by Underwood & Underwood.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 8” x 10”. AMH standing in front of a group of men holding the bottom
of a ‘suffrage’ banner - AMH is wearing sash: “Votes for Women”. - Verso: AMH at a rally.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 8” x 10”. AMH sitting on a black horse with white sash across her. New
York Parade. Verso: Embossed stamp: Photograph by Underwood And Underwood -12 & 14 West 37th
Street. New York. AMH.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH in office with several women sitting at tables. National Democratic
Headquarters. Verso: AMH at her office.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 6” x 8”. AMH sitting on a rock with her hair down. Verso: “Mother in
Staten Island”. Stamp: Photograph by Underwood & Underwood.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH with two other women seated at her desk at the National
Democratic Headquarters. Verso Wallace: 442 West 28th St, New York.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Mr. & Mrs. Marcus Stowe Hill. Stamped at the bottom: Instantaneous
Portrait - 496 Georg Street - Sydney. Verso: Mr. & Mrs. Marcus Stowe Hill [Photograph]. Black and white. Unidentified Woman. Head and waist shot. Embossed with writing:
Copyright Davis & Sanford - New York.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 8”xl0”. Mr. Hill’s office. Stamped: Mitchell & Co., 236 George Street,
Sydney [Australia]. Two doors from Bridge Street. Verso: Mr. Hill- 6 Bridge Street. Office of Marcus
Stowe Hill.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Wedding picture with groom, bride and young girl [AMH]. Young boy
and man in front of porch of house. Stamp: S. Tchitda, Kobe, Japan.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Class photograph. Embossed stamp: S. Tohida, Kobe, Japan. Verso:
AMH in a Norwegian costume.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Class photograph. Embossed: S. Tohida, Kobe, Japan. Verso: Ralph
DeWitt Hill behind an unidentified sailor and AMH wearing a cap.
[Photograph].Black and white. Class photograph. Embossed: S. Tohida, Kobe, Japan. Children on front
porch. Verso: Ralph DeWitt Hill as ‘L’Aiglin’. AMH dressed as a Shepherdess.
[Photograph].Black and white. Children & Adults photographed together. Embossed: S. Todhida, Kobe,
Japan. Verso: AMH.
[Photograph].Black and white. Class photograph of boys and girls. Embossed: S. Todhida, Kobe, Japan.
Verso: Ralph DeWitt Hitt.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 11”x14”. “Governor Woodrow Wilson. What he Says About Them - R.H. Rose &
Son, of Princeton, New Jersey, have an excellent photograph of me which I commend as having my cordial
endorsement. Woodrow Wilson ” Price list - R.H. Rose & Son. Princeton, New Jersey. Original frame. Small flaw in
photograph.
[Postcard]. Black and white. AMH standing with her arm resting on the back of a chair. Word “Lovely”
written on front. Verso: AMH.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Passport photograph of Alberta Teresa Hill. Alberta Hill Smith with
Harrell and Dorothy.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 4” x 6”. Alberta Hill at Long Island. Sitting in the sand dunes.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Alberta Teresa Hill in a white dress holding an umbrella. Embossed: T.
Schida. Photographer, Kobe, Japan. Verso: Alberta Teresa Hill.
[Postcard]. Black and white postcard of AMH, Marcus Stowe Hill and Ralph Stowe Hill. Postcard
trimmed.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH sitting in a chair with her arm resting on the back of a chair.
Embossed stamp: Miller. Verso: Return to Miss Alberta M. Hill, 46 East 29th St., New York City.
“Mother dear, Does this look like your loving daughter? Martie, ” Small pencil marking in photograph.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH sitting in a chair with her arm resting on the back of the chair.
Embossed: Miller. Verso: AMH.
[Postcard]. Black and white. AMH in black dress reaching her ankles. Verso: Name And Address.
August 1, 1909. Not postmarked.
[Postcard]. Black and white. AMH sitting in scoped chair in a white dress wearing an oversized hat
Embossed: Schere, New York. Verso: Name on back. Not sent.
[Postcard].Black and white. AMH sitting in scoped chair in a white dress wearing and oversized hat
Embossed: Schere, New York. Verso: AMH -Name on back. Not sent.
[Postcard]. Black and white, sitting in scoped chair in a white dress wearing an oversized hat Embossed:
Schere, New York. Verso: Name on back. Not sent
[Postcard]. Blue tinted postcard of 6 people wearing bathing suits. AMH in center [?]. Verso: Alberta
Hill - New York City. Come Early and Stay late. J.C. 2236 Seventh Avenue. Postmarked: Rockaway
Beach Station. New York. August 25,1910. 6:30pm.
[Postcard].Black and white. AMH, with her father and brother. Mr. Hill sitting in chair
with Alberta sitting on the arm of chair with Ralph standing. Verso: Names written back. Embossed:
[Postcard].Black and white. AMH side view of head with shoulders facing front. Verso:
“Send out to Lucia Oliviere, 154 Albany St., Schenectady N.Y. 20817.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 5” x 7”. AMH side view with shoulders facing front. Leaning over door
with watch on left arm. Glued to cardboard.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH in coat with fur petting a dog. (Picture has been trimmed to show
only AMH.) Verso; Alberta Hill Executive Secretary of Women’s Political Union.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH in coat with fur petting dog. Picture has been scanned to larger
size. Verso: Name on back.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Alberta Smith at Avon. Verso: Illegible writing. Mounted on cardboard.
[Photograph]. Black and white. The Hill Family. Children in rickshaw. Parents standing with an
unidentified man at front. Verso: The Hill Family in Kobe, ca. 1902. Photograph Co.: K. Tamamura,
Kobe, Japan.
[Photograph].Black and white. AMH standing at a dressing table looking At a jewelry box. Verso
writing: Martie Hill, March 2nd, 1902. Kobe, Photograph Co.: K. Tamamura, Kobe, Japan.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH with brother, Ralph Hill standing. AMH wearing a sailor dress.
Ralph wearing a suit. They are holding hands and Ralph has his head on her shoulder. Verso: AMH &
her brother, Ralph DeWitt Hill. Photographer: Whigham, 22 Kearny St San Francisco, Ca., August
15,1900.
[Photograph].Black and white. AMH with brother Ralph. Ralph is sitting in a cane chair and Martie is
standing. AMH is wearing a sailor dress and Ralph is wearing a suit Verso: Martie and Ralph in San
Francisco, August 15,1900. Kobe, Japan. Mother and Father Marcus Stowe & Alberta Theresa Hill. Sept.
1900. Photographer: Whigham, 22 Kearney St., San Francisco, Ca.
[Photograph].Black and white.AMH as a baby. Wearing a bonnet and lace collar. Verso: AMH.
Photographer:Falk, Sydney.
[Photograph].Black and white.Child and woman walking up a snow bank. Woman is pulling a sled.
Verso: St. James L.I. Winter of 1904 & Spring of 05.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH as a toddler in dress with bonnet with big bow-standing. Verso:
Hill by 7729.4.29. AMH. Photographer: Stewart & Co., 42 Bourke St. Melbourne: Falk, 496 George
Street, Sydney marked as proof.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH as a toddler wearing a dress wearing black socks sitting in a chair.
Verso writing: 6044 Hill- Alberta Martie Hill. Photographer: Falk, 496 George Street, Sydney - marked
as a ‘proof'.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH as a baby with her parents. Showing the shoulders and head.
Photographer: J.W. Taylor, Rochester, New York.
[Photograph].Black and white. Woodrow Wilson Office. Two women sitting at their typewriters, other
women sitting at desks, two men at desk and two men standing. Verso: General Office Wilson
Headquarters. Photographer: The International New Service, 200 William Street, New York. This
photograph to be returned at once - if not available. If used, proper credit to be given. Syndicating
prohibited. Small tear in image.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH standing at dressing table with mirror, looking at Camera. Verso:
Martie Hill, March 2nd 1902. Kobe. Photographer: K. Tamamura, Kobe, Japan. Mounted on cardboard.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH standing at dressing table with mirror, looking at Camera.
Verso: Martie Hill, March 2nd 1902. Kobe. Photographer: K. Tamamura, Kobe, Japan. Oversized
mounted on cardboard.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH and brother Ralph. Ralph is sitting in a cane chair with Martie is
standing. Martie is in a sailor dress and Ralph in a suit Verso writing: “Marie and Ralph in San
Francisco, August 15,1900. Kobe, Japan. Mother & Father. Sept. 2nd 1900. Photographer: Whigham 22
Kearney Street San Francisco, Ca. Oversized picture mounted on cardboard.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH and brother Ralph. Ralph is sitting in a cane chair with Martie is
standing. Martie is in a sailor dress and Ralph in a suit Photographer: Whigham, 22 Kearney St San
Francisco, Ca. Mounted on cardboard.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH head shot showing AMH wearing oversized hat Verso writing:
AMH.
[Postcard]. Black and white. Woman standing and woman sitting. Writing on front: "Mrs. Hill, We
would like to join you but we bet our last dollar on Hearst - Two Huzzy's". Addressed to Mrs. Alberta
Hill, # 206 West 120 Street, New York City. Not postmarked.
[Postcard]. Black and white. The starting point of the Suffragette's parade coming up Pennsylvania
Avenue. March 3,1913 Washington D.C. AMH riding a horse at front of Parade. Published By: I & M
Otttenheimer, Baltimore, Md. Not postmarked.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH on horseback. Photographer: Underwood and Underwood, New
York. Picture was on front of postcard trimmed down to an oval size.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH sitting on horseback. March 3,1913. Suffragette Parade.
Photographer: Underwood and Underwood, New York.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH sitting on horseback. Close up image of March 3, 1913.
Suffragette Parade. Photographer: Underwood and Underwood, New York.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH sitting on horseback. - close up photograph. AMH wearing sash
“Votes for Women" March 3,1913. Suffragette Parade. Verso: AMH New York Parade, 1915 [?].
Photographer: Underwood & Underwood, New York.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH standing - close up photograph. Unusual size. Verso: Photograph
by Earl Von Hay. The Globe.
[Photograph]. Black and white. AMH in a long evening gown. Writing on front illegible. Mounted on
cardboard.
[Photograph]. Black and white. A Studio photograph of AMH in a dress. Background of outdoor theme.
In original frame. Verso: AMH. Stamped: Bernstein's Art Gallery. 2128 7th Avenue, New York, near,
126th Street
[Photograph]. Black and white. 8" x 10" Woman looking down at photograph. Woman is wearing a long
dress sitting on bench. Photographer: Davis & Sanford, New York. This picture was found in a folder of
Woodward girls' photographs.
[Photograph]. Black and white. 8” x 10”. Nina Woodward. Close up shot. Photographer: Davis &
Sanford, New York. This picture was found in a folder of Woodward girls' photographs.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Molly Woodward standing - wearing a long dress holding a book upside-down. Leighton Masterpieces in color. Photographer: Davis & Sanford, New York. This picture was
found in a folder of Woodward girls’ photographs.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Molly Woodward standing - wearing dress and bonnet Verso: Molly
Woodward. Photographer: Davis & Sanford, New York. This picture was found in a folder of Woodward
girls’ photographs.
[Photograph]. Black and white. Nina & Molly Woodward with other young girls. Sitting. Picture
identified as Nina and Molly Woodward. Front cover of folder says: M & O Hammer, 44 Ocean Avenue,
Arrochar, Staten Island, New York
Mr. Frank Smith. Typed letter signed. Written on the stationary of Factory Products Corporation
Stationary. April 1st, 1921. “ My dear Mr. Smith; Your formal resignation as Vice President of Factory
Products Corporation through inadvertence did not come up at the meeting before the annual
stockholders’ meeting, your term in office, together with those of the other officers, automatically
expired at that time in accordance with the By-Laws, and your resignation is filed with the minutes of
that meeting. With the kindest regards, I am, Factory Products Corporation /
J.W. Dub Gauld, Secretary.”
[Newspaper clippings]. Burrelle’s Press Clipping Bureau. Monday, January 26,1914. “Suff” Flag-Bearer
Parading in White Gown That Won Her Fame. Photograph of Mrs. Herbert Carpenter. Photographed by:
Underwood & Underwood. Article: Hike on State for Suffrage- Girls In White Gowns march Up Fifth
Avenue and Then Turn Semi-Thespians - Mentions AMH As one of the lead marchers.
[Envelope]. Containing drawings by Dorothy Hill [AMH’s daughter] Pencil notations: Dorothy Smith
saved by her mother AMH who suffered under the illusion that we had talent Dorothy’s Son [?] might
someday find them fun for his children.
[Colored Pencil Drawing|. Dorothy Smith. 8” x 10” May, 1930.
[Colored Pencil Drawing]. Dorothy Smith. 8” x 10”. No date.
[Pencil Drawing]. Dorothy Smith. Drawing of baker holding pan of food. 1929.
[Pencil Drawing]. Dorothy Smith. Drawing of woman’s profiles. No date.
[Colored Pencil Drawing]. Dorothy Smith. 8” x 10” Drawing of lilies. No date.
[Colored Pencil Drawing]. Dorothy Smith. 8” x 10” Drawing of lilies. No date.
[Colored Pencil Drawing]. Dorothy Smith. 8” x 10” Drawing of buttercups. No date.
[Painting]. Dorothy Smith. Dog Eating Out of Bowl. No date.
[Pencil Drawing]. Dorothy Smith. Drawing of flower. No date.
[Pencil Colored Pencil Drawing] Dorothy Smith. Drawing of pansies. No date.
[Pencil Drawing]. Dorothy Smith. 8” x 10”. Drawing of flowers. No date.
[Colored Pencil Drawing]. 8”xl0”. Drawing of Buttercups. May, 1930.
[Colored Pencil Drawing]. 8” x 10” Drawing of flowers. No date.[Pencil Drawing]. 8” x 10”. Drawing.
April 1930.
[Book]. “ War in the East! Peace in the West “Thank God for Wilson!” The Democratic Text-Book,
1914. Issued by The Democratic Congressional Committee - The Democratic National Committee- Price
25 cents - Picture of Woodrow Wilson on front and picture of Thos. R, Marshall on back - stamped;
AMH.
4. N.O.W. West Point ‘8’Series.
West Point first accepted women as Cadets in 1976, when Congress authorized the admission of women
to all of the federal service academies. The first class with female cadets graduated in 1980.
[N.O.W-WEST POINT ‘8’]. Black and white photograph of women. LHD in center front. Ca. 1970.
West Point N.O.W. Photographs found in Bonnie Peterson's Washington, D.C. apartment after her death
while in San Francisco in the 1990s. These photographs were found and mailed to LHD by Ann
Bachman.
[Card]. Card written to Lucy and Stephen from Ann Concerning pictures from BP’s albums.
[List]. List of BP’s family and friends. 8 54 x 11 sheet Ca. 1970.
[Photograph]. Black and white photograph of four women standing in walkway to stone Building. LHD
second from the right. 3 1/2 x 5 1/4.
[Photograph]. Black and white photograph of two women standing in walkway to stone Building. LHD
on right
Moers, Ellen. Literary Women. The Great Writers. New York, Doubleday & Co., 1976. Presentation
copy from N.O.W. members to LHD - With LHD bookplate and seal.
The National Organization for Women was formed on June 30, 1966, during the Third National
Conference of Commissions on the Status of Women in Washington, D.C. The statement of purpose
declares that "the time has cometh to confront, with concrete action, the conditions that now prevent
women from enjoying the equality of opportunity and freedom of choice which is their right, as
individual Americans, and as human beings." The New York State Chapter of the National Organization
for Women, the first state chapter to be chartered in the United States, was founded on February 6, 1967.
Lucy Hargrett Draper’s Papers provides the untold history of the acceptance of women at West Point.
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
Postcards, Woman’s Suffrage, U.S.
Selling Suffrage: In 1909, at the height of the woman suffrage controversy and During the golden
age of postcards. These postcard images reflect, and depart from, verbal arguments concerning woman
suffrage prevalent during this period. They reflect Arguments against suffrage that highlighted the
coarsening effect the vote would have on women. The postcards also present an argument that was absent
in the verbal discourse surrounding suffrage: that men (and the nation) would become feminized by
woman suffrage. Accordingly, these postcards offer a productive location in which to explore how the
icons of the Madonna and Uncle Sam, as well as non-iconic images of women, were deployed to reiterate
the disciplinary norms of the ideographs of <woman> and <man>. Postcards in individual collections
are listed within those collections.
[Postcard]. Worldwide Policing: A Woman's Affair. Policeman European —Network of
Policewomen. White and black print with red arrow. N.D.
1.
[Postcard]. I Should Worry- Become A Suffragette and Get Run In. Color postcard of woman
being taken by policeman- woman wearing green skirt and red checked jacket and hat with sash: VOTES
FOR WOMEN. N.D.
2.
3.
[Postcard]. Votes for Women. Black and white picture postcard of two women holding up sign:
VOTES FOR WOMEN. Showing women in long dresses and hats. N.D.
4.
[Postcard]. Votes Fur Women. The Great Question Today Is-Will You Not Be My Sweetheart.
Color postcard of girl in sailor suit waving - standing in front of table beside a sign: VOTES FUR
VIMMEN. Writing on front: The Great Question To-day - Is Will You Or Will You Not Be My
Sweetheart. T.P & Co., New York, 1914. Series 895.
5.
[Postcard]. Don't Monkey With Woman’s Rights. Color postcard of A Father- monkey holding a
crying baby monkey while trying to give a bottle to another baby monkey in the crib. Writing on card:
“Don’t Monkey With “ Women Rights" - Or You Might Find Yourself Doing Something Like This”.
Addressed to Mr. Lyle Ward. Griffin, Ohio. “Hope you are well and enjoying yourselves this summer with best wishes to all H.” Postmarked: New Castle, Sept 21,1911. Co. Pr. E. Nash., 1910. Card is
embossed. Monkey Series #24.
[Postcard]. If You Love your Wife and Much Less, Your Life. Color postcard of women sitting
on man on the ground - she is holding a rolling pin in right hand, green chair is knocked over with a dog
is watching. Writing on front: “If You Love Your Wife Get Out and Get Under” - A sign on the wall
reads: “Bless Our Home and Flag: Votes for Women”. Postmarked: Medway, Mass. Dec. 9,1914. |Publ.|
Berman, New York, 1914.
6.
[Postcard]. Mother's Got The Habit Now. Color postcard of women baby in cradle with man
rocking the baby, record player in background. Women in red jacket orange pants with pink dots, top hat,
holding umbrella and sash with : “VOTES FOR WOMEN”. Woman is smoking a cigar. Series A-51-9.
Ca. 1912.
7.
[Postcard].VOTES FOR WOMEN! Color postcard of young girl writing on black board - The girl
is wearing a dress with a big bow in the back and a hat with a big bow, doll carriage and doll laying on
ground. Blackboard reads: ‘Give Us Our Rite’ -‘Votes For Women‘. Picture of stick man hanging with
men pointing with arrow to man. GD & D. London &.N.Y.
8.
9.
[Postcard]. We Demand An Amendment to The Constitution Parade. Black and white postcard of
horse drawn float in parade. Float says: “We Demand an Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States Enfranchising The Women Of This Country”. Card reads: “Amendment Float - Suffragettes
Parade - March 3,1913. Washington, D.C.” Baltimore, Md., I & M. Ottenheimer. Not postmarked. U.S.
10.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette Studentess. Color postcard of women sitting with feet up on table
smoking a pipe. Wall poster of man in top hat reads: Gaiety Theatre. Two flags (Purple and Green)
crossed on wall being held together by a purple ribbon. Smoke from pipe shows rings floating - books on
table: “How To Be A Man” - writing on front bottom: “I wanter be a Man!!!!” Walter Wellman, 1909.
[Postcard]. The Incredible Shrinking Woman’s Right to Choose. Color postcard representing a
movie poster. Writing on front: “Opening in State Legislatures Nationwide! The Incredible Shrinking
Woman’s Rights to Choose and She Thought It Was Her Body - A Regan/Rehnquist Production Starring
The Gang of Five, Boy George, Bush and A Cast of Millions Unwanted Children Featuring The Hit
Song: “She’s Having My Baby”. Rate PG-Papal Guidance Suggested”. Printed on back where stamp
would go shows a person running with briefcase, head is a set of teeth with a carrot dangling out front “US Male“. Not postmarked. P. Matt Wuerker, 1990. U.S.
11.
12.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette. Color postcard showing woman in long gown holding a sword- She
is wearing a purple dress with green trim, green gloves, big hair and green hat - writing on front:
“Generaless of the Army. If You Were The Enemy, Would You Fall For This? Published by Walter
Wellman, 1909.
13.
[Postcard]. Votes For Women. Color post card in green and purple. Women wearing purple
dress and green hat holding a poster: VOTES FOR WOMEN. N.D.,N.P. U.S.
14.
[Postcard]. “Life’s Little Tragedies”. Color postcard of three acts - women in red dress with
oversized hat holding umbrella and man walking behind with cane and top hat - wind is blowing- First
act word is Blow - Second act work is O.....! And the Third Act word is WOE with women hitting man
over the head with umbrella. Addressed to Miss Meta. Walter Wellman Series, 1909.
15.
[Postcard]. Color postcard of New Woman’s Building, Willow Grove Park. Willow Grove Park,
Philadelphia, Pa. Picture of women walking, two buildings with flag. (Showing corner front of building other building shows full front view). Description on back: New Woman’s Building, Willow GrovePark,
For the Exclusive Comfort of Women and Small children. Located Opposite the Administration Building.
N.D.,N.P. U.S.
16.
[Postcard]. Equal Rights Association postcard. The New York Tribune says, Editorially, It Takes
A Certain Amount Of Money To Maintain A Human Being, MAN or WOMAN, And It Makes No Real
Difference In The General Scheme Of Economics Who Earns It” “Give A Woman A Man’s Chance Industrially”. Addressed to Assemblyman Frank Wilson, Capital, Albany, New York. One cent stamp.
Common Sense series. 1923.
17.
[Postcard] Do Not Want A Minimum Wage Law - Give A Woman a Man's Chance Industrially.” Postmarked: Feb. 11: 4:30pm, 1923. Addressed to Assemblyman F.A. Wilson, Albany New
York Capital. One Cent stamp. Common Sense Series No. 24,1923.
18.
[Postcard]. Bargain Sale / Reduce Today Only. My Valentine. Color postcard showing children
wearing ribbons with bows in back- One girl in coat - Looking at hearts on table - “I know You’re Not A
bargain, Dear, But I'll Bravely Do My Part, If There’s The Very Slight Chance of Picking Up Your Heart
Addressed to Master Robert Wenger. York) Pa. 1913. Printed in Bavaria by Ernest Nister.
19.
[Postcard]. The Equal Rights Amendment Now Before Congress reads: Equality of Rights
Under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or By An State On Account Of sex”.
Published by the New York State Branch of the National Woman’s Party. New Years Day, 1944.
Message from Jeanette Marks. U.S.
20.
[Postcard]. Them Pesky Suffragettes Want Everything For Themselves”. Color postcard of an
old man with long beard and hat standing at door that says “For Ladies Only”. Addressed to Mr. Ed.
Stoddard, Orange Co., N.Y. 1912. U.S.
21.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette. Color postcard of boy and girl sitting at table with stuffed Animals
having tea, dog in front of book. Artist: Walter Dark. Addressed to Miss Dorothy Rean, Mansfield, Ohio.
Postmarked: Barre, Vt,October 16,7:30pm. 1913. U.S.
22.
[Postcard]. “Nobody Loves Me - How Can I Win Any Votes”. Color postcard of little girl
standing on a box labeled: “Votes Fur Wimmen”. Addressed to Mr. Joe Cartledge. Waterville, CL
Published by T.P. & Co. New York, 1912.
[Postcard]. “My Wife’s Joined the Suffrage Movement - I’ve Suffered Ever Since.
Color postcard of woman standing on kneeling Husband who is cleaning and wearing an apron. Woman
is wearing a yellow Dress with pink dots pointing at her husband. Bamforth & Co., N.Y. Holmfirth,
England, 1910. No. 1240. U.S.
23.
24.
[Postcard]. An Easter Prophecy: When Hens AH Join the Suffrage Ranks, the Bunnies Little
Easter Pranks Will Have To Keep Up Everyday - Or- Else Who Will the Fresh Eggs Lay? Bunnies
presents bouquet of flowers to a hen wearing a bonnet and carrying a sign: “Votes For Women”.
25.
[Postcard]. An Easter Prophecy: When Hens All Join The Suffrage Ranks, the Bunnies ‘Little
Easter Pranks Will Have to Keep Up Every Day -Or Else Who Will the Fresh Eggs Lay?” Color postcard
with raised eggs at bottom. Mother duck with baby and rabbit- Duck is holding a sign: “Votes For
Women”. Made in the U.S. 2nd copy.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette. Black and white postcard of boy and girl sitting at table with stuffed
Animals having tea, dog in front of boy who looks unhappy. Artist. Walter Dark.
26.
27.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette. Black and white postcard of boy and girl sitting at table with stuffed
Animals
having tea, dog in front of boy who looks unhappy. Artist. Walter Dark. New York, 1912. U.S.
nd
2 copy.
28.
[Postcard]. Queen the Poll. Suffragette Series No. 9. Color postcard of woman standing holding a
purse and a cigarette dressed in a long dress oversized With yellow flowers - Ribbon on dress: District
Leaderess - standing next to a red Fire hydrant and pole with signs on it: “Votes for Bill Sykes for Keeper
of the Zoo”, Don’t Vote for Dr. McMoney for Treasurer - Vote For His Wife, she had been Treasurer for
40 years, Vote Children’s Court, Before Voting see Ann Howolde Boodle - Holder of the Committee for
the Emancipation of the Weaker Sex from The other Sex, Jane Dikker for Governess of the Blue-Grass
Widow State Ladies Prove That You Are A Man. Dunston-Weller Lithographic Co., Dunkirk, New York,
1909. Not postmarked. Suffragette Series No. 9
29.
[Postcard]. I Love My Husband, But -Oh, You Vote. Suffragette Series No. 12. Color postcard of
Woman in red dress with black dot wearing an Oversized hat with bows and flowers, carryings a black
purse with gold necklace holding "Official Ballot” -1 Love My Husband, but - Oh You Vote” Not
postmarked. Dunston-Weller Lithographic Co., Dunkirk, New York, 1909.
30.
[Postcard]. Bust of Woman. Black and white postcard of woman. N.Y. 1910. Pencil writing on
back. N.D., N.P. Ca. 1910.
31.
[Postcard]. Are You A Suffragist? Color postcard of old man standing in front of window with
Signs: "Are you a Suffragist? Votes for Women”.- Man in Suit holding an orange bad and umbrella orange vest and a tie. Words say: "Yew jes' bet I am! Suffered from the chills an "fever for forty years!”.
J.M.P. N.D. N.P. U.S.A.
32.
[Postcard]. “Stumping For Votes”. Suffragettes Series 698/12. Color postcard of Women dressed
in red top and tan skirt with black hat with white fan kissing a man with his hat flying off holding a cane
in front of florist window. (1910?) N.Y. U.S.
33.
[Postcard]. Suffragette Madonna-Crop of 1910-Series 698/12. Color postcard of a man dressed
in white shirt, yellow vest and green tie - looking up With gold halo holding a baby (doll) with pink dress
on. Shelf in back has a vase on One side with a cat and fish bowl on other. Dunston-Weller Lithographic
Co., Dunkirk, New York, 1909. U.S.
[Postcard]. “Here’s To the Suffragette”. Cream colored postcard with brown print - Here‘s To
The Suffragette - Whose Intellects too great for Happy Home and Husband: She Wants To Run The
State”. SKIDDO For You. Fair, Suffragette Chances are few, You’ll find as yet - The ’H” is large in
scroll with quill Pen and ink well. G.A. Co. Ca. 1910. U.S.A
34.
[Postcard].Stumping For Votes. Suffragettes Series 698/12. Color postcard of Women dressed in
red top and tan skirt with black hat with white fan kissing a man with his hat flying off holding a cane in
front of florist window. 1910.
35.
[Postcard]. Where Women Vote. Black and white postcard." Where Women Vote. - A Family
Tangle”. Woman sitting at table reading with a man wearing an apron combing her hair. Postmarked
Seneca Fall, N.Y. June 30th,1913.
37.
38.
[Postcard]. Election Day! Series No. 5001. Color postcard of a Woman wearing a green dress
with green hat and red feather standing in front of Kitchen table, man in red vest wearing an apron
holding two crying babies sitting at table, with a cat under his chair -’’Votes For Women” framed on
wall. Postmarked Long Beach, Ca., Feb. 16,1913. Series No. 5001. Feb. 16,1909.
[Postcard. Bust of Woman. Black and white postcard of woman. Ca. 1910. N.D., N.P. Ca. 1910.
Duplicate.
39.
40.
[Postcard]. What is Home Without A Father. Suffragette Series. Color postcard. Man in while
shirt with a blue tie sitting in rocking chair at table - holding two babies in his arms, one baby is holding a
gravel - young girl in red dress leaning on man’s knee, white cat looking at man- table has a green table
cloth and red book and lamp on top. Card is embossed. Card. Dunston-Weiler Lithograph Co., Dunkirk,
New York, 1909.
[Postcard]. Puzzle -Find the Head of the House. Color postcard of a Woman in light blue shirt
with blue skirt leaning down with dustpan with paper on floor which reads: "News Votes For Women”
Addressed to Mrs. Belle Smith. Bellwood, Neb. 1914.
41.
42.
[Postcard]. Restaurant, Orange Lake Park, Newburgh, New York. Color postcard of Restaurant
Green with tables in front Sign on the Door: “Votes for Women”. Published by J. Ruben, 39 Johnston St
Newburgh, N.Y. N.D.
[Postcard). Don’t Be on the Fence, Come Over To My Side and Be A Good Feller. Series 895.
Artist: Cobb X. Shinn. Color postcard of young woman in checkered dressed trimmed in dark color with
red bow in her black hair. T.P. & Co., 1912.
43.
44.
[Postcard].Susan B. Anthony Homestead- Adams, Massachusetts. Color picture of two story
House with twochimneys. Addressed to Miss E. F. Smith, Wakefield, Ma. 1918. Sterling Printing Co.
North Adams, Mass. 1918.
45.
[Postcard]. [Views]. Color postcard showing three views: 1.) Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Homestead. 2.) Lafayette Carriage, Geneva, New York. 3.) Old Masonic Temple, Aurora, New York.
Sterling Printing Co., North Adams, Massachusetts, 1918.
46.
[Postcard]. “Ambition”. Colored postcard of little girl in pince-nez standing on a chair
addressing a meeting of her dolls under the sign: Suffragettes Meetings in England. Addressed to
Marguerite S. Wells, Broadlove, Maine. New York, Roth Longley, Ca. 1909.
47.
[Postcard].Susan B. Anthony. Black and white postcard of Susan B. Anthony at age 36. N.D.,
N.P.
48.
[Postcard]. Susan B. Anthony. Black and white postcard of Susan B. Anthony in oval shape.
N.D., N.P
49.
[Postcard]. 1914 Coleta Illinois - Women’s Suffrage Votes For Women. Black and white
postcard of 8 women standing in a wagon with mule. Back of card reads: “Happy Holligans At Coleta,
III., July 4,1914, called themselves “Suffragettes”. Elizabeth Procolon, Emma Murrz, Nels Murrz, Mrs
Pierce, Warren Brown, Scott Ceonel, Mary Manning, Elis Frankfather. The Banners read: “Votes for
Women” and “Dress Reform”. Not postmarked.
50.
[Postcard]. Some Men Drather. Color postcard of men with binoculars on a rooftop watching A
woman in the window, while a parade is going on below - the words on the front say: “Some Men
Drather -See a Woman Comb Her Hair Than A Parade”. Taunton, Mass. Ca. 1910- 1920.
51.
[Postcard]. “Driven to Drink by A Woman”. Color postcard of a woman in a cowgirl outfit and
hat riding a donkey who is drinking from a stream with mountains and trees in background. Donkey’s tail
is a spring attached on the back and sticks up. Schmidt Bros., Co. Patient No. 1012747.
52.
[Postcard]. The Rest Cure Take Up So Much of My Time. Color postcard of man and two
women sitting on fence rail looks over the field with a barn. Addressed to Miss Helen Hutchinson,
Fitchburg, MA., 1909. Printed in Germany.
53.
[Postcard]. Liberty And Her Attendants. Black and white postcard of Liberty and Her Attendants
(Suffragettes Tableau) in front of Treasury Building. March 3,1913. Wash. D.C.
[Postcard]. Amendment Float. Black and white postcard with images of an Amendment Float;
Suffragettes Parade - March 3,1913 - Washington, D.C. Float in parade with banner: “We Demand An
Amendment to the Constitution Of the United States Enfranchising the Women of This Country”. Not
posted. U.S.
54.
55.
[Postcard]. We Women Must Stand Together. Color postcard of little girl standing on a box
podium in front of three little girls. Posters behind read: “Give Us the Vote - We Want Our Rites and
meen to git them”. Little Girl talking is wearing a blue dress, green socks, red shoes, red bow in her hair
and sash that says: “Votes for Wimmen.” Bridgeport, Ct.
56.
[Postcard]. The 10 Commandments For Husband. Color postcard. “No 9-Thou Shalt Care For the
Kids That Thy Wife Masy Rest”. Picture of women laying in bed while man is holding a crying baby.
Saratoga Co., New York. U.S.
[Postcard]. Election Day. Series No 5001. Words under the picture-Election Day-Picture of
women in green hat with red feather, green, pink, white Dress and green shoes. Votes for Women picture
hanging on the wall - writing On back: “A Fine She Has Man- Mrs. Teal” N.Y.1909.
57.
58.
[Postcard]. Sartainly Do Believe in Wimins Votes As Long As This Last. Man walking with two
women on either side down of the street. Man is in checkered suit with red vest - one woman has on a
green dress with red belt buckle and hat with red brim, other women has on black dress with stripes at
sleeves and bottom and red feather on hat. “Do You Believe In Wimins Vote?” Addressed to Helen B.
Clark, Cedar Fall, Iowa. 1916. U.S.
59.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Woman should not condemn
Man Because She has Not The Right of Franchise - Rather Condemn Parents For Having Trained Their
Sons Since the Beginning Of time, In the Belief That Man Only is Competent to Vote - In the upper left
corner is the American Shield upon which has superimposed a black smear labeled “The Ballot is denied
to woman-As The Blot on the Escutcheon”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 101.
U.S.
60.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. It's Up to the Parents to the
rising generation of both sexes that Patriotism, citizenship, and suffrage should not to sex. An Ounce of
Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 102.
U.S.
61.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. It is not forcing a burden on
Woman to grant her the right of Franchise, for though the right to vote may be hers, she would not be
compelled To exercise it anymore than Man. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”.
The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 103. U.S.
62.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. The Declaration of
Independence was the direct result of taxation Without Representation - Either Exempt Woman from
taxation or Grant Her The Right of Equal Suffrage - “What Is Good For the Goose - Is Sauce For The
Goose. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids,
Michigan. Series No. 104. U.S.
63.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Will woman be forced to vote
if granted the Right of Suffrage? Is Man disfranchised for not exercising this right? Do not be misled”.
An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series
No. 105. U.S.
64.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Equal Suffrage is Neither
More nor Less Than Simple Justice-An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill
Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 106. U.S.
65.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Woman, If Granted the Right
of Equal Suffrage - Would Not Endeavor to pass new laws for the benefit of Woman Only. She Would
Work and Vote with Man on Legislation. For References apply to: Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and Idaho,
of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 107.
U.S.
66.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Equal Suffrage Should Be A
Daily Topic In every Home and Open To Discussion by the Entire family, that they may all have an
intelligent understanding Of the questions. Equal Suffrage means the Salvation of This Nation from
Corruption-An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids,
Michigan. Series No. 108. U.S.
67.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. The framers of the
Constitution of the United States foreseeing the Social and political conditions that would confront the
nation, did not restrict the Right of Suffrage to Man”. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of
Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 109. U.S.
68.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. A Fundamental Principal of
this Government is Taxation With Representation. We Are All Taxpayers, both Woman and Men. Hence:
Equal Suffrage. Its Admits No Argument. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The
Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 110. U.S.
69.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. Because Women Has The Right to Vote Is No
Reason Why She Must necessarily Serve on the Police Force. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound
of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 112. U.S.
70.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Because Women Owns Real
Estate Is No Reason Why She Should Vote-Every Woman (the Same As Man) Is A Tax Payer and
Citizen and “Of The People”. Enough Said. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The
Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 113. U.S.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Parents have the Training of
Their Child’s Minds, and it is Their sacred duty to rear them, regardless of Sex, to believe in Equal
Rights Both socially and politically. Be Not Afraid to Teach Them Justice. An Ounce of Persuasion
Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 114. U.S.
71.
72.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Don’t Consult Machine
Politicians About Woman Suffrage-Talk It Over With Fair Minded Men “Who Have No Ax To Grind”.
An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids,
Michigan. Series No. 115. U.S.
73.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Man With Political Aspirations
Would Not Do Well From Now On-To Consult Woman. 'Tis a ‘wise Man” who needs a timely warning.”
An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series
No. 116. U.S.
74.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Is It True German that You
Brought Up Uncle in the Belief That He Is stronger Mentally than Mamma? And Grandma said: “I
cannot tell a lie”. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids,
Michigan. Series No. 117. U.S.
75.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Beware of Magazine and
Newspapers Which Are Opposed to Woman Suffrage”. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of
Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 118. U.S.
76.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Machine Politicians Do Not
Want Equal Suffrage for Women. Too Much Truth, Honestly and Purity Applied to “The Machine”
would demolish It An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand
Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 119. U.S.
77.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Any Man Who Denies That
Woman is His Equal Mentally, Simply Casts A Slur on His Mother. An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a
Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 120. U.S.
[Postcard].Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. If Woman Had the Same
Training Politically as Man, She Would Be Equally Competent to Vote On All Questions. Why Not Give
Her the Opportunity?-An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand
Rapids, Michigan. Series No. 121. U.S.
78.
[Postcard]. Cargill Suffrage Series. “Maxim surrounded by a purple banner bearing the words:
“An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a pound of Coercion”. “Think It Over. Every Boy Loves His Mother
and Her Teaching in Early Life Why, therefore, after becoming a Man Should He Deem Her his inferior
mentally? An Ounce of Persuasion Precedes a Pound of Coercion”. The Cargill Co. Grand Rapids,
Michigan. Series No. 122. U.S.
79.
[Postcard]. No Votes for Cupid. Colored card with heart and cupid girl walking holding a sign:
“Votes for Women Cupid & Love” - girl has on a blue hat with a red heart pin, carrying a red heart
shaped purse with the letter ‘C' red heart around her. Valentine Greetings: “No Votes For Cupid With
Darts. He Works His Little Game of Hearts”. S. Bergman, New York, 1913.
80.
81.
[Postcard]. Love Me, Love My Vote. Colored postcard with girl in white and black dress with
white bonnet and red bow, yellow sash that says: “Votes for Women” standing on a box. Card reads: “ To
My Valentine - Love Me Love My Vote” (Valentine and Love in red). Artist: Ellen H. Clapsaddle.
International Art Publ. N.Y., Philadelphia. Pa. Ca. 1920.
[Postcard]. Nobody Love Me - Guess I’ll Be A Suffragette. Colored postcard. Little girl in pink
dress standing trying to put on pants - little girl is crying and pouting - dog is watching the girl. Reads:
“Nobody Loves Me - Guess I am a Suffragette”. Series (617)A.
82.
83.
[Postcard]. Valentine’s Day Card. The Suffragette Question. Black and white postcard of
Women Cooking at Store. Steam is in the shape of a question mark. N.P., N.D. U.S.
[Postcard]. I Want To Vote But My Wife Won’t Let Me. Color postcard of man dressed in blue
apron, red & white shirt washing clothes, child in white dress and red shoes. Frame on the wall reads:
“Everybody Works but Mother - She’s a Suffragette - But My Wife Won’t’Let Me“. Dunston & Weiler
Lithograph, 1909. U.S.
84.
[Postcard]. St. Lawrence University. Black and white postcard of St Lawrence University,
Canton, New York scenes. Addressed to: Miss Kathryn Hicks, Rhinebeck, N.Y.R.F. D “Just Voted for
Woman Suffrage as I think you Were an advocate-hence reason...” N.D., N.P. U.S.
85.
86.
[Postcard]. I Want to be A Suffragette. Colored postcard with three women - two in bed and one
standing - girl standing is wearing a white dress and holding up a pair of pants -setting in the bedroom.
Addressed to: Miss Tessie Roy Hendricks, West Virginia. N.D., N.P.
[Postcard]. I’m De Original Ladies Man -I Am! Cream colored postcard with black drawing-Man
smoking, striped shirt and pans, no shoes, and hat holding a sign: “Votes for Women”. Bowery Kids
#5494. N.D., N.P. U.S.
87.
88.
[Postcard]. Oh You Suffragette. Color postcard - Four Hens Marching -First hen is white with
red tie and yellow hat with red feather, second hen has on a white bonnet with blue ribbon and is holding
a sign: “Votes for Women” - Third hen is wearing brown hat and glasses, forth hen is wearing a white hat
with feather - owl in the tree is says: “Oh You Suffragette”. Chantecler Series. #21. N.P. U.S.
89.
[Postcard]. De Suffragette Upon Her Box Darns Der Men But Not Der Sox. White postcard with
black lettering - girl standing on soap box wearing Dutch shoes holding a Votes for Women pennant.
Walter’s Post card Shop. Rochester, New York. 1913. U.S.
90.
[Postcard]. Life Is just One Damm Thing After Another. Color postcard of a Man standing at
Kitchen table rolling out dough - he is wearing dark pants, white shirt vest and red tie - he is rocking a
crying baby with his foot -pictures on the wall say: What is home without a Suffragette. And a picture of
a women - Our President. Copyright: The Ullman Mfg. Co. American Colorgravor A Post card Life
Series #138. N.Y. Ca. 1905-1910. U.S.
91.
[Postcard]. Easter Postcard. Color postcard of cross with blue flowered wreath in center with
picture of a stream and home: “God Bless this Home at this time of flowers, God Bless thee through
Life’s Changing hours - A Holy Easter” 1912. International Art Publ. New York. U.S.
92.
[Postcard]. Suffragette Vote Getting. Color postcard of woman kissing man - woman dressed in
red with big hat with red flowers, blond haired man with hat and cane: “Suffragette Vote- Getting the
Easiest way”. Dunston-Weller Lithograph Co., New York, 1909.
93
[Postcard]. Election Day. Woman standing in red dress, with pink hat with flowers - man sitting
in rocking chair holding baby crying with a little girl Standing in between his legs with pink dress and
bow. Sign on he wall: “What Is A Suffragette Without A Suffering Household?” Addressed to: Miss
Liaheth Schotland, South Dakota. Postmarked: Fairfax, Ark. Oct Dunston-Weller Lithograph Co.,
Dunkirk, N.Y., 1909. U.S.
94.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette. Color postcard of woman in long green dress with big hair and small
hat with green feather - Man reading bulletin on wall: “The Morning Suffragette Bulletin”. Attractive
suffragette in a police uniform, holding a puppy on leash and brandishing A rolling pin like a nightstick.
Walter Wellman Co., 1909. New York. U.S.
95.
[Postcard]. Suffragette Coppette - Beware of the Dog. Man wearing a police uniform, holding a
rolling pin with chair on his belt with dog attached wearing a red collar with the word policy. Man
standing behind her is in top hat and suit. Addressed to Miss Minnie Crow. Dunston- Weller Lithograph
Co., Dunkirk, N.Y., 1909. U.S.
96.
[Postcard]. I Love My Husband, But—Oh You Vote. Attractive Woman holding a Official
Ballot - Women in red dress, red stocking, red shoes, big Red hat with red flowers and black purse.
Suffragette Series No. 12. Dunston-Weller Lithograph Co., Dunkirk, N.Y., 1909. U.S.
97.
[Postcard]. Where - Oh - Where is My Wandering Wife tonight? Husband left to care for crying
infants with a vision of his wife is standing at table With a pitcher talking to a crowd. An embossed card.
Addressed to Miss Eve Winer. Suffragette Series No. 10. Dunston-Weller lithograph Co., Dunkirk, N.Y.
1909. U.S.
98.
[Postcard]. I Love My Husband, But -Oh, You Vote. Suffragette Series No. 12. Color postcard
of Woman in red dress with black dot wearing an Oversized hat with bows and flowers, carryings a black
purse with gold necklace holding “Official Ballot” - I Love My Husband, but - Oh You Vote” Not
postmarked. Dunston-Weller Lithographic Co., Dunkirk, New York, 1909. U.S. Duplicate
99.
[Postcard]. Suffragette Madonna. Young husband in rocking chair surrounded by loving happy
children; on wall is a framed saying: “What is Home Without A Father”. Suffragette Series #1. DunstonWeller Lithograph Co., Dunkirk, N.Y., 1909. U.S.
100.
[Postcard]. Emmeline Pankhurst. Cream color postcard with image of Emmeline Pankhurst “Our Laurels We Bring Thee Brave Spirit - And Man Thine Own Courage Sublime - Inspire Us to Faint
Not Nor Falter While Yet Exists Legalized Crime”. L.F. Pease, 268 Laurel St., Buffalo, New York. U.S.
101.
[Postcard]. Black and white postcard of women sitting in a car decorated with a Suffrage flag
across The hood. Office of the North Louisiana - Buck County. Votes for Women: The Natchitoches
Equal Suffrage Club 1915-1920. U.S. Very rare.
102.
[Postcard]. Thanksgiving Day. Color postcard of two turkeys- “This is not a suffragette”
Lecture, but a kind Thanksgiving Day Greetings”. Series 560D.
103.
[Postcard]. Where Women Vote. Photographic postcard with red border. A Family Tangle -
shows man kneeling combing a woman hair. Not postmarked. N.D., N.P. U.S.
104.
[Postcard]. Black and white postcard of March 13.1913 Washington D.C. Suffrage Parade.
Suffragettes Procession Moving Up Pennsylvania Avenue with Capital Dome in background. I & M.
Ottenheimer, Baltimore, Maryland. U.S.
105.
[Postcard]. Something New In Financial Fields. Color postcard of two little boys playing craps
while watching a girl holding a “Votes for Women” sign as she bends over to pick a flower. Addressed
to: Mr. David Hessler, Marine Mills, Minn, Dec.7,1912. Postmarked. U.S.
106.
[Postcard]. Votes for Women. Color postcard Reads: “Votes for Women, For the Work of a
Day, For the Taxes We Pay, For the Laws We Obey, We Want Something to say”. Bregman, N.Y.
Addressed to Miss Kathryn Shouder. August 18,1914. U.S.
107.
[Postcard]. I Am Neutral. Color postcard of man running away holding a sign: “I Am Neutral”
With two women in the back ground arguing. No. 2178 - 10 Designs, “Neutral" Comic. N.P.,N.D.
108.
[Postcard]. Results of Suffrage Victory. Color postcard of woman standing at door, man sitting
at table holding baby. Addressed to Mr. Harley Waidleich,. N.P., N.D.
109.
[Postcard]. Suffragette Madonna. Crop of 1910 - Series 698/12. Color postcard of father feeling
baby a bottle with a plate in the background forming a halo over his head. Dunston- Weiler Lithograph
Co., 1909. Duplicate. U.S.
110.
[Postcard]. I Don't Care If She Never Comes Back. Colored postcard of young man in rocking
chair surrounded by loving happy children; on wall is a framed saying: “What Is Home Without A
Father”. Dunston-Weiler Lithograph Co., 1909. U.S.
111.
[Postcard]. Suffragette Coppette - Beware of the Dog. Man in a police uniform, holding a puppy
on a leash and brandishing a rolling pin like a nightstick, is eyed by top-hated dandy. Dunston-Weller
Lithograph Co., Dunkirk, N.Y., 1909. Duplicate.
112.
[Postcard]. The Argument is Why Don’t You Let Me Hear From you. Little girl standing on
platform beside a “Votes for Women” sign. Artist: Cobb X. Shinn. T. P. & Co. New York. N.D.
113.
[Postcard]. You Win- Anywhere You Go. Color postcard of girl and boy standing at box with
ballot box on top. Box reads: “Votes for Wimmen”. T.P. Co. New York.
114.
Postcard]. What We Need Is A Law, So A Feller Can See His Girl Every Night. T. P. & Co.,
New York.
115.
[Postcard]. I Want to Vote - But My Wife Won’t Let me. Color postcard of husband tending
baby and wishing clothes while wife is away; sign on wall says: “Everybody works - But Mother-She’s A
Suffragette”. Dunston-Weiler Lithographic Co.., 1909. U.S.
116.
[Postcard]. Oh Did He! Color postcard of man surrounded by angry women - Man is holding
sign: “Down with Women’s rights” Addressed: “Dear Ma - Hope you didn’t go on like this with your
March to Hyde Park...”. N.P., N.D. U.S.
117.
[Postcard]. Actual Speech written on a blackboard at Woman Suffrage Meeting. Black and
white postcard of speech given in Omaha, Nebraska. We Will Have What Men Have!!!! N.P., N.D.
118.
[Postcard]. Votes for Women. Black and white postcard of girl standing on soap-box holding a
flag: “De Suffragette Upon her box darns der men but not der sox”. Walker’s Post Card Shop, Rochester,
New York. U.S. Duplicate.
119.
[Valentine Day Card]. I Believe In Women’s Rights As Every Woman Should. Colored
Valentine Day Card. Two Men Watching Women in Red Dress Walking - card reads: “I Believe In
Women’s Rights As every woman Should I Wouldn’t be a “cling vine” Or Marry If I could. If don’t you
believe it ask me”. - Writing on back: From Fran Lovejoy. N.D. U.S.
120.
[Valentine Day Card]. Pm a Suffragette and I Don’t Care Who Knows It. Colored card With
heart shape at top and square at the bottom. Girl in pink dress with oversized hat with blue feathers
holding ballot in left hand - Card has a stand that would allow it to stand up. Writing on back: From
Hannah Gregory.
121.
[Postcard]. Love Me, Love My Vote. Colored postcard with girl in white and black dress with
white bonnet and red bow, yellow sash that says: “Votes for Women” standing on a box. Card reads: “ To
My Valentine - Love Me Love My Vote” (Valentine and Love in red). Artist: Ellen H. Clapsaddle.
International Art Publ. N.Y., Philadelphia. Pa. Ca. 1920.
122.
[Postcard]. Valentine’s Day Card. The Suffragette Question. Black and white postcard of
Women Cooking at Store. Steam is in the shape of a question mark. N.P., N.D. U.S.
123.
[Postcard]. Easter Postcard. Color postcard of cross with blue flowered wreath in center with
picture of a stream and home: “God Bless this Home at this time of flowers, God Bless thee through
Life’s Changing hours - A Holy Easter” Addressed to Miss Hazel Howe. Brooklyn, N.Y. 1912.
International Art Publ. New York. U.S.
124.
[Postcard -Photograph-Card]. Alice Snitjer Burke & Nell Richardson. 7” x 5” black and white
Photo-card of two women driving in a car on a “Tour” though the 25 states - The Golden Flyer Tour.
National American Woman Suffrage Association.
125.
[Postcard]. Votes for Women - Merry Xmas. Color postcard of Santa Ciaus- Carrying his bag on
his back with “Votes For Women” signs in his bag. N.P., N.D.
126.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette. Color postcard showing woman in long gown holding a sword- She
is wearing a purple dress with green trim, green gloves, big hair and green hat - writing on front:
“Generaless of the Army. If You Were The Enemy, Would You Fall For This? Addressed to Miss
Wynona Hausler, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Walter Weilman, 1909.
127.
[Postcard]. Sartainly Do Believe in Womens Votes As Long As This Last. Man walking with
two women on either side down of the street Man is in checkered suit with red vest - one woman has on a
green dress with red belt buckle and hat with red brim, other women has on black dress with stripes at
sleeves and bottom and red feather on hat. “Do You Believe In Women's Vote?” Addressed to Ms. Cora
Delancey, Jerry City, Ohio. N.P., N.D. Ca. 1916. U.S.
128.
[Postcard]. Nobody Love Me - Guess I’ll Be A Suffragette. Colored postcard. Little girl in pink
dress standing trying to put on pants - little girl is crying and pouting - dog is watching the girl. Reads:
“Nobody Loves Me - Guess I am a Suffragette”. Addressed to Gertrude Albert, Leechburg, Pa., August 5,
[N.D.]. Duplicate.
129.
[Postcard]. Nobody Love Me - Guess I’ll Be A Suffragette. Colored postcard. Little girl in pink
dress standing trying to put on pants - little girl is crying and pouting - dog is watching the girl. Reads:
“Nobody Loves Me - Guess I am a Suffragette”. Addressed to Mrs. Bertha Pickett, Walkerhill, Michigan.
N.D.
130.
[Postcard]. Mary Livermore autograph quotation; “Character is Destiny”. Special family
association in LHD private collection.
131.
[Postcard]. Color photograph postcard. Woman Smiling holding a red, white & blue Flag -
background is gold - The Word ‘Souvenir’ is printed in Green. The word Marysville is at the bottom
surrounded by blue flowers. Addressed to Maud E. Steins, Oakland, California. July 28,1909.
Postmarked Marysville, California.
132.
[Postcard]. “I Suppose that Expects to Vote, Some Day”. Color Postcard of little girl in a green
dress with red stockings and red bow in her blond hair standing with her hands on her hips. Yellow sash
asks "Votes for Women- Little boy Standing facing her in a white dress with yellow socks holding a
string attached to a Small toy pony. Addressed to: Mrs. V.C. Johnson, Greenville, Mich. N.D. U.S
133.
[Postcard]. The Way It’s Going - The New Woman. Color postcard with Women standing at
door and man sitting on sofa holding two babies dressed in pink And green gowns. Women is holding a
blue flag in her hand. Reads: The Way It’s Going - The New Woman. N.D., N.P. Not postmarked. U.S.
134.
[Postcard]. Uncle Sam Suffragee. Color postcard of man dressed in red and white jacket, blue
and white stars skirt, red, white, and blue hat with red bow. Reads: Uncle Sam- Suffragee. Suffragettes
Series No. 6. N.P., N.D.
135.
[Postcard]. Duplicate.
136.
[Postcard]. I Want To Vote But My Wife Won’t Let Me. Color postcard of man dressed in Blue
apron, red & white shirt washing clothes, child in white dress and red shoes. Frame on the Wall reads:
Everybody Works but Mother - She’s a Suffragette - But My Wife Won’t Let Me. Dunston & Weiler
Lithograph, 1909. Duplicates
137.
[Postcard]. Suffragette Madonna-Crop of 1910-Series 698/12. Color postcard of a man dressed
in white shirt, yellow vest and green tie - looking up With gold halo holding a baby (doll) with pink dress
on. Shelf in back has a vase on one side with a cat and fish bowl on other. Addressed To C.L. Finch,
Addison, New York. Dunston-Weiler Lithographic Co., Dunkirk, New York, 1909. U.S. Duplicates.
138.
[Postcard]. Liberty And Her Attendants. Black and white postcard of Liberty and Her
Attendants (Suffragettes Tableau) in front of Treasury Building. March 3, 1913. Washington D.C. Not
posted. U.S. Duplicates.
139.
[Postcard]. Will You Join? Color postcard of man with red tie and a woman in red jacket and hat
holding a paper that reads: War Cry- Reads: "Will You Join”. Addressed to Miss Winnie Tick, Lapeer,
Michigan, Johnston’s Art Store, Niagare Falls, N.Y. 1906. Image is on writing side.
140.
[Postcard]. “Do I Get Your Vote?” KEWPIE series after Rosie O’Neill-Color Postcard of child
in a white and red dot skirt walking on a cloud hold a Yellow box with the words: "Votes for Women
Equality’’ and a Yellow sash with The words: "Women Suffer”. This card is easel type- Klever Kard
Trade Mark. Campbell Art Co., Elizabeth, N.Y., 1914. U.S.
141.
[Postcard]. Would You Vote For Me for Mayor? / I’ll Show You The Town, If You Foot the
Bill. Color postcard of a woman standing with a red jacket and red hat with feather and the jack has key
attached to the bottom-the women is holding a key in Her left hand. Background colors of blue, green and
yellow. Bottom left is a white box With a baby laying in a cradle crying” "The hand that rocks the cradle
fools the world". Suffragette Series No. 94.
142.
[Postcard]. Susan B. Anthony. Color postcard. N.D., N.P.
143.
[Postcard]. Judy Chicago’s The Birth Project. Black and white Lettering postcard. "If Men had
Babies, there would be thousands of images of the Crowning" - Back: Through the Flower Corp. P.O.
Box 842. Benicia, Ca.
144. [Postcard]. Head of Suffrage Parade Passing Treasury. Black and white photo card of parade on
Pennsylvania Avenue. No postmark. Leet Bros. Washington, D.C. Duplicate.
145. [Postcard]. Parade Passing Suffragette Stand. Black and white photo card with banner reading
“Florence Nightingale”. No postmark. Leet Bros. Washington, D.C.
146.
[Postcard]. Starting of Suffragette’s Parade Coming Up Pennsylvania Avenue- March 3, 1913,
Washington, D.C. Baltimore, I & M Ottenheimer. Black and white photo card of horse unit and women
flags, U.S. Capitol Bldg. No postmark. Duplicate.
147. [Postcard]. Crowd on Pennsylvania Avenue at 15th Street - Looking towards the Capitol
(Suffragettes Parade) March 3, 1913. Baltimore, I. & M. Ottenheimer. Black and white photo card of
crowd, view up PA Avenue, Washington, March 8, 1913. Washington, D.C. Addressed to Ida
(Goodlee?). Duplicate
148. [Postcard]. Women Representing Foreign Countries- Suffragette’s Parade-Photo card of women
in international costumes passing the tented reviewing stand. Addressed to Miss Florence Caton. March
26,1913.
149.
[Postcard]. Where Women Vote - It’s Turn Around All Around. Black and white photo card
with red border - A smiling women watching sorrowful man washing dishes. Addressed to Miss Grad
Kirby. July 8, 1913. Ohio.
150. [Postcard]. “There’s A Girl wanted there, And We Don’t Care Whether She’s Dark or Fair”. New
York, Samforth & Co., 1905. Photo card of man washing clothes in tub on chair. Copyright 1905 by
Robert McCrum.
151.
[Postcard]. Suffragette, Who - Me? Photo card of smiling woman in overcoat and bowler hat
Addressed to (Josie Kimidon) from J. Basmann. Jan 6, 1911. Printed in Germany
152.
[Postcard]. The Red Silk Bargain Dress in the Shop Window is a danger signal. Helaine Victoria
Press, Martinsville, Ind. 1979. Black and white photo card of Francis Perkins at a microphone. Blue
border. No postmarked. Bread & Roses Series.
153.
[Postcard]. United Equal Suffrage States of America. Wyoming 1890- Colorado 1893- Utah
1896 - Idaho 1896 - A Star will be added to the flag as each State enters THE UNION OF STATES AS
THEY OUGHT TO BE. Postcard with American flag with four stars and circle with letter UESS in red,
white, blue. N.P. The Cargill Co. No postmark.
154. [Postcard]. I GO FOR ALL SHARING THE PRIVILEDGES OF THE EXCLUDING WOMEN.
Abraham Lincoln. Postcard of Statue of Abraham Lincoln in front of a chair with American Flag with
four stars laying across. N.P., The Cargill Co. #129.
155.
[Postcard]. Equal Suffrage is the Birthright of Woman. Postcard of flag of purple and gold
colors with circle in center saying ‘The Ballot’ is denied to Woman - Shield with Red, white stripes and
blue with white stars - The Blot on the Escutcheon. N.P. The Cargill Co.
156.
[Postcard]. THE BALLOT IS DENIED TO WOMAN - Postcard of shield with red, white and
blue stripes with white stars - The Blot on the Escutcheon. N.P. The Cargill Co.
157.
[Postcard]. WOMAN’S RIGHTS - If, instead of ranting of Women’s Rights, You tried to look
after some poor, sickly mites. And talk of their rights, long, strong and loud. You would then be a
women of whom we’d be proud. Color postcard of a man wearing a blue striped dress with a tie and
red coat, green hat and holding a red umbrella. With a border of black and blue with red hearts.
N.P., TR Co. N.D.
158. [Postcard]. LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT. Color postcard of man in red checked jacket,
green tie, green and white striped pants, green socks holding a scroll. N.P., Walter. Wellman. Ca. 1909.
#3077.
159. [Postcard]. The Suffragette Studentess - I WANTER BE A MAN!!!. Color postcard of a lady in
a pink and green dress with cap with the letter P - sitting at a table leaning back on two legs of a chair
smoking a pipe with smoke rings in shape of diamond rings - With two books on the table (How to be a
Man) and a poster saying: Gaiety Theatre Wine- Man of Song. N.P., Walter Wellman. Ca. 1909.
Addressed to: Mrs. Berry Baker. East St. Louis, III. November 23,1909. #4007.
160.
[Postcard]. Is Marriage A Failure? A Lady named Lemon - She sneezed And said she would do
As she pleased - That no man should rule’er, Bamboozle or fool’er, So this Lemon was never squeezed!
A color postcard of a lady in a green blazer and green and white shirt with a white umbrella - carrying
“Speech on Womans Rights” - With four men in the background. Addressed to Mrs. Alice Carlton.
August 30,1909.
161.
[Postcard]. I’m A Suffer Yet. Color postcard of a black cart with paw in a sling and a red X
bandage over left eye. Addressed to Mrs. John Schieminer. N.D., N.P.
162.
[Postcard]. Woman’s Rights. Color postcard of three ladies in swimsuits in water - Man in
pants, shirt, tie. Women are tugging on man’s army. Postmarked Block Island, R.I. Aug. 5 1910.
163. [Postcard]. VOTES FOR WOMEN - She’s Good Enough For Me. Color postcard of girl in
yellow flowered dress with ribbon in hair holding flowers with boy dressed in red and white stripped
pants, blue coat and tope hat with blue beard with white stars. N.P., Campbell Art Co., C. 1915.
164.
[Postcard]. Just by Way Of A Change. Color postcard of woman wearing a mink stole smoking
a cigarette going out the door - Man sitting holding a little girl with another girl and boy playing by a
chair. Postmarked: Northwood, N. Dakota. August 8,1910. N.P. The International Postal Card Co.
165.
[Postcard]. Many A Fire-She Will Have To Fight-Still the Fire In Her Heart Will Be Burning
Bright. Black and white postcard of Lady in a Fireman uniform With helmet #4 - holding a coat and ax.
Postmarked Los Angeles, Ca., Jan. 29,1913. N.P., Wolfe. Ca 1912
166. [Postcard]. 10038 - AD2, Help Wanted Male. Black and white postcard of two women pushing a
boat out on the water with two women in boat - one standing - one sitting. N.P. Souvenir Post Card Co.
No Postmark.
167.
[Postcard]. Well I Aint the Only Ass to Support a Woman! Color postcard of woman in red
overalls - white shirt and hat with bow riding an ass. No postmark.
168.
[Postcard]. I Should Worry - Become a Suffragette and Get Run In. Color postcard of police
officer in blue leading woman in red jacket, green skirt, white skirt with Yellow - Votes for Woman sash
and hat. Postmarked Maine, Sept. 1916. BS in circle.
169.
[Postcard]. IF MY WIFE IS A SUFFRAGETTE -I SHOULD WORRY. Color postcard of man
in red suit carrying screaming baby - clock on wall and sign saying ‘Home Sweet Home' - Postmarked
Burlington, Iowa. July 26,1916.
170.
[Postcard]. VOTES FOR WOMEN - Do I Get Your Vote? Color postcard of a baby in white
red-poke-dot skirt with yellow sash saying Women Suffer - baby walking on a cloud holding s stick with
yellow box at saying: “Votes For Women Equality" - Card bends in middle to form easel. N.P. Campbell
Art Co. Ca.1914.
171.
[Postcard]. I’m A Suffragette and I Don’t Care Who Knows It. Color postcard Of a girl in a pink
dress with hat and with a blue top holding a Ballot - two red hearts at bottom. Postmarked: Louisville,
Ky., Feb. 13, 1916.
172.
[Postcard]. Her First Vote. Color postcard of a woman sitting at table in white and black with a
white/black hat with red feather - white gloves looking at a paper - applying makeup- Postmarked:
Geneve 1-1916. Written in French.
173.
[Postcard]. VOTES FOR OUR MOTHERS. Color postcard of four babies wearing yellow
walking with yellow flag. N.Y. National Woman Suffrage Publishing Co. Ca. 1915.
174.
[Postcard]. VOTES FOR WOMEN. Color postcard of a woman in white and blue dress red
stockings with white hat with white feathers blowing a horn with pennant attached saying: “Votes for
Women”. Embossed. N.P., N.D.
175.
[Postcard]. Once I Get My Liberty - No More Wedding Bells for Me. Black and white post card
of a women with hat walking out door - Man holding brush and bucket Baby Crying in highchair and
child pulling cats tail. Addressed to Mrs. Pearly Bostwick. N.P., N.D.
176.
[Postcard]. What Chance Has A Mere Man? Color postcard of boy in blue coat, green tie,
yellow knickers point at parade with girl in red dress riding a goat holding a Votes for Women sign with
three other
girls walking with signs/pennants. Postmarked: Halifax, N.S., Nov. 18,1914.
177.
[Postcard]. I’m A Militant Suffragette. Color postcard of a girl with yellow dress and yellow sash
(Votes for Women) running and store clerk looking out door beside broken window. N.D., N.P. B.S. in
Circle. Addressed to Mrs. Mackenzie. Duplicate
178.
[Postcard]. THE BALLOT IS DENIED TO WOMAN - Postcard of shield with red, white and
blue stripes with white stars - The Blot on the Escutcheon. N.P. The Cargill Co.
179.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette. Black and white postcard of girl and boy having tea seated at table Boy holding doll and has red tie. A dog in front of table. N.P., ca. 1912.
180.
[Postcard]. VOTES FOR WOMEN. Color postcard of lady in blue dress with gold sash holding
gold flag. N. Y., The National Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., Inc. Ca. 1915.
181.
[Postcard]. VOTES FOR WOMEN - Suffrage First! Color postcard of a boy wearing blue and
white while talking to a girl in a pink dress with a blue bow in her hair - girl is holding up her right hand a doll is laying on the ground. N.Y., The National Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., Inc. Ca. 1915.
182. [Postcard]. Oh, You Suffragette. Color postcard of an Owl in a tree watching chickens march
carrying a sign saying: “Votes For Women”. N.P., Chantecler Series No. 21.Corp. E. Nash. 1910.
183. [Postcard]. What Chance Has A Mere Man? Color postcard of boy in blue coat, green tie, yellow
knickers point at parade with girl in red dress riding a goat holding a Votes for Women sign with three
other girls walking with signs/pennants. Postmarked: Halifax, N.S., Nov. 18,1914.
184.
[Postcard -Photograph-Card]. Alice Snitjer Burke & Nell Richardson. 7” x 5” black and white
Photo-card of two women driving in a car on a “Tour” though the 25 states - The Golden Flyer Tour.
National American Woman Suffrage Association
185.
[Valentine Card]. “Aw Fido! She’s Thrown Me Down An' Only Yesterday I Spent all My Penny on Her.
Color Valentine card with big heart trimmed in red. An embossed card. N.P., N.D. U.S.
186.
[Valentine Card]. “Say Yes Or, l'll Do Something Awful Desperate”. Color valentine card with big
heart at the top trimmed in red- boy standing wearing a blue shirt with red tie. An embossed card. N.P.,
N.D. U.S.
187.
[Valentine Card]. “They Say Titer’s Germs In Kisses But Who Afraid of Germs?” Color valentine card
with big heart at tope trimmed with red - boy in sailor suit leaning over wall kissing a girl. N.P.,N.D.
188.
[Postcard]. Ain’t it Hell To Die of Thirst - Just Cause I Never Learned to Swim. Color postcard of man in red
coat, blue hat sitting on river bank looking across at a building Signs saying: Early Times Pure Rye- Jockey Cap Old
Rye - Glenmore Bourbon - UDL Old Rye- Front is marked Not Published or Displayed by the Liquor Control Board
or by the Government of British Columbia. Postmark: Toronto, Ontario, June 12,1930 & Oakland, Calif. June 16,1930.
189.
[Postcard]. Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me The Master. Black and white postcard of two flowers: Mrs. M.W. Palmer, Superintendent-Claremont, New Hampshire
and Mrs. C.E. Hopkins, Asst.
190.
[Postcard]. Miss Columbia. Color of woman in white/red trimmed shirt, red belt, red/white/blue
tie, blue skirt with six white/red stripes - 1/4 of the way up and red shoes-holding American flag and
cornucopia with fruit. No postmark.
191.
[Postcard]. My Valentine-You are the Candidate for Mine, I Vote for You For Valentine. Color postcard
of girl in red dress, green/white stripe apron, red socks and Red hair band holding stick with yellow box
(Vote for Dan Cupid with two hearts). No postmark.
192.
[Postcard]. Holding Her Job. Color postcard with gold trim of a man kissing a woman on the
check - woman sitting at desk - Man/Woman/Desk in black and white. Postmark: Lake Ann-Michigan.
October 10,1910.
193.
[Postcard]. “Votes For Women!” Certainly! Here’s mine for the candidate- I have selected for My
Valentine. Color postcard of man casting his ballot in a ballot box - A woman holding onto his arm. N.P. The Gibson
Art Company. Cincinnati. [Ohio].
194.
[Postcard]. Clara C. Hoffman-PresidentMissouri Woman’s Christian Temperance Union -And
Grandchildren -ALL THE WORLD FOR GOD and TEMPERANCE”, Black and white postcard of Ms.
Hoffman sitting with a book in lap, Grandson sitting beside her, granddaughter standing on a chair. N.P.
The Red Cross.
195
[Postcard]. Missouri Dry in 1910 - Clara C. Hoffman and Grandcltildren-Thy Kingdom come, O Savior,
Great, in hearts and homes, in church and state; But ere it comes, full well we know. Saloons, Saloons, Saloons must
go. Frances E. Willard. Black and white postcard of Ms. Hoffman sitting with book in lap, grandson sitting
beside Her, grand-daughter standing up on chair - Jasper District Woman's Christian Temperance Union.
196.
[Postcard]. Frances E. Willard. Statuary Hall U.S. Capitol. Color postcard of Statue of Frances E.
Willard with white/red flowers tied with white bow. Green writing printed on back. B.S. Reynolds Co.
No postmark. Duplicate.
197.
[Postcard]. For God and Home and Native Land - “Only the Golden Rule of God of God Can Bring the
Golden Age of Man- Frances E. Willard. Color postcard of oval gold framed picture of Ms. Willard with
white bow on border - lettering in red and black. Embossed. F.A. Own Publishing Co. 1911.
198.
[Postcard]. For God and Home and Native Land - “Only the Golden Rule of God of God Can Bring the
Golden Age of Man- Frances E. Willard. Color postcard of oval gold framed picture of Ms. Willard with
white bow on border - lettering in red and black. - Embossed. F.A. Own Publishing Co. 1911.
199.
[Postcard]. Along we can do little, separated we are units of weakness, But aggregated we become batteries
of power! “agitate, educate, organize these are the deathless watch-words of success - Frances E. Willard - Sept. 28th
1839- Feb. 17th 1898. Black and white postcard of oval picture of Ms. Willard - Whittier says of her: “She knew the
power banded ill-But felt that LOVE was stronger still; And organized for doing GOOD - The WORLD'S UNITED
WOMANHOOD! Postmarked. St. Louis, Mo., N.D. Ca.1907.
200.
[Postcard]. For God and Home and Every Land - In Statuary Hall - Washington, D.C. Black and white
postcard - on left front is a black and white oval picture of Frances E. Willard and the writing under that picture: “Trust
In the Lord and Do Good; so shalt thou dwell in the land, and verily thou shall be fed." PS. 37:4. One of Miss Willard’s
favorite verses. On the right side says: “Verily I say Unto You -Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole
world - there shall also this that this woman hath done, be told a memorial for her.” Matthew 26:13 -Emmet G.
Coleman, Ca. 1906. Postmarked: Selin Pa. August. 1906.
201. [Postcard]. Here’s Good Luck to the Union Maid - She’s true blue to the core - She works, plays and sleeps
eight hours - And loves us all the twenty four- A toast to ye Union Maid. Color postcard of girl in blue/ white striped
dress with green ruffles and blue stars hold a flag USA and on left is goblet that says: “Toast - 3 clocks with orange
faces With the time 8:00, 4:00 and 12:00. Postmark illegible. Very rare.
202.
[Postcard]. A Busy Worker’s Correspondence card - Check Message 2-3 Desired. Color postcard of
girl in yellow overalls walking in front of people coming from a factory. Card has 9 blocks - different
colors and different blocks to check. Date - No Postmarks.
203. [Postcard]. IS HE DIGGING YOUR GRAVE? Color postcard of man in white apron and top hat
digging in the Saloon Cemetery (red sign) sign posted saying 100,000 buried annually by the ‘saloonist'
No postmark.
204.
[Postcard]. EXTRA-EXTRA - EVERYTHING MOVES SWIFTLY HERE- WE HAVE THE LATEST DOPE
ON EVERY THING FROM BASEBALL TO WOMANS SUFFRAGE. P.S. Yes and the new dames. Color postcard of
boy in blue shirt with brown shorts with suspenders running with papers under his arm. No postmark.
205.
[Postcard]. Let Each One Bring Another - Frances E. Willard. Color postcard of invitation style
gold lettering saying: Our White Ribbon Band is fighting hard Against the curse of rum. But there’s an
empty place for you - We need you - won’t you come? Our next W.C.T.U. will be held at Come early
and get a hearty welcome - We Call to U in oval with ribbon - embossed card.
206.
[Postcard]. Equality- “Waltz Me Around Again Teddy" Black and white image of female and male
teddy bears dancing. N.D. Parchen Bros. May 13/18,1908. Postmark: Harvre and Butte. [Montana] May,
1908.
207.
[Postcard]. Votes for Women. Color postcard of a little girl with her hands on her hips: “And you
think you can keep women silent politically’’. IT CAN’T BE DID!. N.Y. S. Bergman, 1913. Postmarked
Leesburg, D.C., 1914.
208.
[Postcard]. Valentine Greetings. Color postcard of boy and girl standing on two hearts- girl
hugging boy - “I’m Not A Little Suffragette, to the polls I never go: But a vote to-day I’d like to case
And elect you as my beau”. Postmarked: Brooklyn, February 1915.
209.
[Postcard]. It is Not Good That Man Should Live Alone! Color postcard of a man seated with two
children in lap, one standing behind man in chair with club and two children seated in front of floor Woman in blue dress sitting in chair smoking and reading. Bam forth & Co. Augusta, Maine. N.D.
210.
[Postcard]. Suffrage Society for Men. Color postcard: This Certifies that Mr. R. in submitting to all
forms of unequal rights in and about the household is hereby and forever afterwards permitted to drop
cigar ashes on the floor and in the best vase; or spit in the sink; to come home any hour of the night
without giving an account of himself, to play poker, get pickled, take the other girl to dinner or joy riding
and to cut out everything that would curtain his personal pleasure. Signed and sealed in the presence of
the duly acknowledged officers of the Society: E.Z. Mark, Sec., Ura Henpecko, President Addressed to
Mr. R. J. Gillen, Dayton, Texas. Postmarked: San Antonio, Texas, April 17,1922. ANTI
211.
[Postcard]. Sewall-Belmont House. Postcard in black and white with drawing of Sewall Belmont
House, Washington, D.C. Johnson Creek, WI.: Creeko Creations.
212.
[Postcard]. Women’s Suffrage Statue. Postcard in black and white with a picture of the
Women’s Suffrage Statue. Johnson Creek, WI.: Creeko Creations.
D.
[Postcard]. Alice Paul Postcard. Color postcard of bust of Alice Paul. Washington, D.C., Family
Press Service. N.D. Modern.
213.
[Postcard]. Alice Stone Blackwell. Color postcard of “Lagoon Pond and Vineyard Haven Harbour, Vineyard
Haven, Mass. October 1,1914. Addressed to Mrs. Judith W. Smith: “As this long, Steady trip o*er the water extends long, blessed life with the...steadfast, and straight, and Helps up us...to the heavenly Gate. With Love, Alice Stone
Blackwell".
214.
[Postcard]. Worldwide Policing: A Woman’s Affair. Policeman European Network of
Policewomen. White and black print with red arrow. N.D.,
215.
[Postcard]. “Bargain Sale / Reduce Today Only. My Valentine.” Color postcard showing
children wearing ribbons with bows in back- One girl in coat - Looking at hearts on table - “I know
You’re Not A bargain, Dear, But I’ll Bravely Do My Part, If There’s The Very Slight Chance of Picking
Up Your Heart Addressed to Master Robert Wenger. York, Pa. 1913. Printed in Bavaria by Ernest Nister.
U.S.
216.
[Postcard]. The Equal Rights Amendment Now Before Congress reads: Equality of Rights
Under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or By An State On Account Of sex”.
Published by the New York State Branch of the National Woman’s Party. New Years Day, 1944.
Message from Jeanette Marks. U.S.
217.
[Postcard]. “Them Pesky Suffragettes Want Everything For Themselves”. Color postcard of an
old man with long beard and hat standing at door that says “For Ladies Only”. Addressed to Mr. Ed.
Stoddard, Orange Co., N.Y. 1912. U.S.
218.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette. Color postcard of boy and girl sitting at table with stuffed Animals
having tea, dog in front of book. Artist: Walter Dark. Addressed to Miss Dorothy Rean, Mansfield, Ohio.
Postmarked: Barre, Vt.,October 16,7:30pm. 1913. U.S.
219.
[Postcard]. “Nobody Loves Me - How Can I Win Any Votes”. Color postcard of little girl
standing on a box labeled: “Votes Fur Women”. Addressed to Mr. Joe Cartledge. Waterville, Ct.
Published by T.P. & Co. New York, 1912.
220.
[Postcard]. “My Wife’s Joined the Suffrage Movement - I’ve Suffered Ever Since. Color
postcard of woman standing on kneeling Husband who is cleaning and wearing an apron. Woman is
wearing a yellow Dress with pink dots pointing at her husband. Bamforth & Co., N.Y. Holmfirth,
England, 1910. No. 1240. U.S.
221.
[Postcard]. “An Easter Prophecy: When Hens All Join the Suffrage Ranks, the Bunnies Little
Easter Pranks Will Have To Keep Up Everyday - Or- Else Who Will the Fresh Eggs Lay?” Bunnies
presents bouquet of flowers to a hen wearing a bonnet and carrying a sign: “Votes For Women”.
222.
[Postcard] An Easter Prophecy: When Hens All Join The Suffrage Ranks, the Bunnies ‘Little
Easter Pranks Will Have to Keep Up Every Day -Or Else Who Will the Fresh Eggs Lay?” Color postcard
with raised eggs at bottom. Mother duck with baby and rabbit- Duck is holding a sign: “Votes For
Women”. Made in the U.S.
223.
[Postcard]. “The Suffragette”. Black and white postcard of boy and girl sitting at table with
stuffed Animals having tea, dog in front of boy who looks unhappy. Artist. Walter Dark. Addressed to
Miss Beatrice Packard, Enfield, New Hampshire. New York, 1912. U.S. 2ndcopy. Duplicate.
224.
[Postcard]. I Love My Husband, But -Oh, You Vote” Suffragette Series No. 12. Color postcard
of Woman in red dress with black dot wearing an Oversized hat with bows and flowers, carryings a black
purse with gold necklace holding “Official Ballot” -1 Love My Husband, but - Oh You Vote” Not
postmarked. Dunston-Weller Lithographic Co., Dunkirk, New York, 1909. U.S.
225.
[Postcard]. Bust of Women. Black and white postcard of woman. N.Y. 1910. Pencil writing on
back. N.D., N.P. Ca. 1910.
226.
[Postcard]. Are You A Suffragist? Color postcard of old man standing in front of window with
Signs: “Are you a Suffragist? Votes for Women”.- Man in Suit holding an orange bad and umbrella orange vest and a tie. Words say: “Yew jes' bet I am! Suffered from the chills an ‘ fever for forty years!”.
Addressed To Gail Norris, Huntingdon Penna. J.M.P. N.D. N.P. U.S.A
227.
[Postcard]. “Stumping For Votes”. Suffragettes Series 698/12. Color postcard of Women
dressed in red top and tan skirt with black hat with white fan kissing a man with his hat flying off holding
a cane in front of florist window. Addressed to Mr. Peter Edwards, Vandalia, III. Aug. 1912. (1910?)
N.Y. U.S.
228.
[Postcard]. “Suffragette Madonna-Crop of 1910”-Series 698/12. Color postcard of a man
dressed in white shirt, yellow vest and green tie - looking up With gold halo holding a baby (doll) with
pink dress on. Shelf in back has a vase on One side with a cat and fish bowl on other. Addressed To C.L.
Finch, Addison, New York. Dunston-Weller Lithographic Co., Dunkirk, New York, 1909. Duplicate.
229.
[Postcard]. “Here’s To the Suffragette”. Cream colored postcard with brown print - Here‘s To
The Suffragette - Whose Intellect's too great for Happy Home and Husband: She Wants To Run The
State”. SKIDDO For You. Fair, Suffragette Chances are few, You’ll find as yet - The ’H” is large in
scroll with quill Pen and ink well. G.A. Co. Ca. 1910. U.S.A
230.
[Postcard]. “Stumping For Votes”. Suffragettes Series 698/12. Color postcard of Women
dressed in red top and tan skirt with black hat with white fan kissing a man with his hat flying off holding
a cane in front of florist window. Addressed to Miss Oma Band. Minneapolis, Feb. 23.1910.
231.
[Postcard]. “Where Women Vote”. Black and white postcard. “ Where Women Vote. - A
Family Tangle”. Woman sitting at table reading with a man wearing an apron combing her hair.
Addressed: Mr. Richard J. Leakey. Livingston, New York, June 1913. Postmarked Seneca Fall, N.Y.
June 30th, 1913.
232.
[Postcard]. “Election Day!” Series No. 5001. Color postcard of a Woman wearing a green dress
with green hat and red feather standing in front of Kitchen table, man in red vest wearing an apron
holding two crying babies sitting at table, with a cat under his chair -”Votes For Women” framed on wall.
Addressed To Mrs. Louise C. Norton, 123 W. Belmont Avenue, Warren, Ohio. Postmarked: Long Beach,
Ca., Feb. 16,1913. Series No. 5001. Feb. 16,1909. U.S.
233.
[Postcard. Bust of Women. Black and white postcard of woman. Ca. 1910. Pencil writing on
back. N.D., N.P. Ca. 1910.
234.
[Postcard]. Color picture of women standing in line and one woman handing a piece of paper
through the window. Postmarked: Washington, D.C., 26,1995. 19th Amendment 1920-1995.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & Archives- For the Study of The Rights of Women in History
and Law.
Postcards, Women’s Suffrage, U.K.
Selling Suffrage: In 1909, at the height of the woman suffrage controversy and During the golden age of
postcards. These postcard images reflect, and depart from, verbal arguments concerning woman suffrage
prevalent during this period. They reflect Arguments against suffrage that highlighted the coarsening
effect the vote would have on women. The postcards also present an argument that was absent in the
verbal discourse surrounding suffrage: that men (and the nation) would become feminized by woman
suffrage. Accordingly, these postcards offer a productive location in which to explore how the icons of
the Madonna and Uncle Sam, as well as non-iconic images of women, were deployed to reiterate the
disciplinary norms of the ideographs of <woman> and <man>.
1.
[Postcard]. 'To the Twentieth Century Miss'. White post card with black and red ink. "To the
Twentieth Century Miss: Be Good, Sweet Maid, And Let who will be clever Do noble Deeds: Not dream them all Day
long, And so make Life, Death, and the great forever, One grand sweet Song, and Never Mind Votes for Women..
N.D., N.P. Gt.Br.
2.
[Postcard]. National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. Black print National Union of Women’s
Suffrage Societies, Parliament Chamber, 14, Great Smith Street, Westminster, London, S.W. Hon.
Treasurer: Mrs. Auerback-President: Mrs. Henry Fawcett, LL.D. Hon. Secretaries: Miss K. D. Courtney,
Miss C.E. Marshall - Secretary: Miss Crookenden, M.A. N.D.
3.
[Postcard]. Suffragettes Going to Parliament. Color postcard with four ducks marching. Green
background. Addressed to Mill Parsores. 152 Fredericks Rd., [England]. N.D. Asking Ms. Parsores to
call round between 9 and 9:30pm tomorrow evening (Friday).
4.
[Postcard]. Will Those In Favor of Women's Suffrage - Please Hold Up Their Hands? Color postcard
with women holding up their hands. Woman/man? Dressed in red with green sash “Votes For Women”men and women sitting around. England and New York: Bamforth 8c Co., Ltd. Publishers. N.D. Gt.Br.
5.
[Postcard]. When Lovely Woman Gets the Vote - the Men will Look Such Freaks. Color postcard with
man and woman walking. Man is dressed in black coat and red skirt with bloomers holding an umbrella woman is dressed in red hat with feather - yellow frilled shirt and brown pants holding a purse - writing
on back: “My Dear, It was pay day here today -I got seven shillings -I have got altogether thirty three with love from George.” N.D., N.P. Gt.Br.
6.
[Postcard]. Comparisons Are Odious. Color postcard with man sitting on left side of table holding
a bottle of liquor and glass. Writing under (I. The male political prisoner - on right is woman sitting with
apron - holding a plate. Writing under (2. The female political prisoner. Valentine's Series. N.D., N.P.
GtBr. Very rare.
7.
[Postcard]. Oh, What A Difference! Color postcard on left side showing two women talking to
three police officers (holding up their hands up) Street sign reads STEPHENS 1/4 MILE. Writing under:
1). Reception of a Constitutional Deputation to the British Parliament at Westminster. On right side
shows three officers are hauling off one of the women. (2. Its result Not postmarked. N.D., N.P. GtBr.
8.
[Postcard] The Ulster Militant Suffragettes. Black and white postcard of women marching- in front
is dressed in black with a black hat on - several women walking behind. Writing on front: “The Ulster
Masculine Woman. A Throw-back to times prehistoric: when mated. No one is his senses Considers her
human - God help the poor man who to marry her is fated”.
9.
[Postcard] Women Are Half The People & Demand A Voice In Deciding the Taxes. Black and white
postcard with three people on front - to the left is a women holding a VOTES FOR WOMEN poster and
writing on the back of the coat of the man in front:“ Women Are Half The People & Demand A Voice In
Deciding The Taxes - The man whose coat is written is behind a man Who is wearing a King’s crown
and drape: - The Commons As Representatives of The People Must Decide The Taxes - The King on the
poster on the wall reads: The People Not The Commons Must Decide The Taxes.” Writing on card reads:
The Women’s Social & Political Union. 4, Clements Inn, Strand, W.C. Artist: A. Patriot. N.D., N.P. Not
postmarked. Gt.Br.
10.
[Postcard]. The Right Dishonorable Double Face Asquith. Black and white postcard with three
people on front - King on left is looking to man in the center who wears two faces - Woman on right is
holding a poster with writing: “Liberty Equality” - Man in center is holding a flag towards the King.
Writing on front: Under the King: “Citizen Asq-th; Down With Privilege Of Birth - Up With Democratic
Rule!” / Under man and woman: Monsignor Asq-th: The Rights of Government Belong To The
Aristocrats By Birth - Men, No liberty or Equality For Women!On right of card reads: “Votes for
Women” - Women’s Social and Political Union, 4, Clements Inn, Strand W.C. Artist: A. Patriot N.D.,
N.P. Not postmarked. GtBr.
11.
[Postcard]. Color postcard birth announcement - Stork holds a baby girl wearing a yellow hat
holding a sign: Votes for Women...Weight...Hair...Eyes...Name... Everybody concerned. Stork Series No. 86.
N.D.,N.P. Not postmarked. GtBr.
12.
[Postcard]. Give Me a Vote. Color postcard of man wearing dress and coat hold a red ribbon with
a rock with writing: “VOTES FOR WOMEN”.Writing on front: “SERMONS IN STONE”. J. Miles &
Co., Ltd. 68-70 Wardour St, W. N.D. GtBr.
13.
[Postcard]. Bournemouth Centenary Carnival Suffragettes. Black and white postcard of three men
like statues wearing dresses and aprons waving. Addressed to Miss Futcher, 8 West End Terrace Winchester Hants. “I believe ‘A’ is going to Ropley for a week or so soon then she intend to come round
to you - so look out for - I told her you were down there - come to see flying not -1 shall be up soon.
JWF.” Harley Barton So. Ltd.No. 28. GtBr.
14.
[Postcard]. Pankhurst, Chistabel. Black and white photograph postcard of Hyde Park
demonstration, Sunday, June 21,1908. “Miss Christbel Pankhurst, and Mrs. Pethick Lawrence” - ladies
are standing in white dresses with sashes in front of VOTES FOR WOMEN float. Not postmarked.
Sande Brothers, Empire House, Patenoster Row, London, England. N.D.,N.P.
15.
[Postcard]. Black and white postcard photograph of Petts’ Popular Cash Stores, Popular Fancy
Bazaar men standing out in front of store- [Picture Is faded]. Writing on back: “Dear H.. going to
London...getting home from a Suffragette Meeting...Louise”. N.D., N.P.
16.
[Postcard]. Mrs. [Charlotte] Despard- Hon. Treasurer Women’s Freedom League. Photograph by
Elliott & Fry. Printed in England. N.D.
17.
[Postcard]. Mama’s A Suffragette too! Black and white Photograph postcard of girl sitting on a
chair holding a paper that reads: “ Laugh and the World Laughs With You.” Rotary Photographic Series.
- Sweet Memories - I’m thinking of You often as the Days go by. And if I had my own way, You’d
always be night. Addressed to Miss H. Rider, 5 Ball Haye Terrace, Leeks Staffs. England. GtBr.
18.
[Postcard]. When Lovely Women get the Vote -The Men Will Look such Freaks. Color
Postcard of man and woman walking. Man is dressed in black coat and red skirt with bloomers Holding
an umbrella - Women is dressed in red hat with feather, yellow frilled shirt and brown Pants holding a
purse. Addressed to Mrs. A. Toarris. England. Printed in Great Britain. Duplicate.
19.
[Postcard]. Vll Still Got My Eyes on You, Black and white photograph postcard. Posed photograph
of a toddler peeking out from behind a broadside advertising a performance by Mrs. Howard Paul In Her
Impersonation of Miss Grym In Which She Will Lecture on Woman’s Rights. Rotary Photographic
Series. August, 12,1909. GtBr.
20.
[Postcard]. Vote For Women - Which Way?Black and white drawing of women holding a Flag:
“Votes for Women” - looking at a womensitting with cherubs flying around her. Photogravure Series
printed in England. Inter-Art Co., Southampton House. GtBr.
21.
[Postcard]. House of Parliament Black and red postcard. Mouse Series #1005. Mouse Standing
On Inkwell Looking At Paper on desk that is Report Suffragettes - Caption on report: “The Militant
Captain Said: “Close Up! Soon they wish she’s said “Close Down!”
22.
[Postcard].We Want Votes. Valentine Suffragette Series. Safe in the Arms of The Policeman Policeman carrying a woman in a red dress With red tie - she is holding an umbrella and has her hand in
her face- Another Woman being held by a policeman - several men and women in the background
Looking on. Addressed to Miss Lagden - Grays wood Vicarage - Haslermore, Surrey.
23.
[Postcard]. I Want My Vote. Color postcardof black cat with White mouth and strip down his belly,
and white paw tips he is sitting. Green, White, purple striped in background. Addressed to: Miss E.
Mitchell- West View, Littlethorpe, Ripon [England]. July 25,1909. Background striped in colors of The
WSPU - purple, white and green. Gt.Br.
24.
[Postcard]. We Don't Care if We Never Have the Vote. Series No. E42. Color postcard of Two cats,
one white with blue collar and one with a red collar. Printed in Germany. Series E.42. GtBr. Not
postmarked.
25.
[Postcard]. We Don't Care if We Never Have the Vote. Series No. E42. Color postcard of Two cats,
one white with blue collar and one with a red collar. Addressed to: Miss Mary Eleanor White, Little
Silver, Monmouth, N.J., N.D. London, B.B. Printed in Germany. Series E. 42.
26.
[Postcard]. A Thing of the Past - Old Dear. Color postcard - Pictorial Post cards from originals by
Tom Browne. Series 2607. Women wearing a blue dress with red short cap holding a sign: “Votes For
Women WOW!!Standing behind a box marked Moonlight Soap- Policeman carrying a a women wearing
a red skirt and yellow jacket and red hat - two boys standing by - laughing. Davidson Bros. (London).
1907.
27.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette Nails Her Colours to The Mast. Calette Suffragette Series. Color postcard
of women in blue jacket, yellow shirt and tie, with red and white ribbon on jacket holding umbrella
attaching cloth says: “Votes For Women”. Addressed to: Miss Cousland. Brighton, England. Raphael
Tuck and Sons, Ca. 1908. GtBr.
28.
[Postcard]. Suffragettes in Council. Black and white photograph postcard of four women. One
sitting and three women smoking. Two women on side have their feet on the arms of the chair.
Addressed to Mr. W. Bailey. Lufflnoott, N. Holsworthy. London.
29.
[Postcard]. Votes For Women. Black and white photograph postcard of Miss Christable Pankhurst
Ll.B - The Women's Social & Political Union. 4 Clements Inn, Strand, W.C. England.
31.
[Postcard]. Suffragette: How Did You Manage It? Color postcard. Picture of woman (man)-Standing
wearing a red coat over dress, holding a cane - bearded women (man) sitting in chair on stage with
banner in back showing a bearded lady danger. Bam forth & Co. England.
32.
[Postcard]. An Advocate for Women's Rights. Color postcard. “We Demand the Vote - Cat with hat
with feathers and a purple, white and green scarf with Votes for Women pin. WSPU colors. A & G
Taylor's Orthochrome Series. London, 1892.
33.
[Postcard]. A Perfect Woman. Color postcard of women standing holding a sign: “I Want A Vote”
- Sign Behind her reads:” Give Me a Vote And See What I'll Do.J. Miles & Co.,
34.
[Postcard]. But Surely My Good Woman. Color postcard of two Women Talking To a Man and
Woman at the door. Reads: “But Surely My Good Woman Don't You Yearn For Something Beyond
Sufficient Money To Provide You With Your Immediate Needs, Doesn't Your Heart Swell With the
Thought of Elevating Your Sex To A Share In Making the Laws Of Your Country”. Addressed to: Miss
Jessie Surell, Devon, England. C.W. Faulkner & Co., Series. 777F.
35.
[Postcard]. Sir - Will Women ever have Votes. Black and white postcard of man pointing at a
woman in a large hat holding a paper: “Sir, Will Women Ever Have Votes - Wait and See”. Davidson
Brothers. N.D. GtBr.
36.
[Postcard]. Votes For Women. Black and white drawing of a man standing at fence with Shotgun Train conductor pouring water into engine - woman sitting in a tree that has thrown a bomb? The
Southwold Express. Artist: Reg. Carter. Addressed to MC. Howard 'Freddy” Dorking, Surrey. England.
The Borrows of Southwold Series #1. GtBr.
37.
[Postcard]. A Perfect Woman. Color postcard of woman holding a sign: “I Want To Vote”.
Addressed to Mr. Kmorbinner, Esq. J. M. Miles & Co., Ltd. N.D. GtBr.
38.
[Postcard]. Miss Margaret Bondjield, M.P. Black and white photograph postcard image of Miss
Bondfield sitting at her desk. J. Miles & Co., Ltd. N.D. GtBr.
39.
[Postcard]. The Simple Life. Colored postcard. “The Simple Life - 99 times Round the Garden
Before Breakfast” C.W. Faulkner & Co., Ltd. Series 1029. N.P., 1913. GtBr.
40.
[Postcard]. We Don 't care If We Never Have A Vote. Color postcard of three cats. Addressed to:
Master Barnard Tingle. B.B. London, England. Printed in Germany. N.D. GtBr.
41.
[Postcard]. A Happy New Year. Color postcard of woman in purple dress running from a police
Officer. - Woman holding flag: “Votes for Women”. Printed in Saxony. N.D., N.P. GtBr.
42.
[Postcard]. Mrs. Pankhurst. Black and when photograph of Mrs. Pankhurst Being Arrested in
Victoria Street, Feb. 13,1908. Addressed to Joshua Pirn Esgre, Belfast. Ireland. Photochrom Co., Ltd.
London, 1908.
43.
[Postcard]. Fight On! Black and white photograph postcard. Flowers at a graveside: Date on
Gravestone: “February 1893”. No postmarked. Picture Of the Grave of Emily Wilding Davidson. Gr.Br.
44.
[Postcard]. Slow March - Constable - I’m Having The Time of My Life! Police carrying off middleaged suffragette with his hands on her thighs: card had sexual overtones. Bamforth & Co., N.Y. & Holm
firth, England.
45.
[Postcard]. Ain’t it Funny. Color postcard of women in green dress and orange hat holding her fist
in the air talking to a crowd. Wearing a sash that says “Down with Liquor”. Sign in back on blue says:
“Ladies’ Sponge Club”. Women Sitting behind her on stage. Wording: This female, whose one
inspiration was that Rum meant eternal damnation - Put our town on the blink in her campaign on Drink
And we dried up from liquid starvation.
46.
[Postcard]. Be Gamined. Color postcard of man in white sailor suit and hat in a speed boat
looking at the mermaids in the water. Five mermaids Swimming with their tails showing
47.
[Postcard]. Mrs. Pankhurst. Black and white photograph postcard. Mrs. Pankhurst standing by a
table holding a chain for her glasses - looking Into the camera. N.D.. N.P. A well- known image. GtBr.
Duplicate.
48.
[Postcard]. P.E.O. =[Petticoat Enter Only]. Black and white postcard with a star on the left side
with the words PEO-On the right side: B.I.L.’s -you’ve long wanted to know the Actual Meaning of
P.E.O.. You’ve heard solution Under the sun, “Petticoats Enter Only” - “Pretty Every One.” All false and
Delusive, you know very well - Now the meaning to you I am going to tell. It is: “Pretty Exclusive
Only”. Not posted. N.P., N.D. Gt Br.
49.
[Postcard]. Color postcard birth announcement - Stork holds a baby girl wearing a yellow hat
holding a sign: Votes for Women...Weight...Hair...Eyes...Name. Everybody Concerned. Stork Series No. 86.
N.P., N.D. Not postmarked. GtBr. 2nd copy.
50.
[Postcard]. What Are the Wild Wives Saying. Color postcard of man wearing a coat and Hat
standing in the street looking into two windows of a hall. Sign says: Women Suffrage Meeting in Town
Hall To-Night at 7:45. N.D. ca.1915. Bamforth & Co., England & New York.
51.
[Postcard]. Will Those In Favour’s of Women’s Suffrage - Please Hold Up Their Hands? Color postcard
of man dressed as a femal in a red skirt and jacket with a green sash that says “Votes for Women”.
Addressed to Mr. Henry Regard. Pontiac, Michigan. GtBr.
52.
[Postcard]. YES MADAM, BY YOUR BUMP OF PERSERVANCE - IF YOU LIVE ANOTHER 1000
YEARS - YOU MIGHT BECOME PRIME MINISTERESS! Color postcard of woman in glasses, blue dress Votes for Women scroll in lap sitting with man in black coat, red vest has fingers in woman’s hair - book
shelf in back with books and hats - framed picture of two heads on wall with names Charlie Peace and
Mr. Balfour. No postmark.
53.
[Postcard]. THE SUFFRAGETTE IN COURT- Two Months Without Chocolates. Color postcard of a Judge
in white wig and a red robe seated at a table pointing a girl in green dress with yellow bonnet in witness box with sign
stating “Votes for Women” - TUCK’S POST CARD - [London] Raphael Tuck and Sons. Oilette Postcard 9498.
54.
[Postcard]. THE SUFFRAGETTE Flouts His Worship. Color postcard of a large balding man with
glasses on, dark coat looks down at two women -one in white coat and red shirt, white/red hat and other
in green suite with green hat waving a flag that is written upside down : Votes for Women. London,
Raphael Tuck & Sons. N.D. Postmark: Oxford.
55.
[Postcard]. VOTES FOR WOMEN-Mrs. T. Billington-Greig. Black and white oval picture of Mrs.
Billington-Greig with writing: Hon. Organizing Sec. Women’s Freedom League - 1 Robert Street - Adelphia, London
WC. Photo-Brinley & Sons Glascow. The Women’s Freedom League. Signed by Mrs. T. Billington-Greig. N.D.
56.
[Postcard]. This is ‘THE HOUSE * that man built And these are a few of the Ladies of Fame Anxious to
write M.P. after their name, With each sex on a par, why pout up the bar? For M.P. means Mama or Papa. Quoth the
sweet Suffragette we're entitled to get into 'THE HOUSE' that man built Color postcard of three women in black
and white with red hat holding “Votes for Women” card - one in green with black hat, one in white skirt,
red belt and tie, black shirt and hat talking in front of Big Ben clock. BP London Series.
57.
[Postcard]. My Wife's Joined the Suffrage Movement (I've Suffered ever since!) Color postcard of woman in
yellow dress with pink flowers standing pointing at a man on his knees with blue striped apron on cleaning in front of
fireplace. London, Bamforth & Co. #1240.
58.
[Postcard]. This is 'THE HOUSE' that man built. And these are a few of the Ladies of Fame Anxious to
write M.P. after their name, With each sex on a par, why pout up the bar? For M.P. means Mama or Papa. Quoth the
sweet Suffragette we're entitled to get into 'THE HOUSE' that man built. Color postcard of three women in black
and white with red hat holding “Votes for Women” card - one in green with black hat, one in white skirt,
red belt and tie, black shirt and hat talking in front of Big Ben clock. BP London Series. #E23. March
22,1909. Duplicate.
[Different Images - Same Header].
[Postcard]. Just By Way Of A Change. Color postcard of a woman in greenish dress kneeling at the
feet of a man in a black suit sitting in a chair with red cushion - bouquet of flowers on the floor. BB.
London Series. N.D.
59.
60.
[Postcard]. Just By Way Of A Change. Color postcard of a woman in blue coat - - another man
walking toward door holding two jugs. BB. London Series. N.D.
61.
[Postcard]. Just By Way Of A Change. Color postcard of two women - one in a yellow dress with
brown trim and hat - second in green dress with fur wearing a hat - standing at a bar with a man behind
the bar wiping out a glass. BB London Series. N.D.
62.
[Postcard]. Young Lady wanted to keep house for Single Young Man (State salary required). Black and
white photograph of man washing clothes. Bamforth & Co. N.D.
63.
[Postcard]. Bribery Fair Canvasser: Then You Won’t Vote for Mr. Tomkins? Not- not even if - if I give
you a kiss. Black and white postcard of a man sitting at a desk writing and a woman standing with her hand on mouth.
Bamforth Series. N.D.
64.
[Postcard]. Oh, Its Nice to Be Married. Black and white photograph of man in apron on floor
cleaning while a woman sits at a table with a book. Bamforth Series. N.D.
65.
[Postcard]. Edith Cavell. Black and white oval photograph of Edith Cavell. N.P. Cliché et edit R.
Ringoest.
66.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette - An Anti-Shock. Black and white photograph of woman in black holding
post reading : The Suffragette - An Anti Shock by James Barr. N.P., N.D.
67.
[Postcard]. Sir, Will Women Ever Have Votes? “Wait and See!” Black and white photograph of a man
pointing at a woman in a hat holding papers. N.P. Davidson Bros. N.D.
68.
[Postcard]. Woman Suffrage Series - Fellow Women, Our Day Dawns at Last! Black and white
photograph of child in glasses holding up hands over newspaper. N.P., N.D.
69.
[Postcard]. VOTES FOR WOMEN - WE DON’T KNOW WHAT WE WANT BUT WE’LL HAVE IT!!!.
Color postcard of angry looking woman in orange coat, white shirt, red skirt in front a banner: Votes for
Women. N.P., N.D. #736.
70.
[Postcard]. A Suffragette and a Fooligan I Like em both. Color postcard of two women in white
dresses and hats walking on either side of a policeman - he has his hands around their waists. N.P., N.D.
71.
[Postcard]. The Suffragette - Addresses a Meeting of Citizens. Color postcard of a large woman in
green skirt, jacket with hat addressing 6 smaller people - one boy has a Votes for Women upside flag.
London, Raphael Tuck and Sons. N.D.
72.
[Postcard]. Who Said Votes For Women! Color postcard of dog with a pipe and glasses with
background of red, white, blue. N.P., N.P.
73.
[Postcard]. I Want My Vote. Color postcard of black and white kitten with mouth open
background of purple, white and green. Postmark: Ontario, Calgary. June 27,1912.
Duval Collection - *Small Collection of British Suffragist Postcards - The numerology is consistent
with the original inventory.
1043. Postcard. “Rights of Women”. Black and white postcard with woman standing holding A baby
in the street looking at a man in the doorway. Card reads: “Rights of Women, Mother. “Please Mr.
Burns, my baby ain't fit to be vaccinated.” John Burns: “No good for you to come here. Where’s your
husband?” Mother. “At Sea”. John Burns: “Well, be off with you - Mother don’t Count as parents”.
Marked: “For Sale at Women’s Freedom League Office. 18th Buckingham St, Strand, W.C. London,
England. N.D. Created by The Artists’Suffrage League.
The Artists Suffrage League, formed in 1907, designed banners for the National Union of
Women’s Suffrage Societies and produced postcards and illustrated pamphlets to facilitate its campaign.
While the Artist’s Suffrage League was open to professional artists, the Atelier (founded in 1909)
encouraged non-professionals to submit work. The Atelier was most closely associated with the
Women’s Freedom League and the Women’s Social and Political Union. Visually great. Very rare.
1044. Postcard. A Grand Members Concert. Cream colored postcard with red and black printed on
front: New Copyright Act In red ink: “ A Grand members Concert will shortly be given in the House of
Commons. In black ink: Admission by insurance card. Programme: Mr. McKenna, Mr. John Redmond,
Mr. Asquith, Mr. Bonar Law, Sir Rufus Issacs and Mr. Lloyd George., Mr. Winston Churchill and Mr.
Kier Hardie. Not Postmarked. The Printeries. Gorton Lane, Manchester, S.E. N.D. Visually great. Very
rare.
1045. Postcard. Result of the Suffragettes. Color postcard of woman standing on top of a stage holding
a pair of pans and suspenders - she is dressed in a black skirt and red jacket with red hat. She is talking to
a crowd of women. There is a woman seated at a desk behind her on a stage. The Sign reads” “Great Sale
- Relics of the Last Man”. Copyright No. 42. H.Q. 92 Burrows Rd. N.W. No. 42. Addressed to: Middie
Maud Williams. N.D. Visually great Very rare.
1046. Postcard. Mrs. Longtongue on Woman's Rights. Cream colored postcard with black ink. The text
on the front starts with Mrs. Longtongue, addressing a meeting of the “Blab and Scandal Society,” said
"In my opinion Ladies that the time has arrived when We must buck up and put our foot down on that insignificant
insect called man!” Addressed to Mrs. A. Hunt The Croft, York Avenue, Hunstanton. N.D. M & Co.
Registered. London, E.C. Visually great Very rare.
1047. Postcard. Bah Ah Ah. Color postcard of little girl in white and red dress crying in the middle of
the picture - at bottom left is a man and woman walking; top left: man and woman and woman in red
dress skating, top right: man at bar drinking with woman behind the bar - bottom: right boy with thumb
up. Reads: "Bah-ah-ah! Mammy’s Rinking. Sister Linking, Brothers Winking, Ise a thinking. Ise a Suffragette”.
Addressed to: Miss Josephine Wall / One Camden Rd / Dublin, Ireland. Visually great Very rare.
1048. Postcard. “The Suffragette”. Color postcard of woman in a green suit and black Hat with feather.
She is standing in front men drinking from a glass. Alfred Liebel & Co. Modern Humor Series -#4332 London, England. N.D.
1049. Postcard. “Votes for Women”. Black and white photographic postcard of nine Women sitting
and standing. Man dresses as a policeman is standing. All the women are wearing sashes and one women
is holding a banner that reads” “Votes for Women”. Not Postmarked. N.P. [London, England]. N.D.
Historically important Very rare.
1050. Postcard. Hyde Park Demonstration, Sunday 21, 1908: Mrs. Pankhurst, Mrs. Wolstenholme
Elmy. Photograph of women standing with flag and policeman in front right side. Addressed to: N.
Shochel, Esq. Sunderland, England. Postmarked: Leeds, May 6, 1910. Historically important. Very rare.
1051. Postcard. Votes for Women. Black and white photographic postcard of Mrs. E. How- Martyne.
ARCS BS. Hon. Sec. Women's Freedom League. 1 Robert Street Adelphia, London, WC. Photograph is
oval shaped. Top reads: “Votes for Women” The London Council of Women's Freedom League.
Photographer: Ridsdale Cleare, Lower Clafton Rd. N.E. [London, England].
1052. Postcard. Mrs. Pankhurst Black and white photograph of Mrs. Pankhurst being arrested in
Victoria Street on Feb. 13, 1908. She is surrounded by police. Addressed To Mrs. Marriott London,
England. Photographer: Photochrom Company Ltd. London and Detroit Printed in London. Verso: pencil
writing on back. Historically Important - this image was published throughout the world. Very desirable.
Pivotal event in the History of Women Suffrage.
1053. Postcard. “Comparisons Are Odious. Color postcard with man sitting on left side of table
holding a bottle of liquor and glass. Writing under (1. The male political prisoner - on right is woman
sitting with apron - holding a plate. Writing under (2. The female political prisoner. Valentine's Series.
N.D., N.P. [London, England]. Gt.Br. Very desirable.
1054. Postcard. “Feeding A Suffragette By Force. Color postcard of woman in red dress Wearing a bib
being feed by a needle-like-plunger with the words: “Milk On The Tube”. She is being held by one man
wearing black and another man is holding the plunger. Woman Is grabbing this man's hair. The scene
takes place in a prison cell. Addressed to: Miss Morris. National Series. Made in Great Britain. Very rare.
1055. Postcard. “The Suffragette Proudly Goes to Glory!” Color postcard of woman dressed In red
holding a “Votes For Women” flag in the back of a paddy wagon driven by two policemen. Read: The
Suffragette Proudly Goes to Glory!”. Postmarked: Maida Hill, W. [London], March 16,1910. Raphael
Tuck & Sons. “Oilette”. The Suffragette Postcard #9498. Very rare.
1056. Postcard. “Women Writers’ Suffrage League”. Color postcard of Woman Justice Standing blind
folded with scales in left hand and sword in right A halo is around her head- She is dressed in white and
gold. There is a woman at her feet in a pink dress with brown material Draped around her and she is
holding on. Addressed to: Mrs. Bailey Belmont Ramsey- Isle of Man- “Just been to the House of Commons...
Postmarked: July 21. |Ca. 19101. W.W.S.L. 53 Goschen Building, 12 Henrietta Street London, W.C.
[England]. Very rare. Seldom seen.
1057. Postcard. “Girls I Didn’t Marry”. Color postcard of man being booted out by Women with
“Votes for Women” pins. The signs on the front of the building say: “Man? The Missing Link, Down
with the Men, No Men Admitted, Home for Lost, Stolen or Strayed Suffragettes, Man Disgraces the
Animal World. Addressed to Mrs. E. Reid. Belfast [Northern Ireland]. Addressed to: “Mother”. N.P.
N.D. [Ca. 1910]. Very rare.
1058. Postcard. “Yes Madam”, color postcard of a woman in blue dress (looking like a man) Sitting
with a rolled up paper that reads: “Votes for Women”. Man in red vest and black Jacket is standing
behind her with his hand in her hair. Reads: “Yes Madam, by your bump of Perseverance, you will live
another 1000 years - you might become prime ministeress!”. Addressed to: Arthur Squires. N.P., N.D.
Very rare. Visually great
End of postcards in the Duval Archive. (15)
74.
[Photograph postcard]. Wargrave Church. Black and white postcard Showing three men
standing in front of the Wargrave Church. Inscribed: “Wargrave burnt down By Suffragettes” (sic). In the
early hours of 1 June 1914 the church was set on fire. It is thought that suffragettes were responsible.
Arson had become one of their common methods of protest, a way to demonstrate their defiance to the
government’s suppression of women. Gt.Br.
75 [Postcard]. ‘To the Twentieth Century Miss’. White post card with black and red ink. “To the Twentieth
Century Miss: Be Good, Sweet Maid, And Let who will be clever Do noble Deeds: Not dream them all Day long, And
so make Life, Death, and the great forever, One grand sweet Song, and Never Mind Votes for Women.” N.D., N.P.
Gt.Br.
76.
[Postcard]. ‘To the Twentieth Century Miss’. White post card with black and red ink. “To the
Twentieth Century Miss: Be Good, Sweet Maid, And Let who will be clever Do noble Deeds: Not dream them all Day
long, And so make Life, Death, and the great forever, One grand sweet Song, and Never Mind Votes for Women.”
N.D., N.P. GtBr. Duplicate.
77.
[Postcard] .National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies. Black print National Union of
Women’s Suffrage Societies, Parliament Chamber, 14, Great Smith Street, Westminster, London, S.W.
Hon. Treasurer: Mrs. Auerback-President: Mrs. Henry Fawcett, LL.D. Hon. Secretaries: Miss K. D.
Courtney,Miss C.E. Marshall - Secretary: Miss Crookenden, M.A. N.D.,
78.
[Postcard].Mrs. [Charlotte]Despard - Hon. Treasurer Women’s Freedom League. Photograph by
Elliott & Fry. Printed in England. N.D. GtBr.
79.
[Postcard].“Mama’s A Suffragette too!” Black and white Photograph postcard of girl sitting on a
chair holding a paper that reads: “ Laugh and the World Laughs With You.” Rotary Photographic Series.
- Sweet Memories - I’m thinking of You often as the Days go by. And if I had my own way, You’d
always be night Addressed to Miss H. Rider, 5 Ball Haye Terrace, Leeks Staffs. England. GtBr.
80.
[Postcard].“When Lovely Women get the Vote -The Men Will Look such Freaks.”. Color
Postcard of man and woman walking. Man is dressed in black coat and red skirt with bloomers Holding
an umbrella - Women is dressed in red hat with feather, yellow frilled shirt and brown Pants holding a
purse. Addressed to Mrs. A. Toarris. England. Printed in Great Britain. Duplicate.
81.
[Postcard]. “I’ll Still Got My Eyes on You”. Black and white photograph postcard. Posed
photograph of a toddler peeking out from behind a broadside advertising a performance by Mrs. Howard
Paul In Her Impersonation of Miss Grym In Which She Will Lecture on Woman’s Rights. Rotary
Photographic Series. August, 12,1909. Gt.Br.
82.
[Postcard]. “I'm Going to Make A Suffrage Speech To All The Folks Whom I Can Reach”.
Black and white drawing of little girl with wings standing on stump holding a hammer? Artist: C.E.
Perry. Addressed to Mrs. Lulie Hinton, Grandfordsville, Inc. U.S. $75.00
83.
[Postcard]. “Vote For Women - Which Way?” Black and white drawing of women holding a
Flag: “Votes for Women” - looking at a women sitting with cherubs flying around her. Photogravure
Series printed in England. Inter-Art Co., Southampton House. Gt.Br.
84.
[Postcard]. “House of Parliament”. Black and red postcard. Mouse Series #1005. Mouse
Standing On Inkwell Looking At Paper on desk that is Report Suffragettes - Caption on report: “The
Militant Captain Said: “Close Up! Soon they wish she’s said “Close Down!”
85.
[Postcard].“We Want Votes”. Valentine Suffragette Series. Safe in the Arms of The Policeman Policeman carrying a woman in a red dress With red tie - she is holding an umbrella and has her hand in
her face- Another Woman being held by a policeman - several men and women in the background
Looking on. Addressed to Miss Lagden - Grays wood Vicarage - Haslermore, Surrey. September
23,2909.
86.
[Postcard]. “I Want My Vote”. Color postcard of black cat with White mouth and strip down his
belly, and white paw tips he is sitting. Green, White, purple striped in background. Addressed to: Miss E.
Mitchell- West View, Littlethorpe, Ripon |England]. July 25,1909. Background striped in colors of The
WSPU - purple, white and green. Gt.Br.
87.
[Postcard].“We Don’t Care if We Never Have the Vote” Series No. E42. Color postcard of Two
cats, one white with blue collar and one with a red collar. Printed in Germany. Series E.42. Gt.Br. Not
postmarked.
88.
[Postcard].“We Don’t Care if We Never Have the Vote” Series No. E42. Color postcard of Two
cats, one white with blue collar and one with a red collar. Addressed to: Miss Mary Elleanor White,
Little Silver, Monmouth, N.J., N.D. London, B.B. Printed in Germany. Series E. 42.
89.
[Postcard]. “Don’t Be on the Fence, Come Over To My Side and Be A Good Feller”. Series
895. Artist: Cobb X. Shinn. Color postcard of young woman in checkered dressed trimmed in dark color
with red bow in her black hair. T.P. & Co., 1912.
90.
[Postcard].“A Thing of the Past - Old Dear”. Color postcard - Pictorial Post cards from originals
by Tom Browne. Series 2607. Women wearing a blue dress with red short cap holding a sign: “Votes For
Women WOW!!” Standing behind a box marked Moonlight Soap- Policeman carrying a women wearing
a red skirt and yellow jacket and red hat - two boys standing by-laughing. Addressed to: Sargent Starkey.
London, England, 1907. Davidson Bros. (London). Ca. 1907.
91.
[Postcard]. “The Suffragette Nails Her Colours to The Mast”. Calette Suffragette Series. Color
postcard of women in blue jacket, yellow shirt and tie, with red and white ribbon on jacket holding
umbrella attaching cloth says: “Votes For Women”. Addressed to: Miss Cousland. Brighton, England.
Raphael Tuck and Sons, Ca. 1908.
92.
[Postcard]. “Suffragettes in Council”. Black and white photograph postcard of four women. One
sitting and three women smoking. Two women on side have their feet on the arms of the chair.
Addressed to Mr. W. Bailey. Luffinoott, N. Holsworthy. London. Published Walstone Bros. 1907.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & Archives- For the Study of The Rights of Women in History
and Law.
Women's Suffrage Advocacy Campaigns, U.S. & U.K., 1840-1920
By the early twentieth century, a proliferation of fliers, booklets, off-prints, articles, handbills, extracts
and broadsides inundated America and Great Britain. This propaganda tactic used during the long and
complex history of the woman suffrage movement was overwhelming the most successful. For roughly
seventy years, the suffrage movement in America had stalled, transformed, and flourished through
various manifestations. Early twentieth century suffragists believed that appealing to traditional ideas of
female domesticity offered their best chance to obtain the vote. Instead of arguing that politics could
transform the housewife, suffragists promised that women's votes could create positive change in policy.
By using such powerful expressions, suffragists highlighted the importance that society put on the health
and well-being of one's family. With a multitude of threats facing society and the family, women's
'natural' abilities would be indispensable at the polls. Suffragists also promoted the nineteenth century
notion that women had "a firmer grip on religion and morals ... (and a) stronger claim to piety and
purity, and a sense of moral superiority". Directed at voting men, some of these fliers suggested that
women's moral purity could transform public behavior.
Additionally, suffragists used the printed word to address longstanding arguments against women
obtaining the vote. While suffrage propaganda attempted to assure men of the many ways women's
votes could be utilized, it also sought to persuade society of the benefits these votes offered the state and
nation. Women had been active in abolition, moral reform, and temperance movements during the latter
half of the 1800s. Suffragists reasoned that the women who had administered medicine and sanitation
during the Civil War, (Mary Livermore) initiated social programs for the poor (Jane Addam’s Hull House),
and organized prison reform, (Dorothy Dix) would also provide positive influence at the polls.
A host of events at the turn of the century contributed to the success of women's suffrage. Spearheaded
by the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA), the national organization that led multiple
local associations, the movement steadily expanded in the early 1900s. At the urging of President
Woodrow Wilson, the Senate approved a women's suffrage amendment in became law in time for
women to vote in the November 1920 presidential election. After decades of combating opposition from
without and apathy from within, the movement had finally achieved its goal.
Leaflets:
First Annual Congress-1873. Association for the Advancement of Woman. New York, 1873. Lists
president: Mary A. Livermore and Vice Presidents, Secretaries, Treasurers and Executive Committee. 4
Pp.
Some Strange History: The “Three Immediate Women- Friends of Susan B. Anthony Family. James
Calloway, Editor. Reprinted from The Macon Telegraph. May 26,1918. 4 Pp.
Susan B. Anthony Eulogizes Ben Butler. At New Orleans, in the Official History of Suffrage, Which
Meets with the Approval of Carrie Chapman Catt, Ida Husted Harper and Others. Her Co-Laborers in
Writing it. Will the Men of Louisiana Stand for this? Will the Daughters and Grand Daughters Whom
This Crushing Blow Fell, Continue to follow Such Leaders? The Official History of Woman Suffrage
Stands the Accuser! Excerpts from The History of Suffrage. James Calloway, Editor. Reprinted from
The Macon Telegraph, N.D, Ca. 1918. 4 Pp.
National Women Citizens Association. Worthing Branch-Office 14, Liverpool Terrace. Ca. 1918.
Written on top in red ink: “Have these in quanity-50p. Each”. Gt.Br.
Women Suffrage and Temperance. An ounce of fact is said to be worth a ton of theory- let us listen to
the testimony offered by those who live where Women already vote. Hornell, New York. Southern Tier
Suffrage Press. N.D.
How to Vote For Woman Suffrage - Nov. 6,1917. Mock ballot form telling the reader how to vote on
Election Day. November 6,1917. New York State Woman Suffrage Party. Black printing on orange.
A Million Women. Appeal to the Voters of New York for Justice. New York: Empire State Campaign
Committee. New York, Ca. 1915.
Votes for Women. “People Say: and We Say”. New York, National American Woman Suffrage
Association. Allied Printing. Black print on orange paper. N.P., N.D.
Some Reasons Why We Oppose. List the reasons to oppose Woman Suffrage. New York. National
Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. New York, N.D.
Don’t Forget to Vote for Woman Suffrage First. Instructions for voters on how to vote for Amendment
No. 1. New York. The New York State Woman Suffrage Party. N.P., N.D. 2 copies.
To the Voters. Resolutions Adopted by the New York State Woman Suffrage Party Conference.
Saratoga, [N.Y.]. August 30,1917. Vote for Woman Suffrage Amendment - Nov. 6, [1917]. New York
State Woman Suffrage Party. 4 copies.
Your Vote Was Handled to You When You Become Twenty One Years of Age. New York. National
Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., October 1917. Black print
Twelve Reasons Why Woman Should Vote. 12 Numbered Reasons Why Women Should Vote. National
Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, Inc. N.P. |N.D].
Votes for Women! The Women’s Reason [Ten Reasons Listed]. New York City: National American
Woman Suffrage Association. 2 copies.
You Will Wish to Hear....the famous Canadian Woman Suffrage Leader Mrs. Flora Mc D. Dennison and
Mr. Frank Durham (Formerly of Colorado). Also: The Liberty Loan Speaker: Rev. Dr. J. Ellenwood at
the Final Suffrage Mass Meeting in The Common Council Chamber City Hall. Thursday, October 25 at
8:00 P.M. Presiding officer: Mayor E.J.
College Equal Suffrage League. Extracts from Objections Answered. Subheading: “Are Women
Represented? Women are Represented Already by Their Husbands, Fathers, and Brothers” - “Men and
Women Different?” - “The Ignorant Vote”. N.P., N.D. 4 Pp.
Summing Up the Case for Woman Suffrage. Justice David J. Brewer of the United States Supreme
Court Extracts from an article in in Lady’s World. December 1909. 4 Pp.
Women Suffrage and The Marriage Relation. To the Editors of “The Courant” from J. Hooper. The
Hartford Courant N.D.
College Equal Suffrage League. San Francisco, Listing the Board of Directors. “Arguments for Equal
Suffrage”. N.P., N.D. 4 Pp.
Clergymen Pledged to Support Woman Suffrage, Liquor Dealers Opposing Woman Suffrage - Why? Answer - Emphatically “Yes” - on October 19th. [N.D]. Newark Allied Printing.
[Emily Davies). Are Women Suffragists Asking for Seats in Parliament? A Reply. A Letter of Inquiry,
signed “Phytogenies” appeared in “The Times” of January 30, 1907. This reply was inserted with the
February 4th - To the Editor of “The Times. Kensington, (London): S. Sidders & Co., .N.D. Gt. Br.
California Equal Suffrage Association. Do You Know? Carrie Chapman Catt, President of the
International Suffrage Alliance of 21 Counties. Bullet Points of “Do You Know?” N.D., 2 Pp.
What is Woman Suffrage? London Society for Women’s Suffrage. President - The Lady Balfour. By
C.E. Skinner. London, (1898). 2 Pp. Gr. Br.
Request from Mrs. Fawcett, LL.D. and Others to be Heard at the Bar of the House. February 1907. The
following letter has recently been addressed by Mrs. Eva McLaren, Lady Knighley of Fawsley, Miss
1.0. Ford; Mrs. Henry Fawcett, and Mrs. Cooper to the Prime Minister, asking him to move in the House
of Commons that they might be heard at the Bar in support of a Petition to remove the electoral
disabilities of their sex”. Reprinted by the Central Society of Women’s Suffrage. Kensington, [London):
S, Sidders & Co., [February 1907]. 2 sheets - 4 Pp. Hand punched. Very rare. Gt Br.
To the Women of New Jersey - Why You Should Vote? Executive Committee, New Jersey State
Woman Suffrage Association. Vineland, March 1,1868. For Sale by C.B. Campbell, Vineyard and Lucy
Stone. Newark, N.J. Price $1.00 per 100. 2 sheets. 4 Pp.
Reason Why the Women of New Jersey Should Vote, As Shown From the Constitution and Statues of
New Jersey. Executive Committee, New Jersey State Woman Suffrage Association. Vineland, 1868. For
Sale by C.B. Campbell, Vineyard and Lucy Stone. Newark, N.J. Price $1.00 per 100. 2 sheets. 4 Pp.
Why Not? New York State Woman Suffrage Party. New York. N.W.S. Publishing Company. [1868]. 4
Pp.
Woman Suffrage Above Human Law. Reprint of a letter from Gerrit Smith to Susan B. Anthony.
August 15,1873. 2 Pp.
Men and Women: Who Gave The Men Their Right to Vote? Who Will Give Women Their Right to vote
and when? Votes for Women! The Women’s Reason’s Reason. San Francisco Equal Suffrage
Association. N.D.
Woman’s Progress versus Woman Suffrage. Article by Helen Kenrick Johnson. New York State
Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. 2 sheets. 4 Pp.
Provisional Draft International Convention on the Nationality of Married Women. London: International
Woman Suffrage Alliance. N.D. 1 sheet. 2 Pp. Gt.Br.
Five Points in the Relation between Votes for Woman and Certain Economic and Social Facts. Article
by Geraldine Hodgson. National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies. President: Mrs. Henry Fawcett,
LL.D. London, Templar Printing Works. 1 sheet. 2 Pp. Gt. Br.
To Adult Suffragists: the Present Suffrage Position - Its Advantages And Dangers.
Fabian Women's Group. Signed in print by Barbara Black. Dec. 1911.2 sheets. 4 Pp. Gt. Br.
Eminent Opinions on Woman Suffrage. American Woman Suffrage Association. Vol. II, Number 20.
May 15,1889. 1 sheet 2 Pp.
Emily Davies. Women’s Service to the State and the Parliamentary Vote. Central Society for Women’s
Suffrage. London. S. Sidders & Co. [May, 1905]. 4 Pp. Gt. Br.
Will the Ballot Help the Working Girl? By M.E.L. McKeen. N.P., N.D. 2 sheets. 4 Pp.
Hon. George Curtis. Equal Rights for Women. Woman Suffrage Leaflet Vol. 11, No. 12.
The following Argument for Woman Suffrage was made by the Hon. George Curtis before the last New
York State Constitutional Convention. Boston, American Woman Suffrage Association. Jan. 15,1889. 2
sheets. 4 Pp.
Rev. J. W. Bashford. The Bible for Woman Suffrage. Woman Suffrage Leaflet Vol. II. No. 29.
Addressed delivered at the 13th Annual Meeting of the Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Association.
Boston, American Woman Suffrage Association. October 1, 1889.1 sheet, 2 Pp.
Henry S. Blackwell. Objects to Woman Suffrage Answered. Woman Suffrage Leaflet Vol. I. No. 3.
Objections to Woman Suffrage Answered. Boston, American Woman Suffrage Association. September
1,1888. 1 sheet. 2 Pp.
War As A War Measure. New York State Woman Suffrage Party. New York. N.W.S. Publ. Co.,
October 1917. 1 sheet 2 Pp. 4 copies.
Your Great Opportunity to Hear...Two of the Country’s Famous Speakers, Dr. Anna Howard Shaw
(Chairman of the Woman’s Advisory Committee of the Council of National Defense) and the Hon. Wm.
H. Wad hams (Justice of the Court of General Sessions). At Hamanus Bleecker Hall, Sunday, October
28th at 4 p.m. Vote for Woman Suffrage Amendment No. 1, NOVEMBER 6th 2 copies.
Women Suffrage As A War Measure. Mrs. Catt, President of the National Woman’s Suffrage
Association urges Congress to Pass the Federal Suffrage Amendment as a “War Measure”. Public
Interests League of Massachusetts. N.D.
To the Women Who Are Well Off. By M. Taylor. National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies.
London, S. Sidders & Co., [1905]. 2 sheets. 4 Pp. 2 copies. Gt.Br.
Mrs. Humphrey Ward. Woman Suffrage - The Present Situation. The National League for Opposing
Woman Suffrage. London. National Press Agency Limited, N.D. 1 sheet 2 Pp. GtBr.
What President Wilson Says. President Wilson Wants Woman Suffrage. Writing to Mrs. Catt January
27,1917. Hon. Crabtree, March 3,1917. Address to Congress on April 3, 1917. Address to Suffragists at
the National Convention, September 8th, 1916. Stand by Our President and Make Our Own Glorious
Country - A Democracy. Duplicate.
Votes for Women Suffrage. Includes two cartoons: “Try A Suffrage Pencil!” Reprinted from The
Maryland Suffrage News and E.B. Schiffers’s “Votes for Women and the Larger Homer.
N.P., N.D. 1 sheet 2 Pp.
Women Suffrage in Wyoming. Woman Suffrage Leaflet. Vol. II. No. 19. American Woman Suffrage
Association. Boston, September 1,1888. 1 sheet. 2 Pp.
Some Words of Weight on Women’s Suffrage. National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies.
Quotations from John Stuart Mill, The Late Lord Salisbury, Rt. Hon. Arthur J. Balfour, M.P.; Rt Hon.
John Morey, M.P.; J Keir Hardie, M.P.; The Late Francis Power Cobbe, Mrs. Henry Fawcett, LL.D. 1
sheet 2 Pp. Gt Br.
Lucy Stone: Questions for Remonstrants. Woman Suffrage Leaflet Vol. 11. No. 18. Boston, American
Woman Suffrage Association, April 15,1889. 1 sheet 2 Pp.
The Catholic Historical Review. James J. Kenneally. Catholicism and Woman Suffrage In
Massachusetts. Reprinted from The Catholic Historical Review. Volume LIII. Number 1, April 1967.
James J. Kenneally was an Associated Professor of History at Stonehill College.
Harper’s Bazaar. Jeanette Gilder. Why I am Opposed to Woman Suffrage- Jeanette Wilder, Founder of
The Critic. Reprinted from Harper’s Bazaar. May 19,1894. 4 Pp.
The Delineator. George Creel and Judge Ben B. Lindsey. Measuring Up Equal Suffrage. Reprinted from
“The Delineator” By Courtesy of the Editors. New York: National American Woman Suffrage
Association. Ca. 1910-1911.
The Delineator. George Creel and Judge Ben B. Lindsey. Measuring Up The Results of Equal Suffrage
in Colorado. Reprinted from “The Delineator”. February 1911.
The Western Historical Society. T.A. Larson. Dolls, Vassals, and Drudges - Pioneer Women in the
West. Reprinted from The Western Historical Society. Vol. Ill, Number 1 January 1972.
The Historian. James J. Kenneally. Woman Suffrage and the Massachusetts “Referendum” of 1895.
Reprinted from The Historian. Volume XXX, Number 4. August, 1968. Pp. 617-633.
Goldwin Smith. Woman Suffrage. Reprinted from “Essays On Questions of the Day”, by Goldwin
Smith, D.C.L., Author of “Canada and the Canadian Question”; “The United States: An Outline of
Political History”. With stamp bookplate: Mrs. Henry Draper. Duplicate to be Kept: The New York
Public Library/Astor, Lenox and Truen Foundations, 1899. - Copyright 1893. Pp. 183-218.
Sunday Times. Cicely Hamilton. Women’s Votes. The Repression of A Disenfranchised Sex. Reprinted
from The Sunday Times, March 15,1908. By Kind permission of the Editors. National Union of
Women’s Suffrage Societies. Pp. 183-218.
[Program]. The Equal Rights Amendment-Our Legacy - Our Goal. July 18,1998, National Woman’s
Party - 75th Anniversary Equal Rights Celebration. First Presbyterian Church - Seneca Falls, New York.
[Program]. The Illustrated Inaugural Souvenir. Containing the Official Programs of the Inaugural and
Suffragettes Parades. Washington, D.C. March 4,1913.
Harper’s Bazaar. Carl Schurz. New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. Reprinted
from Harper’s Weekly. New York, June 16,1894. 4 Pp.
[Program]. A Meeting of Appreciation of the Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony. Under the Auspices
of the Inter-urban Political Equality Council of the Greater New York. Plymouth Church, Brooklyn,
New York. April 1,1906 at three o’clock. Brooklyn Auxiliary Leagues.. 1906.
[Program]. Woman Suffrage Mass Meeting. Carnegie Hall, Friday, December the Fourth - Nineteen
Hundred & Eight - Held under the auspices of the Inter-urban Woman Suffrage Council. 1908.
[Program]. The Equal Suffrage Society of Indianapolis. Literary and Social Meeting in Celebration of
the Seventieth Birthday of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. November 12,1885.
[Program]. London Society for Woman’s Suffrage. Programme of A Dramatic Entertainment to be
given by the Elizabeth Bessie Comedy Company at Spears Memorial Hall, Highgate Hill on Thursday,
January 11th, 1912 at 8 pm. The Rehearsal of A XVII Century Play by Villiers - 2nd Duke of
Buckingham.
[Program]. Primrose League. Entertainment at the Town Hall, Andover. By kind permission of His
Worship the Mayor: Two Acts. The Chimney and The Coming Woman. Mayor Davenport in the play.
Andover Standard Co., Ltd., Ca. 1890.
[Program]. Treasure Women’s History - Sewall Belmont House. National Woman’s Party. SewallBelmont House Millennium Matching Fund Campaign literature. Color- tri-fold leaflet Modern.
Sewall Belmont House. Leaflet. Washington, D.C., N.D. Modern.
Pictorial Review. Cardboard sign. White background with red and black lettering: Signage advertising
for magazine: “Do We Want The Suffragette? By An American Woman who has voted/ What the Public
Spirited Woman Can Do and How She Can Do It//How to be a Milliner”. With 18 Pp. of New Fashions.
15 Cents.
Alice Stone Blackwell. Women Do Not Want It! It Is Often Said That When The Majority of Women
Want The Ballot, They Will Get It. Stamped on front: Massachusetts Suffrage Association. The National
American Woman Suffrage Association. N.Y. 1914.
The Independence With Which is Incorporate - Mr. Root and Suffrage. Elhiu Root was a ardent antisuffragist and Secretary of War Under President Theodore Roosevelt N.P, N.D.
An Interview with Mrs. Clarence Mackay on Woman Suffrage. 4 page article with photograph. Mrs.
Mackay was President of the Equal Franchise Society. Munsey’s Magazine, New York, 1905.
Pictorial Review. Edited by Arthur T. Vance. Vol. XVI-No 5. February 1915. “Let’s Make A Law
Against It”.
Woman’s Home Companion. November, 1922.Campaigning with Women Candidates.
The Delineator. January [1910?]. Mable Potter Daggett Suffrage Enters the Drawing Room. - Society
has saluted the Four Star Flag and the “Cause” Enrolls Thousands.
Good Housekeeping. Article on “When Women Get Together” - October, 1919.
Harpers Weekly. “The Conquest of the English Channel”. Article showing Sydney Brooks as a London
Correspondent. Picture at the bottom: “The Naval Branch of Militant Suffragettes”.
Harpers Weekly. “Women’s Rights In England”. June 22, 1872. Article discussing the Woman’s
Disability Act in England - Illustration titled: “Women’s Rights in England - Meeting in Support of
“The Women’s Disability Act”. Illustration shows men and women sitting and standing on a balcony.
Harpers Weekly. “Chivalry”. October 9,1915. Illustration showing Woman tied to a pole with a chain
around her ankles and a man bowing holding her hand-Also a man pointing finger at women who has a
sash with the words: “Votes For Women”-Artist: Chamberlain. Words on the page: He: “Woman
Suffrage will kill Chivalry!” She: “Is that a threat? - Or a Promise!”
Grover Cleveland. Would Woman Suffrage Be Unwise? 1 page printed on both sides. Article by the ExPresident of the United States. N.P., N.D.
Harpers Weekly. Katharine Rolston Fisher: The “Anti” Speaks. 1914. Article discusses suffragists and
the need to protect boys against these women.
The Illustrated American. Shall Women Be Granted Full Suffrage. Articles on front and back of Pp.:
“Not For the Southern Woman - Taxed Without Representation - Suffrage Means Death of the Nation.
May 19, 1894.
Harper’s Weekly. Cartoon cover: “Get Thee Behind Me. (Mrs.) Satan” [Mrs. Woodhill]. February 17,
1872. Pp. 140. Artist: Thomas Nast
Harper’s Weekly. Cartoon cover: “Women at the Polls in New Jersey in the Good Old Times”.
November 13,1880. Pp. 724. Artist: Howard Pyle
Harper’s Monthly. June 6,1903. Article by Mary Garrett Hay. Pg. 933.
Harper’s Monthly. 1908. Article by Bertha Damaris Knobe. “Votes for Woman: An Object Lesson”. Pp.
20-21.
Harper’s Weekly. 1908. Article: Tribulations of the Suffragettes.
The Illustrated American. June 30,1894. Article: Shall Women Be Granted Full Suffrage? Pp. 771-773.
Leslie’s: The People’s Weekly. Votes for Women. November 7,1912. Drawing of Suffrage marchers in
automobile with pennants and megaphones.
McCall’s Magazine. September 1910, Pp. 12-13. Article: Brunson Clark: “Concerning Women’s
Rights”.
The Graphic. May 25,1872. Women’s Rights-A Meeting at the Hanover Square Room.
Pp. 483.
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper. December 20, 1879. Two page section of captioned illustrations.
“Massachusetts-Woman Suffrage In the Bay State-Scenes at the Polls in Cambridge; December 2nd and
[in] Boston. December 9th - During the Municipal Elections- When Women were permitted to Vote for
the School Boards” Pp. 276-277. Artist: H.A. Ogden.
ERA Summit. Congressional Research Service Analyzes Three State Strategy. Article by Roberta W.
Francis. 2nd side: The Equal Rights Amendment: Why the ERA Remains legally viable and Properly
Before the States. N.P, N.D.
[Response Form]. The Equal Rights Amendment - Unfinished Business for the Constitution. ERA
Summit Response Form - Yes, I Want to Support the ERA Amendment through the work of the ERA
Summit - [Inside] Purple paper with article clipping: “Equality of Rights Under the Law...” and “Three
State Strategy keeps existing ratifications alive”. Tri-fold. N.P., N.D.
[Announcement]. Suffrage School and Conference. Sixth Campaign District New York State Woman
Suffrage Party to be held in the Binghamton Public Library - March 6-10, 1917. Conducted by Miss
Elinor Byrns. Free admissions. N.P., [1917].
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper. December 22, 1888. Pp. 319-320. Article: “Women at the Polls In
Boston”.
Ladies Home Journal. November 1, 1910. Pp. 15-16,68-69. Article: Richard Barry: “What Women Have
Actually Done Where They Vote”.
Woman’s Home Companion. November 1909. Pp. 22,70-71.
Article: “Vote For Women, What They Look Like From the Inside”.
Harper’s Weekly. 1908. Pp. 7-8. Article: Henry James Forman: “The Most Eloquent Woman Living”.
With a full page photograph of Mrs. Phillip Snowden.
Harper’s Weekly. Lucretia Mott, William Lloyd Garrison. Appearing in Harper’s Weekly, May 21,1870.
Pp. 325-326. Containing biographies illustrated with portraits.
[Booklets]:
Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Women and Her Wishes. An Essay. Thomas Wentworth Higginson,
Minister of the Worcester Free Church. Hand bound with a string, 31 Pp., plus 6 Pp. of advertisement
that includes an advertisement of Lucy Stone endorsing “Universal Clothes Wringer”. New York.
American Equal Rights Association, 1867. Rare.
George Jacob Holyoake. A Defense of the Ballot in Consequences of Mr. Mill’s Objections to it Political error is like a Serpent alive at both ends - if severed it may still sting; while it wriggles it lives,
and those who mean to end it must —chop at it”. [Ninth thousand]. London, Book Store, 1868. 8 Pp.
Gt.Br.
John George Hertwig. “Equal Rights To All In All Matters of Public Concern.” Washington, D.C., John
G. Hertwig, 1883. 16 Pp. Inscription on front: “St. Louis, August 2nd, 1889 / James T. Mallinder /
Washington, D.C.”
James Thronton Hoskins. A Modification of Mr. Hare’s Scheme for the Election of Representatives.
London, Emily Faithful - Victorian Press. N.D. Gt. Br.
John Innes Society. Dorset Hall, 1906-1935. A House, A Family, A Cause-Votes for Women. John
Innes Society. London, 1994. Gt. Br.
Alice Stone Blackwell. Objections Answered Why Should Women Vote. Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Woman Suffrage Association. Revised. 1915. 44pp.
Suffrage Speeches From the Dock. The Woman’s Press, 1912. Made at the Conspiracy Trial.
Mr. Tim Healy, K.C., M.P. In the Old Bailey today - Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst and Mrs. Pethick
Lawrence and her husband were charged with conspiracy in connection with recent suffragists
disturbances. All pleaded not guilty. Mr. Tim Healy appeared as council for Mrs. Lawrence. The others
were not represented by counsel. Gt.Br.
The International Arbitration and Peace Association for Great Britain and Ireland.
11th Annual Report - Together With Statement of Accounts for the Year 1892. Presented at The Annual
Meeting. 30th May 1892. 44 Pp. Gt.Br,
The Program Record of the League of Women Voters of Massachusetts from the Beginning Until Now The Early Years to Economic Welfare. League of Women Voters of Massachusetts. May 1957. 25 Pp.
Address label inside front cover: Jacqueline Van Voris.
Do You Know? International booklet with 1 to XXXII Facts for Women. National Women Suffrage
Publishing Company. February, 1917. 12 Pp.
Bonnie Eisenberg. Women Suffrage Movement. National Women’s History Project 1995. Copyright
1985. 28 Pp.
Woman and Her Place In A Free Society. By Edward Carpenter. London, Manchester.
The Labour Press Society Ltd. 1894. Previous owner’s inscription on title page: “Aphra Wilson/ May
94”. 41 Pp. Gt Br.
Taxation on Women in Massachusetts. By William L. Bowditch. Cambridge, [Massachusetts]. Press of
John Wilson and Son. 1875. Revised edition. Previous owners inscription: “Kind regards of M.F.
Eastman”.
The Suffragette...A Comedy In One Act for Seven Females. By Helen Ludington. The Author of “A
Lunch In the Suburbs. New York and London. Samuel French,. (1909). 30 Pp.
The Equal Citizenship (Blanket) Bill. By Dorothy Evans. Designed to free our laws and regulations,
present and future of sex-discrimination. Cover reads: “Britain has one law for men and another for
women in right to work, conditions, pay rates, insurance compensation, pensions, income tax, savings,
nationality, housewifery, and the moral code. Forward by Rebecca D. Sieff. Text of the Bill and the
consequent changes in over thirty acts. Second Edition. London: Woman’s Publicity Planning
Association. N.D. Gt.Br.
MASSACHUSETTS ANTI-SUFFRAGE COMMISSION. The Case Against Woman Suffrage. Booklet
7” x 5”. 49 Pp. The Most Important Question on the ballot at the State Election, November 2, 1915.
Woman Suffrage Essential to The True Republic. 6” x 4”. 23 Pp. Woman Suffrage Tracts No. 8.
Address Delivered by Hon. George F. Hoar at the Annual Meeting of the New England Woman
Suffrage Association. Boston, MA., The Women’s Journal Office, 1873.
Brief History of the Massachusetts School Suffrage Association. Eva Channing, (Secretary,
Massachusetts School Suffrage Association). This organization came about after the failure to secure the
re-election of Miss Abby W. May to the School Board of Boston. April 1893.16 Pp.
Special Aid Society for American Preparedness (Incorporated) Massachusetts Branch for Women. The
Object and purpose of the Society are, and shall be, to encourage and promote patriotic education
sentiment, and service among the people. Two membership cards -enclosed in booklet One is blank other filled out by Mrs. M.A. Crockett. N.P. N.D.
Lena B. Mathes. Women Suffrage and Polities. A Digest. Westerville, Ohio. American Issue Publishing
Co., N.D. 12 Pp. Library stamp on front cover.
The Case Against Women Suffrage. The Most Important Questions on the Ballot at the State Election November 2,1915. Shall the Following Proposed Amendment to The Constitution,
Enabling Women To Vote, Be Approved and Ratified? Massachusetts Anti-Suffrage Committee. James
D. Colt, Chairman - Augustin H. Parker, Secretary. Boston, Massachusetts.
Mrs. Fawcett-Representative Reform. Two Essays on Proportional Representation. Representation
Reform. The Representative Reform Association, 1871. Gt.Br.
Alice Stone Blackwell. Political Equality Series. Progress of Equal Rights. Vol. III. No. 12.New York,
April 1899. The National American Woman Suffrage Association. U.S.
Alice Stone Blackwell. Political Equality Series. Progress of Equal Suffrage. Vol. IV. No. 8 New York,
The National American Woman Suffrage Association. [Ca. 1908].
Margaret Long on Colorado. Political Equality Series. Reprinted from The Woman’s Journal, February
9, 1909. The National American Woman Suffrage Association. Vol. III. No. 9.
Woman Suffrage Series #9. Teaching material historical print. Images of leading Suffragettes.The
Perfection Form Company. Images of Carrie Catt Chapman (1859-1947); Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst
(1858-1928); Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919); Victoria Woodhull (1838-1927); Susan B. Anthony
(1820-1906); Mrs. Julia Ward Howe (1819-1910); Lucy Blackwell Stone (1818-1893); Elizabeth Cady
Stanton (1815-1902); Ester McGuigg Morris (1814-1901).
Greig Billington, Teresa and Margaret G. Bonfield. Verbatim Report of Debate on Dec., 3rd, 1907. Sex
Equality - Versus Adult Suffrage. Manchester: William Morris Press, 8 Lloyd Street. (Deansgate and
Albert Square). Picture of Margaret G. Bondfield bottom of front cover. Printed inside front cover:
Objects: To secure for Women -the Parliamentary Vote as it is or may be granted to men; to Use the
power thus obtained to establish equality of rights and opportunities between The sexes, and to promote
the social and industrial well-being of the community. Gt.Br.
March on Washington. July 9th 1978. For the Equal Rights Amendment. A Photographic Essay. By
Cully Miller and Chris Backus. N.P. Printed by Good Impressions, 1978. 34 Pp.
[Primrose Society]. In A Nutshell. To the Dames of the Primrose League - the first political body to
combine chivalric equality with popular organizations. 2nd edition. London, J.W. Arrowsmith. 1893.
Woman’s Suffrage- Alice Stone Blackwell, Editor-In-Chief. 6 1/2” x 8 1/2”. Booklet. 59 Pp. Woman’s
Journal and Suffrage News was a weekly Paper devoted to the interests of woman, to her educational,
industrial, legal and Political equality, and especially to her right of suffrage. Boston, 1917. Very rare.
“Emmeline Pankhurst. Why I Am a Militant”. Miscellaneous article from unidentified [English]
magazine. An article written by Ms. Pankhurst with pictures of her riding in a parade, woman wearing
an apron: “Are We Downhearted?” Pictures show of women prisoners at the Holloway Jail-yard, The
arrest of Lady Constance Lytton, Prison cells for political female prisoners and male prisoners, etc. N.P.
N.D., Ca. 1910-1920.
Boston Women’s Heritage Trail. Polly Welts Kaufman; Bonnie Hurd Smith; Mary Howland Smoyer;
and Susan Wilson. (Editors). Four Centuries of Boston Women, A Guide to five Walks: Downtown,
North End, Boston, South Cove/Chinatown, Back Bay. 2nd edition. Boston, MA. The Curious Traveler
Press. 1999.
George J. Barnsby. Votes for Women - The Struggle for the Votes In the Black Country 1900- 1918.
Suffragists and Suffragettes. Integrated Publishing Services Co., 1995.
Calling All Women! Report of the 2nd Session of the London Women’s Parliament October 26, 1941.
London Women’s Parliament 32 Pp. 2 copies.
[Booklet with Label Pin]. Edward Marshall. A Women Tells All About Women Suffrage. The New
York State Association Opposed to Suffrage. N.D. 14 Pp. Label pin: In red: "Opposed to Woman
Suffrage”
National Women’s History Project. In Every Generation - Action Frees Our Dreams. National History
Month, 1994. Information booklet. Copyright, 1993.
National Women’s History Project. "Promises to Keep”. Biographies of Women featured on the 1995
NWHM Poster. Informational booklet Copyright, 1994.
National Women’s History Project. "See History In A New Way”. Background information about the
images on the 1996 NWHM Commemorative poster. 13 Pp.
Early History of South Pass City, Wyoming and How Women First Received the Right to Vote and
Hold Public Office. By Fred D. Stratton, Jr. Ca. 1950. 50 Pp.
Female Labors Laws. State of Tennessee. Department of Labor -Division of Factory Inspection. M.
Ellenwaters, Commissioner and M.F. Nicholson, Chief Inspector. N.P.,N.D. 12 Pp.
Working Women and the Suffrage. By Mrs. Wibaut. President of the League of Women’s Socialist
(Holland). Adapted by Margaretta Hicks and Clara Hendin. N.P., N.D.
The Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Brochure on the Henry J. Miller Distinguished Lecture Series
featuring "The Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg - Thursday, February 13,2003. 5:30pm. Signed by The
Honorable Ginsburg. Georgia State University College of Law, 2003.
The Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Brochure on the Henry J. Miller distinguished Lecture Series
featuring "The Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg - Thursday, February 13,2003. 5:30pm. Georgia State
University College of Law, 2003. Unsigned.
[Broadside Collection]:
"Parsons & Pool’s Original Uncle Tom’s Cabin and Tennessee Jubilee Singers- Coming Soon. [Harriet
Beecher Stowe]. Providence, Rhode Island. Ca. 1900. The only theatrical company on the road to-day
presenting the old time manuscript version of Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
Wait for Us, Watch for Us. As we will positively appear in your city soon. Watch for Day & Date.”
Single sheet, printed on thin pinkish-tan paper [known in other colors also], measuring 9 x 24” ,
illustrated with woodcut vignettes of scenes from the play. Original promotional poster for the Jubilee
Singers production of Uncle Tom’s Cabin.
Virginia Warns Her People Against Woman Suffrage. Twenty Nine Counties Will go Under Negro Rule
- Over Sixty Countries in The State of Georgia, The Entire State of Mississippi. Reprinted from The
Richmond Evening Journal. May 4,1915. Republished by Request.
Why Women Want to Vote. Justice - Equality - Women Are Citizens, and wish to do there civic duty.
List 9 Reasons. Women Suffrage Party of the City of New York. At the forty-ninth annual convention of
the Suffrage Party, held in New York city just a few days after the great victory of November 6,[1918] it
was decided that, as an organization, the New York State Woman Suffrage Party should remain a nonpartisan group of voters; and that its members should inform themselves of the various problems of
government in order to use the new power of citizenship to the greatest advantage of State and nation. 7”
x 10”.
Mrs. Mary Bentley Thomas. Testimony from the Governors of the Four Free States. Mrs. Mary Bentley
Thomas of Maryland Addressed A letter to the Governors on the Equal terms of woman’s vote. N.P.,
N.D. Mary Bentley Thomas (1845-1923) played a major role in the struggle for women’s rights, often
hand in hand with Susan B. Anthony. Succeeding Miller as president of the state Suffrage association,
she entered the national arena, and with dramatic success. In one famous instance [See Above]. She
wrote the governors of Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Idaho-states already enjoying suffrage-inquiring
about the results. Her letters, and the favorable responses they evoked, were published with telling effect
in respected newspapers and journals from Boston to St Louis.
[Anti-Suffrage] Look Ahead! National League For Opposing Woman Suffrage. Ca. 1890. Equality
Women Are Citizens. Woman Suffrage Party City Of New York.
[Anti Suffrage] - James Galloway. A Southern Women Speaks Her Mind. Our Men, God Bless them,
Superbly Brave Enough to Die for Us in France, Yet Not Good Enough to Vote For Us at Home! Oh,
the base Ingratitude of Some Women! Were you Represented on Flanders Field, Mr. James Galloway.
Macon, Ga. N.D.
[Anti-Suffrage]. A Diatribe on the 15th Amendment within an arguments Against Congressional
Passage of the 19th Amendment. James Callaway Cites Sen. Bailey’s Admonition against submitting
Constitutional; amendments in war Times when the public mind is out of joint” Printed by Brown
Printing Co., in Montgomery Alabama from the Macon Georgia Telegraph, Jan. 8,1918. James
Callaway turns to the KLAN COLLIER’S WEEKLY for a brief, inexact and inflammatory ‘history’ of
the 15th Amendment and of them measures taken by the Ku Klux Klan. 17” x 11”.
[Anti-Suffrage]. Dr. Johnson. Suffrage & Taxation. Don't Be Deceived by This Slogan. Taxation
Without Representation. The Real Tyranny Would Be A Vote Based on Property. There Are two kinds
of Taxs; And the Reason is Plain and Unanswerable. N.D. Printed Brown Printing Co. Montgomery,
Alabama. N.D
[Anti-Suffrage]. Ask Legislature To Stand By Oath: Second Section of Anthony Amendment Gives
Control of Suffrage. This was originally a letter To the Editor of The State, from an "Alabamian”, and
was printed as a broad sheet James Callaway, Anti Suffrage advocate. Copied from the State Columbia,
S.C.
[Anti-Suffrage]. Will the States Consent to Blot the Stars from Old Glory, Leaving only a Meaningless
Square of Blue? Then Beware of Federal Amendments Passed in “War Times” When the Public Mind is
immortalized - A Message from the Old South to an United Nation Of today. Macon, Georgia. The
Macon Telegraph. January 8,1918. Rabid Anti-Suffrage Editor. James Calloway.
Ida Minerva Tarbell. Announcing Ida M. Tarbell Biography. N.P. N.D. ca. 1900-1910.
Anna Cadogan Etz. What’s the Matter With Women? New York State - Woman’s Suffrage Association
Headquarters, 505 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Press Secretary for Political Women Union.
Election Campaign in Cumberland. National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies - Election Campaign
in Cumberland. Carlisle, Whitehave, and Cockermouth Divisions - December 13,1909. Blakewell, 1909.
Bottom of sheet is perforated for persons to sign up.
Smith, Gerrit. Woman Suffrage Above Human Law. 14” x 9”. Two sided printed letter offering to pay
Susan B. Anthony’s fine for voting. Peterborough, N.Y. 1873. N.P. Signature on front: Rev. W. Koppel.
Catholic Opinions. Iowa Equal Suffrage Association. Single sheet, 6 1/2” by 6” New York, 1914.
Printed on both sides. Quotations by several Catholic Church officials in support of woman suffrage, in
an attempt to quell the "widespread belief that the Catholic Church is officially opposed to Woman
Suffrage." (No copy listed on OCLC, which cites only a similar pamphlet entitled "More Catholic
Opinions"]. First edition [not in Krichmar]. 4 copies.
Lillie Devereux Blake. Woman’s Rights Fables. Each short story has a “moral” fable that follows it
Illustrated. American Woman Suffrage Association. N.P., N.D. Lillie Devereux Blake. 1833 - 1913. née
Elizabeth Johnson Devereux American novelist, essayist, and reformer whose early career as a writer of
fiction was succeeded by a zealous activism on behalf of women’s suffrage.
Population Votes-Not Area. Map and Statistics Showing Suffrage in the United States. White area
shows Equal Suffrage. Tinted area: Partial Woman Suffrage. Black area: Manhood Suffrage Only.
National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. N.P., N.D.
A Loss to All Women: An Injury to the State. Why Elihu Root Opposes Woman Suffrage. Reprint of a
letter to Miss Mary Alice Chittenden, President of the New York State Anti-Suffrage Association. May
3,1915.
A Talk on the Tax Paying Woman and Woman Power-Vote “No” on Woman Suffrage. Anna Howard
Shaw is mentioned in this article.
State of Vermont Proclamation. Governor of Vermont states he received a Communication enclosing a
certified copy of a resolution entitled: “Joint Resolution Proposing An Amendment to the Constitution
Extending the Right of Suffrage to Women”. Signed in print: Governor Percival W. Clement / July
12,1920.
Anti-Suffrage Notes. No. 169. Articles: Mrs. Robert Lansing, Wife of the Secretary of Stare accepts
position as Secretary of the National Anti-Suffrage Association; Elihu Root, American Greatest
Statesman, presides the Big Anti-Suffrage Meeting in Utica, New York. Many soldiers vote
overwhelming against Women Suffrage. Officers of Connecticut Suffrage Association resign to join the
“Militants”. Cambridge, Massachusetts Anti-Suffrage Association. October 10,1917.
Some Facts About Suffrage Leaders - A Cause Is Not Stronger Than Its Leaders, Why this Hysteria?
Only 14 States for Suffrage and 34 Against. J.B. Evans. “Lest Ye Forget”. Write your Representative in
Congress and Your Senators Not to Vote for Woman Suffrage. N.P., N.D.
Suffrage Democracy Knows No Bias of Race, Color, Creed or Sex. Short message from Carrie
Chapman Catt, Susan B. Anthony, Mrs. Howard Gould, Anna Howard Shaw. “Lest Ye Forget”. Only 14
States for Suffrage and 34 Against. No Need for Undue Haste or Excitement Previous owners
handwritten note: These women are spending millions to unhorse the manhood of the South! That Shall
Not Pass.
About Voting. Who Gave Men Their right to Vote and When? Who Will Give Their Vote and When.
New York. National American Woman Suffrage Association. 3 copies, one copy is glued to cardboard.
[Extracts removed from Magazines, Periodicals, etc]
Suffrage vs. Taxation. Article by Dr. Rossite Johnson, as quoted in The Unpopular Review for January March 1916.
Analysis of Women’s Vote in 1916 Upsets Theories. J. S. Eichelberger: Figures of Last Election Prove
That It Possess No Independent Political Power and Was Merely an Echo of Man’s Vote. Reprinted
from The New York Times Magazine. January 21, 1917. Single sided.
Woman’s Progress in the 20th Century written by Walter Thornton. Sunday Magazine for July 22, 1906.
Decorations by Nat Little.
Ladies Home Journal. Miss Ida Tarbell. The Wholesome Analysis of the “Woman’s Question” on page
24. With Mr. Edward S. Martin article “Views on Women” on page 23. N.P.,N.D.
The Saturday Evening Post. October 9, 1915. Votes for Women article.
Newsweek. May 2, 1989. With cover: “The Battle Over Abortion “ With picture of Sandra Day
O’Connor.
The WAC - Good Soldiers. Extract from Magazine. Picture is of a painting by Schlaikjer. N.D., N.P.
Ending An Anachronism. Extract from the New York Herald Tribune, April 5,1948. Editorial endorsing
passage of the Equal Rights.
Collier's Magazine. Sara Comstock. The Women Who Votes - Campaign Days In Denver, The First of
Three Papers Showing the Western Women Voter’s Equal Interest in Jelly-Making and Politics. New
York. N.D.
The Ladies’ Home Journal. Article: Mrs. Humphrey Ward. Why I Do Not Believe In Woman Suffrage.
New York, N.D. Anti-Suffrage.
The Saturday Evening Post. Article: The Woman With Empty Hands: The Evolution of Suffragette Article contains photographs of Inez Milholland, Mrs. Harriet Stanton Balch and Mrs.
The Saturday Evening Post. Mary Isabel Brush. Suffragizing Tammy. New York, N.D.
The Saturday Evening Post. Elizabeth Frazer. Adventures In Politics. New York, December 22, 1923.
The Ladies Home Journal. Anna Howard Shaw. Two New Cabinet Members And An Assistant
Secretary of Labor- A Woman That Is What Women Who Vote Want and What They Intend to get New
York. April, 1919.
The Ladies Home Journal. Is Mrs. Goddard Alone In Her Position that Woman Suffrage in Colorado is a
Failure. Mrs. Goddard was President of the Colonial Dames of Colorado.
Vol. XXVII. No. 7; Philadelphia, April 1,1911.
Woman’s Home Journal. Marjorie Schuler. When Is A Vote - Not A Vote? New York,
April 1921.
The Ladies Home Journal. M.A. DeWolfe Howe. Causes and Their Champions: Women Suffrage and
its “Napoleon” - Susan B. Anthony.New York, April, 1926.
Good Housekeeping. Emmeline Pankhurst. The Making of A Militant. New York, N.D.
The Old and New - Extract from October 3,1871. Volume IV. Published by The Roberts Brothers.
Woman’s Home Companion. Our Own Page: “If I Had the Vote, I Would Vote...” Vol. XXXVI.
October 6,1909. No. 10.
Scientific American Supplement. Weekly New York City Monthly periodical with its front cover
showing a photograph of Women munitions Workers operating drilling machines in a Canadian factory.
New Work for Women Created by the War. Famous image.
McCalls Magazine - 50th Anniversary Number. The McCall Company, October 1920. Celebrating Half
A Century of Woman’s Progress, colored drawing of a beautiful young woman in colorful flowered
print dress, off-shoulders, short sleeves, wearing open fingered gloves, long print shawl, bonnet and high
heels, carrying a blue, gold and pink lace trimmed parasol with a small landscape in background and
horse-drawn hackney with women: Honorary Editors: Carrie Chapman Catt, Jane Addams, Helen Taft,
Mary Shaw, Mrs. Raymond Robins, Mrs. Thomas G. Winter.
[Fliers. Handbills. Handouts. Circulars]:
Votes for Women, Woman’s Cause is Just and Must Prevail. Votes for Women-Every Women Needs
the Protection of the Ballot - Join the Political Equality Association, Mrs. Oliver H.P. Belmont,
President, Political Equality Association, New York. Printed in blue ink. N.P., N.D.
Fuerst & Kraemer Limited. With logo: “Happiness in Every Box and a picture of Cupid carrying a
banner which reads: “Votes For Women”. N.P., N.D.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Photograph on front cover with the words: Under the Exclusive Management
of James B. Pond / Listing Ms. Gilman’s lectures, typical lectures in courses, press comments, and
editorial review of her books.
New York League of Women Voters - First Region. Has this Information Helped You? Then Join the
League of Women Voters- A Membership Will Give You A Weekly Bulletin - Information on
Legislation Meetings For Political Discussions. First Region. 37 West 39th Street. New York City.
League of Women Voters Invites You to Three Lectures at League Headquarters at 8:15 pm. “Typical
Forms of Government” by Henry R. Waite. President of the National Municipal League and Former
City Manager of the Dayton, Ohio; “The Present New York City Charter and Improvements”. By
Raymond Ingersoll, Secretary to the Men’s Club. And The Proposed Charter of the Home Rule
Commission by Henry DeForest Baldwin. N.D. Ca. 1920’s.
Catholic Opinions. There Exists a Widespread Belief That The Catholic Church Is Officially Opposed to
Women Suffrage. Lists Those In The Catholic Diocese Who Support Woman’s Suffrage. Iowa Equal
Suffrage Association, Fleming Building, Des Moines, Iowa. Ca. 1900-1915.
Catholic Opinions. Various quotes from His Eminence James Cardinal Gibbons, the Most Rev. Francis
Redraw; The Late Most Rev. Patrick W. Riodan; Rev. Paul Rhode and others. N.P.. N.D.
Logic for the Business Man. Women Have Proved Their Business Sense, Their Honestly, Their Ability
in Thousands and Thousands of Business Positions-As Owners, Managers, and In Office Work - Please
Be Logical - Vote for the Woman Suffrage Amendment. Nov. 7. South Dakota Universal Franchise
League. N.D. ca.1911-1919.
Resolutions. Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association. Resolution in the 5th - -Resolved the word large
is crossed out and the word larger is written on the margin. 3 copies. N.D.
A Friendly Word. Showing A Little of What is Being Done Without Equal Suffrage. Plainfield, New
Jersey Association. N.P., N.D.
Have You Ever Thought Why Your Mother, Wife, Sister and Daughter Are Not Allowed to Vote?
Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association. “The only reason for not enfranchising any class of people in
a democracy is because they are mentally or morally incompetent to vote”. N.D., N.P.
Suffrage Rally. “Under the auspices of the Concord Massachusetts Equal Suffrage League- March 11,
1915”. Cabot and Borland, 1915. [MA].
Election Campaign in Cumberland. National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies Election Campaign
in Cumberland. Carlisle, Whitehaven and Cockermouth Divisions Catherine E. Marshall (Hon.
Organizing Secretary). T. Bakewell Keswick, 1909. With the attached tear sheet for signature and
address. Gt.Br.
Florence A. Armstrong. Forward Into Light. 4 Pp. Printed in purple ink on cream paper. National
Woman’s Party. December, 1944.
[Anti- Suffrage]. Resolved: that there is not consideration whatever that makes the Right of Suffrage
valuable to me...” Single sheet N.D., N.P.
Women in City Homes. Single sided. Women in City Homes lists the reason her Place is in the home has a fill-in the blanks if you wish to join the Women’s Political Union. National American Woman
Suffrage Association. New York, N.D.
Equal Suffrage League of Virginia 1915-1920. Printed by NAWSA. Suffrage handbill. 5 1/4 x 7. One
sided printed on tan paper. Twelve Reasons Why Women Should Vote - Equal Suffrage League of
Virginia Commonwealth Building-Richmond, Virginia.
Nafzger, Samuel H. Report on Equal Rights Amendment. 1980. Single sheet 9’x 18’ tri- folded into 9' x
6’ size. 6 Pp. printed on gold stock. The Commissioner’s report was issued in 1976, but public debate
prompted this reprint. Samuel H. Nafzger, Commission on Theology and Church Relations, The
Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod. August, 1980. Anti-suffrage.
Suffrage Massachusetts handbill. 5 3/8' x 8 3/8'. Black print on beige paper. One sided. Act of 1895
Enacted by the Massachusetts Legislature, June 1895 gave women the right to vote in school elections.
This handbill shows rules for registration of women and the time of registration. A pivotal event in the
history of Women suffrage. Uncommon to find in good condition.
Text of Equal Rights Amendment & Equal Rights Amendment Planks in National Platforms of the Two
Major Political Parties. No place. [1948]. This proposal enjoyed the backing of both political parties, yet
failed to be voted out of Congress until two decades later remains an obscure phase in the history of the
ERA. Campaign ephemera of this vintage is, not surprisingly, uncommon.
Equal Rights Amendment in Missouri - Missouri Commission on the Status of Women. Single sheet-tri
fold. Printed back and front - black ink on beige paper. Cover shows a set of scales with House-10/12/71
- Senate 3/22/72. Gives facts about the Equal Rights amendment in Missouri.
Isn’t True? Seven reasons listed: “Votes for Women - South Dakota Universal Franchise League.
Masonic Temple. Huron, S.D. Ca. 1911-1918. Mamie Shield Pyle, A pioneer leader of the women's
suffrage movement in South Dakota, Mamie Shields Pyle became President of the State Equal Suffrage
League in 1910, which became the South Dakota Universal Franchise League the following year. Pyle's
determination, along with that of her colleagues, allowed the women of South Dakota to claim victory in
1918, when state lawmakers and voters passed the equal suffrage amendment Pyle also led the campaign
for state ratification of the national suffrage amendment which occurred on 4 December 1919.
How To Vote For Woman Suffrage Amendment. Small hand-out Yellow printed on one side: “How to
Vote for Women Suffrage Amendment Election Day, November 6,1917. The form of ballot will be as
follows: Amendment No. 1- Two boxes on left shows yes and no, the yes box has an ‘X’ in it
Amendment No. 2 - Two boxes on left shows yes and no boxes.- neither is marked. Vote “Yes” on
Amendment No. 1 as marked above. New York State Woman Suffrage Party- November 6,1917. N.Y.
State Woman Suffrage Party.
Why Women Want the Vote. Justice/Equality Are Citizens and Wish To Do Their Civic Duty. Working
Women Need the Ballot...Housekeepers Need the Ballot...Mothers Need the Ballot...Tax Paying Women
Need the Ballot... All Men Need the Women's Help to build A better and juster government and Women
Need Men To Help Them Secure Their Right to Fulfill Their Civic Duties. National American Woman
Suffrage Association - 505 Fifth Avenue, New York.
Anna Howard Shaw Memorial of the National American Woman Suffrage Association - Resolution
Passed at the Victory Convention. Chicago-Feb. 12-20,1920. Resolved that the N.A.W.S.A. establish an
official joint memorial to Dr. Anna Howard Shaw at the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania at
the Foundation of Preventive Medicine. Also lists the Advisory Committee, Executive Committee and
State Chairman, 1920.
The Map Proves it - Show U.S. Map. Shows 4,000,000 Women Vote In The Equal Suffrage Votes. Lists
the States With Women Being Able To Vote and the year. Vote for Women Suffrage. New Jersey
Suffrage Association Headquarters. Plainfield, N.J.
Who Represents Her? If A Woman Is Responsible For An Accident, If She Defaults On Her Contracts,
If She Slanders Her Neighbors, Is Any Man Arrested, Sued or Bound Over To Keep Peace? List the
other reasons Then- Why It That The Only Place In The World Where Man Wants To Represent
Woman Is At The Ballot Box? Vote for the Suffrage Amendment Nov. 7 (date) South Dakota Universal
Franchise League. N.D., ca. 1911-1919.
As Man to Man. Between Ourselves- Can Men Represent Women At The Polls? Do Men Represent
Women at the polls. Between Ourselves Let’s Give Women the Vote and Vote for the Suffrage
Amendment November 7. South Dakota Universal Franchise League. N.D., ca. 1911.
Women in City Homes. Single sided. Women in City Homes lists the reason her Place is in the home has a fill-in the blanks if you wish to join the Women's Political Union. National American Woman
Suffrage Association. New York, N.D.
“Who Shares the Cost of War? Who Faces Death In Order to Give Life To Men? Women.”. Several
Other Reasons Listed. Who Dare Says That War Is Not their business? In the Name of Justice And
Civilization Give Women a Voice in the Government and in the Councils That Make or Prevent War.
Vote for Women Suffrage Amendment in November. Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association.
Harrisburg, Pa. 1916.
Women Suffragists and the Empire. Two sided article. National Union Women's Suffrage Societies.
N.D., N.P. England, Ca. 1910.
To Working Men. Two sided - Election leaflet. No. 2. National Union Women's Suffrage Societies.
N.D., N.P. Gt.Br.
The Late Marquis of Salisbury On Women’s Suffrage. Single sided. Quotations. Nov. 12, 1888 and July
15,1891. National Union Women's Suffrage Societies. N.P., N.D.
Women in City Homes. Single sided. Women in City Homes lists the reason her Place is in the home has a fill-in the blanks if you wish to join the Women's Political Union. National American Woman
Suffrage Association. New York, N.D.
The Vital Claim. 4 Pp. folded. Appeal from Liberal Women to Women Liberals. National Union
Women's Suffrage Societies. N.D.,N.P. Gt.Br.
What Women Demand. Single sided yellow paper. National Union Women's Social And Political
Union. N.P., N.D. Ca. 1910-1914. U.S.
Some Words of Weight on Women's Suffrage. Two sided leaflet Quotes from: John Stuart Mill, The
Late Lord Salisbury, Rt. Hon. Arthur J. Balfour M.P. Rt. Hon. John Morley, etc. etc. National Union
Women's Social and Political Union. N.P., N.D.
The Testimony of the Commonwealth Parliament to the Satisfactory Working Women's Suffrage in
Australia. March 1910. Folded three Pp. National Union of Women’s Suffrage - Mrs. Henry Fawcett
Parliament Chambers. Westminster, S.W. March 1910. Gt.Br.
To Men and Women of the Labor Party. Showing What Some of the Leaders of the Labour Party Think
on the Questions of Women's Enfranchisement - Mr. Lansbury, P.M. National Union Women’s Suffrage
Societies. Vacher & Sons, Ltd. May 5, 1911. Gt.Br.
Women's Vote in Australia. Extracts taken from an article in the Canadian Magazine of June 1907.
Written by Professor R.E. MaNaghten, of McGill University, Montreal - A Plea For Woman Suffrage in
Canada. S. Sidders & Co., May, 1908. Gt.Br.
Speech by Mr. Philip Snowden, M.P. Parliamentary Franchise. (Women)-1910. Women’s Printing
Society. N.D., N.P. Gt.Br.
Obenchain, Eliza Calvert Indirect Influence. Printed two sided. National Woman Suffrage Association.
N.D.,N.P. U.S.
Parce, Lida. The Cost of Living and the Ballot. “Now look at this situation - my woman friend and see if
you don't think it is your particular business”. National Woman Suffrage Association. N.P., N.D.
Suffrage as A War Message. “Since the war began woman suffrage has been sweeping over the civilized
world. Where do New York Women come in?” National Woman Suffrage Party. [New York], October
1917. Duplicates.
Pigs vs. Boys. The Journal of Education has the following suggestive editorial. National Woman
Suffrage Association. N.P., N.D.
Testimony From Wyoming. Two sided. Testimony from Wyoming Legislative: Hon. Joseph M. Carey,
Hon. Bryant B. Brooks and others. South Dakota Universal Franchise League. N.P., N.D.
Alice Park. Women Under California Laws. Father Sole Guardians, Minority of Girls, Contract Rights,
Are Women People? California Equal Suffrage Assoc. April, 1911. N.P.
Minnie J. Reynolds. Votes For Women - A Success. Two sided. Legislative Secretary Suffrage
Organization of New Jersey; formerly Colorado. Showing map of U.S. National Women Suffrage
Association. N.D.
Rev. C.C. Harrah. Jesus Christ - Emancipator of Women. Woman Suffrage leaflet - Published
fortnightly at 3 Park St, Boston, Mass. Vol. 1-8. November, 1915. American Woman Suffrage
Association,, Nov. 15, 1888.
Walter S.B. McLaren Speech: The Equality of Women Before the Law. Speech at the Annual Meeting
of the Ladies National Association on May 25, 1909. Gt.Br.
Hon. George William Curtis. The following argument for Woman Suffrage was Made by Hon. Curtis
before the New York State Constitutional Convention. American Woman Suffrage Association. 1889. A
speech made by the noted writer And orator in support of a New York State Constitutional Amendment
granting women Those rights, including the ballot, vouchsafed to men. one of the last to grant Women
the vote.
The New York State Woman Suffrage Party. Orange and black printing. “I....of...Street... City believe
that the vote should be granted to the Women of New York...Country Assembly District Election
District N.P., N.D. Single sided.
[Petition]. Citizens of Georgia Petition. We, the undersigned Citizens of Georgia respectfully petition
our Senators, Hon. Augustus O. Bacon and Hon. Hope Smith [names added in manuscript] to pass
immediately Senate Joint Resolution, No. 1. Extending the Right of Suffrage to Women. Ca. 1900-1910.
Very important to the history of Georgia's Suffrage.
Some Strange History. The ‘Three Immediate Women Friends” of the Anthony Family with images of
Carrie Chapman Catt; the Rev. Anna Shaw, Mrs. R. Jerome Jeffrey, with image of negro on front page.
Macon Telegraph, May 26,1918. Rabid Anti-Suffrage Editor. U.S. James Callaway.
Julia Ward Howe. Suffrage Song to be sung to the tune “America” on one side and on the other: “The
Battle Hymn of the Republic”. N.D., N.P. U.S.
How to Vote for Woman Suffrage Amendment, Election Day, November 6, 1917. New York State
Woman Suffrage Party, 1917. The form of ballot will be as follows” Amendment No. 1 Shall the
proposed amendment to section one of the article two of the Constitution, conferring equal suffrage
upon women, Be approved? The yes box is marked with an X - vote “YES” on Amendment No.l as
marked above. 2 copies.
Demonstration, Princess Street - Edinburgh, 9tb October 1909. Booklet to accompany the Government
sponsored “Right To Vote" exhibition organized to celebrate the 50th Anniversary Of the
Representation Of the People Act. 9th September - 7th October 1978. Reprinted in 1985. David J. Clark
Ltd.
Suffrage As A War Measure. Two sided. Since the war began woman suffrage has been sweeping over
the civilized world. Women are now voters in Canada. New York State Suffrage Party. October, 1917.
Duplicate.
Memorandum In Support of the Equal Rights Amendment. National Woman’s Party, January 20,1950. 3
Pp.
Conservative Leaders Opinions on the Enfranchisement of Women. Quotes from speeches of Lord
Beaconsfield, April 27,1866; Lord Salisbury, November 12,1888; Hon. Arthur J. Balfour, Lord
Iddesleigh. Conservative and Unionist Women’s Franchise Association.
Dr. J.G. Shipman. Male Electors League for Women’s Suffrage. The Law of England As It Affects Men
and Women gives both sides information. Also a Copy of Petition -Presented to the House of Commons
on March 13, 1903. Although the majority of men opposed the idea of women voting in parliamentary
elections, some leading male politicians supported universal suffrage. This included Several leaders of
the Labour Party, including James Keir Hardie, George Lansbury and Philip Snowdon. Frederick
Pethick-Lawrence helped to fund Votes for Women and provided bail for nearly a thousand members of
the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) who were arrested for breaking the law. Several
members of the Liberal administration, such as David Lloyd George, also favored women being granted
the vote. In 1907, several left-wing writers, including Henry Nevinson, Laurence Housman, Henry
Brailsford and 37 other men formed the Men's League for Women's Suffrage and three years later the
Men's Political Union for Women's Enfranchisement was established.
Jaakoff Prelooker. The Women’s Demonstrations. A Russian’s point of view. The Anglo- Russian. Best
known for his work: “Under the Czar and Queen Victoria The Experiences of a Russian Reformer”. Ca
1895-1910.
Votes for Women - The Woman’s Reason because...list of reasons... Women In the Home...How Far can
Mother Control These Things. College Equal Suffrage League. In 1900, suffragists Maud Wood Park
and Inez Haynes (later Irwin) founded the first College Equal Suffrage League in Boston. During the
following decade, MWP traveled across Massachusetts and then the United States founding branches,
intending to persuade recent college alumnae to take an interest in suffrage work. The hope was that the
alumnae would provide the suffrage ranks with younger members and interest current college women in
the cause. MWP believed that college women b
A Tale of Six Cities - Berlin, Paris, London, New York, Boston, Chicago. Statement of Anna Howard
Shaw & Helen Todd & Carrie Chapman Catt. Brown paper printed on both sides with black ink. 5” x 7
1/2".
There Are Two Way to Secure the Establishment of Woman Suffrage. First: The Legislature of each
State can Submit the question to the voters. Second: The Congress of the United States by a two-thirds
majority can refer the Question to the voters. Second: The Congress of the United States by a two thirds
Majority can refer the question of woman suffrage to the Legislatures of all the States....” N.D. Allied
Printing, N.P.
Information for the Use of the Newly Made Women Voters in Ohio. Leaflet cover The following topics.
Classification of School Districts, Board of Education, City Districts of First class, Registration, City
Districts of Second Class and Village districts, Township Districts, Special Districts, Nominations,
Citizenship, etc. etc. Ohio Woman Suffrage Assn. Signature of Helen Train Taunehill - Active in the
Ohio Women Suffrage Association. N.P.,N.D.
Proceedings of Association Held at Cincinnati, Ohio. May 1,2,3,1894. (President) & (Recording
Secretary) Of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association.
County Suffrage Leaflet No 1. 1900-1902. Single Sheet - 8 1/2" x 11”. Printed on both sides and
Suffrage of Los Angeles, California. Availability at NAWSA Headquarters.
Mrs. Seward Simmons. Equality of Opportunity. Single sheet folded to 8 Pp. Mrs. Simmons was the
President of the Political Equality League at Fifth and Oliver Street - Los Angeles, California. Ca 1905.
College Equal Suffrage League. Single sheets folded to create four Pp. with printed information. “The
Arguments For Equal Suffrage”. College Equal Suffrage League - 318 Union Square Bldg., 350 Post St,
San Francisco, California. With additional material on Lillian J. Martin, who was 3rd VP of the Board of
Directors of the College Equal Suffrage League.
Ingalls, Ethel. Women's International Congress - 4 Pp. with information about nearly all the eminent
living advocates of Woman Suffrage. N.D., N.P.
Why the Farmer Is For Equal Suffrage. Ohio Woman Suffrage Assoc., 1912. Single sheet 6’ x 9 1/2
‘folded in thirds to 6 1/2' by 3 1/8’. Printed on beige paper on both sides by L.J. Taber Lecturer for the
Ohio State Grange. This leaflet also advertises two other lectures: ‘The Changing Position of Women by
President Welch of Ohio Wesleyan University' and ‘Working Women vs. Anti-Suffragists'.
Mills, Grace Saxon. Against Woman Suffrage -Some Reason. Shows 12 Reasons that begin with
BECAUSE. National League for Opposing Woman Suffrage. Single page - double sided. Printed by the
National Press Agency, Ltd., Claxton House, Tothill Street, Westminster, SW. Anti. Gt.Br.
Woman’s Suffrage in America. National League for Opposing Woman Suffrage. What Americans Think
of Its Results - Quotes from An American Lawyer - Colorado Women and Suffrage statistics in USA.
Published by The National League Opposing Woman Suffrage. N.P.,N.D.
Better Babies- New York Woman Suffrage, 1925. Single sheet - double sided. Cover shows a Rose
O'Neill cartoon reprinted from Woman Voter, with a list of the infants deaths rates in countries and
cities linked with women citizens. New Zealand had the lowest infant mortality.
Don’t Forget to Vote for Woman Suffrage First. Single Sheet printed on Beige stock. New York State
Woman Suffrage Party: W.S. Publ. Co 1917. “Your President asks you to vote for it,
Your Governor is for it, Your Party has endorsed it, Woman’s Suffrage is coming the world around Don 7 Let New York lag Behind... ”. New York State Suffrage Party -1917.
By Laws of The Fairfield County Republican Women’s Association. 1921.8 Pp. Blue cover: “Our Aims
and Purposes and Lists IX Articles that includes objects, memberships,
Month - Black and white with purple ribbon binding. Agenda for Lynne M. Smith luncheon, Friday
March 3, 2000. 6 Pp. Athens Country Club, Sponsored by the Athens Area Chamber of Commerce,
Women in Business Council & The University of Georgia Libraries.
Religious Committee for the ERA. Why Religious Groups Support the Equal Rights Amendment Light
green background with dark Green lettering, tri-folded pamphlet. Three reasons with six further
explanations.
Evangelical Women’s Caucus. Dark green background with white lettering on front and women's
symbol with dove inside / white background With green lettering inside, quad-folded pamphlet,
explaining who the Evangelical Women's Caucus is, origins, how to join, locations, council & officers
information, And what they believe. Membership application form included.. N.P., N.D.
Our Foreign Born Citizens. Information taken from The National Geographic Magazine of February
1917 - showing a map of the United States showing the percentage of foreign citizens- compares map
with Woman Suffrage map. N.P. [1917].
Pass the Equal Rights Amendment Now. Article by Anita Politzer. “Time has knocked Out the
arguments advanced against the Equal Rights Amendment''. Reprinted from Equal Rights. May 15,1937.
Suffrage Federal Amendment. Destruction of State Rights and Majority Rule - Women Voters AntiSuffrage Party Co-operating with Established Parties Against Radicalism - Proof from the World. N.P.,
N.D.
Suffrage Federal Amendment. Open Letter to the President of the United States (Woodrow Wilson].
From the Women Voters’ Anti-Suffrage Party - From the World. August 12, 1918.
[Off-Prints/Reprints]
Woman Suffrage Practice. 6” x 9 1/8”. Offprint from Century Magazine. A Criticism of “What Have
Women Done With the Vote?” by George Creel in the Century Magazine for March 1914. The
Massachusetts Association, 1914.
The Century Magazine. Woman Suffrage Practice. 6” x 9 1/8”. Offprint from Century Magazine. A
Criticism of “What Have Women Done With the Vote?” by George Creel in the Century Magazine for
March 1914. The Massachusetts Association, 1914.
The Ladies Home Journal. Won't Stand For Partisan Slander and Abuse: They Put Over Beveridge and
Pinchot Against the Men’s Orders -Most of Them Care Less for Party Lines Than For Good
Government New York, August, 1922.
The Ladies Home Journal. Jessie Atkins McGriff. Article: Before the American Woman Votes. New
York. April, 1910.
The Ladies Home Journal. Article: His Letters to His Mother - The Mother's Question - This Time Is:
What Is The Truth About Woman Suffrage?
The Ladies Home Journal. Margaret Deland. Article: The Third Way In Woman Suffrage - A Play for a
Possible Solution of a Vexing Problem. Jan, 1913.
Harper‘s Bazaar. Ida Husted Harper - Article: I Votes for Women - Summer and Autumn Campaigning
Political Work for Suffrage, National and State Work - Men’s Suffrage Leagues - Triumph May Be
Delayed. New York, N.D.
Harper’s Bazaar. Ida Husted Harper - Article: Votes for Women: The English Situation- Do Our Women
Want to Vote, Women as Officers Holders. New York. N.D.
The Ladies Home Journal. Lola LaFollette. Article: The World of Busy Women; Suffragetting on The
Chautauqua Circuit Ca. 1916.
Collier’s The National Weekly. Easter number. Arthur Kuhl. Article: Soldiers and Suffragettes: A Play
About Woman's Suffrage and One Showing What Might Happen
The Ladies Home Journal. Charles A. Selden. Article: Women Voters Won't Stand For Partisan Slander
and Abuse: They Put Over Beveridge and Pinchot Against the Men's Orders - Most of Them Care Less
for Party Lines Than For Good Government. New York, August 1922
Anne O'Hagan. “Why the Housekeep Needs the Vote”. National American Woman Suffrage
Association. Article; I Am A Housekeeper - Even The Antis Will Allow That -That Is A Perfectly
Proper Thing For Me To Be. Reprinted from Smith Magazine Ca. 1916.
Mary K. Simkhovitch. Votes In the Tenements. Ms. Simkhovitch - Head of the Greenwich House
Settlement - My Life Has Been Lived for 15 years In Tenement Neighborhoods-Reprinted from the New
York Evening Post Febr 15,1914. Stamped on front: Massachusetts Woman's Suffrage Association.
National American Woman Suffrage Association.
The Ladies Home Journal. January 1921. Article by Jean Nelson Penfield. The Twentieth Amendment
With decorations by Nat Little.
Good Housekeeping. Article on “When Women Get Together - October, 1919.
Harpers Weekly. “The Conquest of the English Channel". Article showing Sydney Brooks as a London
Correspondent. Picture at the bottom: “The Naval Branch of Militant Suffragettes".
Harpers Weekly. “Women's Rights In England”. June 22, 1872. Article discussing the Woman's
Disability Act in England - Illustration titled: “Women's Rights in England - Meeting in Support of “The
Women's Disability Act". Illustration shows men and women sitting and standing on a balcony.
Harpers Weekly. “Chivalry”. October 9, 1915. Illustration showing Woman tied to a pole with a chain
around her ankles and a man bowing holding her hand-Also a man pointing finger at women who has a
sash with the words: “Votes For Women"-Artist: Chamberlain. Words on the page: He: “Woman
Suffrage will kill Chivalry!" She: “Is that a threat? - Or a Promise!"
Grover Cleveland. Would Woman Suffrage Be Unwise? 1 page printed on both sides. Article by the ExPresident of the United States. N.P., N.D.
Harpers Weekly. Katharine Rolston Fisher: The “Anti” Speaks. 1914. Article discusses suffragists and
the need to protect boys against these women.
The Illustrated American. Shall Women Be Granted Full Suffrage. Articles on front and back of Pp.:
“Not For the Southern Woman - Taxed Without Representation - Suffrage Means Death of the Nation.
May 19, 1894.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & Archives- For the Study of The Rights of Women in History
and Law.
Iconography U.S. & U.K. Women’s Suffrage
[Posters].
“Votes for Women- 1915.” Color poster - 20 3/8” X 14. White letters on blue background with white
stripe and gold color in top right and bottom left Thin white strip edges the lozenge runs the legend. This
poster appeared, with slight variations, in the four populous and powerful northeast states of
Massachusetts, NJ, NY, and Pennsylvania which held state referendums on the issue of woman suffrage
in the fall of 1915. The NAWSA liked the poster enough that it used yet another variant in the New York
Referendum Campaign in 1917.
“Votes for Women- 1915.” Color poster - 20 3/8” X 14. White letters on blue background with white
stripe and gold color in top right and bottom left. Thin white strip edges the lozenge runs the legend. This
poster appeared, with slight variations, in the four populous and powerful northeast states of
Massachusetts, NJ, NY, and Pennsylvania which held state referendums on the issue of woman suffrage
in the fall of 1915. The NAWSA liked the poster enough that it used yet another variant in the New York
Referendum Campaign in 1917. Mounted onto hard board.
Creative Picture Framing / A1 Hammond’s / Newton Art Center /120 Spring Street/ Newton, New Jersey.
2nd copy. Shows creases where folded.
National Women’s Independence Day Celebration. Color poster. 17 x 11. Blue ink printed on tan papers.
Signed by singer and activist, Margie Adams. “We Shall go Forth. /Margie”.
Saturday June 4th, Noon-4 p.m. Lafayette Park, Washington, D.C.. Within the rectangle is printed:
‘Relighting Feminist Fires with: Bella Abzug, Robin Morgan, Margie Adams, Allie Hixson, Gloria
Stienem, Caroline Reed, Charlotte Bunch, Betty Powell, Gracia Molina Pick,
Tracie Dejanikus Scott, Joan Martin and friends. A National Day of Re-Commitment to Feminist Issues:
to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, to injustice and equality under the law; to control over our
own lives and our bodies; to freedom from violence; to the implementation of the 1977 National
Women’s Conference Plan of Action.
ERA poster. Color poster. 24 x 17 1/4. Printed in yellow, red, white and dark blue on heavy white stock.
Artist: Mario Urbie, 1980. In the Pop style of Roy Lichenstien, a female “Uncle Sam” in a dark blue
frock coat with red and white striped lapels, looking straight out, pointing at viewer. Beneath the image in
large, bold letters is the legend E R A .
Woman Suffrage Poster. “Give Her of the Fruit of Her Hands; And let her own works praise her in the
gates. 9” x 12” Color image of a Woman Standing with arms raised up to a fruit tree. Copyright By
Evelyn Rumsey Cary. The Munro & Hartford Publishing House Co. (New York: 1906-1908). Evelyn
Rumsey Cary was the artist who also designed the Art Nouveau Pan-Am poster depicting an Indian
princess at Niagara Falls (the original Maid of the Mist). She was the wife of Dr. Charles Cary (married
1879) and aunt of sculptor Charles Cary Rumsey. A women’s suffragist, artist, and patroness of the arts,
she painted The Spirit of Niagara, official emblem of the Pan American Exposition in 1901, and the portrait
of Charlotte Mulligan in the Twentieth Century Club.
Woman’s Suffrage Poster. 9” x 12” color poster. Of Woman Standing With Arms Raised Up To Fruit
Tree - Words on side of photograph: “Woman Suffrage” in blue print- words at bottom in brown/gold
print. “Give Her Of The Fruit Of Her Hands, And Let Her Own Work - Praise Her In The Gates”.
Copyright by Evelyn Rumsey Cary, E.R.C. Vintage Arts. The Munro &
Hartford Co. #5 of 2500. Heavy archival paper. Modern reproduction.
Collage of early American Suffrage Posters. Housed in black box with clear top. Modern.
President Abraham Lincoln. “I go for all sharing the privileges of government Who assist in bearing its
burdens, by no means excluding women.” Women Should Vote. Poster Supplement Seattle, [Wa.]. N.D.
[ERA]. Stop ERA -Vote No. Picture of rolling pin in center. N.P. N.D. Modern anti-suffrage.
The Issue in 1912. Fat man over Women Marching. No Special Privileges for Men-Equal Rights to All
Women. Demands: The Right to Vote in political elections. Consideration in all fields of employment
where a women’s Brain can be taxed without danger to her health. March out of his shadow into the
Sunlight Liberty. General Rosalie Jones’ Liberation Army is on the way on its way to Washington to Join
the Parade. N.P. Key Publishing Co. NEWBURG WOMEN PARADE.;" General" Rosalie Jones Musters
350 in Suffrage March. June 5,1913. NEWBURG, Preceded by a detail of police and a in Newburg this
afternoon. There were 350 women and a few men in the parade, which was led by "General" Rosalie
Jones. 14” X 11”.
Woman Suffrage Movement - 1848-1920. Collage of Images of leading Suffrage Leaders And Events.
National Women’s History Project Windsor, Ca., 1989. 18” x 24”.
I’m going to make a Suffrage Speech to all the folks whom I can reach.” A mini poster of a little angel,
standing on a tree trunk, holding a gravel and wearing: “We Want The Vote.” Artist: C.E. Perry.
“I Love the U.S. The Temperance Version of “I Love the U.S.” Tremendous Feature of the Great AntiSaloon League Campaign by Will Hardy. Pictures if Rev. Howard H. Russell, D.D., Rev. P. A. Baker,
D.D., Hon. Richmond Pearson Hobson and a color drawing of lady liberty holding A flag and shield.
Bostonia Publishing Co. Worcester, Mass. 2003.
March for Women’s Lives. White poster with purple print March for Women’s Lives - Washington, D.C.
April 25, 2004. 10:00 am - Assembly on Mall. LHD’s personal notebook with copy of poster inserted in
front cover. 17” x 11”.
Crusaders for the Rights of Women. 6th Annual Women’s Poster Month Exhibition 2002. March 1-31,
2002.
Official Program - Woman Suffrage Procession-Washington D.C., March 3, 1913. Reproduction.
Research value.
Read It America! Poster in support of E.R.A. in red, white and blue. Copyright - Jonas Miller
Photography, Gainesville, Florida.
March Again for EQUAL RIGHTS. Poster in support of E.R.A. In brown on gold with photograph of
suffrage parade. Ca. 1977.
ERA. Color comic poster in the style of Roy Lichtenstein of a woman dressed as “Uncle Sam” parodying
the “I Want You” recruiting poster. Artist: Marion Urbie.
The National Women’s History Project.
In 1980, the NWHP was founded in Santa Rosa, California by Molly Murphy MacGregor, Maria Cuevas,
Paula Hammett and Bette Morgan to broadcast women’s historical achievements. The NWHP began by
leading a coalition that successfully lobbied Congress to designate March as National Women’s History
Month, now celebrated across America. Today, the NWHP is known nationally as the only clearinghouse
providing information and training in multi-cultural women’s history for educators, community
organizations and parents - for anyone wanted to expand their understanding of women contributions to
American history.
National Women’s History Project. Suffrage Demonstration. 1913 New York City Parade. Reproduction
from the Sophia Smith Collection.
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. The
introductory poster [1 of 8] with large illustration of Suffrage Marcher with flag in black on yellow.
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. The
introductory poster [1 of 8] with large illustration of Suffrage Marcher with flag in black on yellow.
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. 18401960. [2 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. 18401960. [2 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. 18401960. [3 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. 18401960. [4 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement 18401960. [4 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement 18401960. [5 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. 18401960. [5 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement 18401960.[6 of 8].
National Women’s History Project An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement 18401960. [6 of 8].
National Women’s History Project An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement 18401960. [7 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement 18401960. [7 of 8].
National Women’s History Project. An [illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. 18401960. [8 of 8|.
National Women’s History Project. An Illustrated Timeline of the Woman Suffrage Movement. 18401960. [8 of 8|.
National Women’s History Month - March 1993- Discover A New World: Women’s History. Copyright,
1992. Signature at bottom unidentified.
National Women’s History Month - March 1994. In Every Generation Action Frees Our Dreams. Shirley
Chapman.
National Women’s History Month - March 1995. Promises To Keep. Kathryn L. Dillon.
National Women’s History Month - March 1996. See History Her Way. Barbara Garza, et al.
National Women’s History Month - March 1997. A Fine & Long Tradition of Community Leadership.
Kathryn L. Dillon.
National Women’s History Month. Living the Legacy of Women’s Rights. Colleen Barclay. National
Women’s History Month. Living the Legacy of Women’s Rights. Colleen Barclay. National Women’s
History Month. Living the Legacy of Women’s Rights. Colleen Barclay.
National Women’s History Project. 1994. 75th Anniversary Of Woman Suffrage -1920- 1995. Celebrate
the Vote - Make Your Future. Three women and a child in a stroller in front of suffrage marchers.
Kathryn L. Dillon.
National Women’s History Week. March 6-12, 1983. Weaving the Story of Our Lives. Scott Patterson.
National Women’s History Week. March 4-10, 1984. Poster with Portraits & Biographies. Linda Zulch
Morand.
National Women’s History Week. March 3-9, 1985. Portraits in a Quilt design.
Jacquan Miller Dare and Indigo Crone.
National Women’s History Week. March 2-8, 1986. Women: Builders of Communities and Dreams.
Teeda LoCodo.
National Women’s History Week, March 1987. Portraits styled as tiles. Lark Lucas.
National Women’s History Month, March 1988. Reclaiming the Past and Rewriting the Future. Teeda Lo
Codo, et al.
National Women’s History Month, March 1990. Courageous Voices Echoing in Our Lives. Rick
Wheeler.
National Women’s History Project, 1990. Women and The Civil War. Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1990. Women and The Civil War. Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1989. Women Suffrage Movement - 1848-1920. Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1989. Women Suffrage Movement - 1848-1920. Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1989. Women Suffrage Movement - 1848-1920. Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1989. Women Suffrage Movement - 1848-1920. Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1989. Women Suffrage Movement - 1848-1920. Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1997. Living the Legacy - 1868-1998. Women’s Rights Movement.
Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1997. Living the Legacy - 1868-1998. Women’s Rights Movement.
Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1997. Living the Legacy - 1868-1998. Women’s Rights Movement.
Colleen Shafer.
National Women’s History Project, 1997. Living the Legacy - 1868-1998. Women’s Rights Movement.
Colleen Shafer.
YMCA War Work Council. Remember the Girl Behind the Man Behind the Gun. Ca. 1910.
[Poster]. The Woman Citizen. Image of a woman at gates marked “Equal and Rights” - What Will She
Do with The Vote Now That She Has it? Adapted from the cover of the The Woman Citizen Sept 20,
1919. In an edition of 500. The Woman Citizen was a weekly chronicle of the National American
Woman Suffrage Association that was devoted to woman suffrage and other causes of concern to women.
Helaine Victoria Press, 1980.
Drawings.
[Anti Suffrage]. No Time for Politics. Black and white drawing of woman sitting at table with a young
girl - Series A. No #11. Artist’s Proof of new Gibson drawing are printed exclusively for Collier’s
Annual subscribers and are not to be purchased elsewhere. P.F. Collier & Sons, 1909
Ida Minerva Tarbell. 8” x 10” drawing mounted on card board. Artist: George Jacoby. Signature of Ms.
Tarbell on sheet. Ida Minerva Tarbell, born in 1857, was a woman far ahead of her time. She lived during
a period of our history when few opportunities were open to women other than teaching, nursing, and
homemaking. While a few women did write poetry, essays, or novels, Ida Tarbell, with her inquisitive
spirit and thorough nature, pioneered historical research and set standards which professionals today
strive to emulate. She was born two years before the birth of the oil industry and eight years before the
assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Both events were to influence her life and career.
Drawing of man and women. Wording on back. “Life” 1910. Jan. 28, The Home of the Suffragette.
Drawing done by Bayard Jones. Watercolor highlighted with white wash. Illustration for Life Magazine.
12” x 18”.
Drawing of Mrs. Ashton Dilke. Black pencil drawing. Mrs. Ashton W. Dilke, who was a sister- in-law of
Sir Charles Dilke, a sister of Mrs. Crawford, and a noted advocate of woman's rights in England.
N.D.,N.P.
Cartoons:
Pictorial Review. Cover with female New Year With Baby carrying a valise with “The Vote” and “1921”
written on side. January, 1921.
Women’s Political World. Front page of Women’s Political World. January 6, 1918. Volume 1, Number
1. Artist: Frank Parker.
Harper’s Weekly. Two panel cartoon: “How It Would Be If Some Ladies Had Their Own Way”. May 16,
1868. Pp. 320.
Harper’s Bazaar. Cartoon: The Dovecot June 12, 1869. Pp. 380.
Life Magazine. Cartoon: Condescending Man. August 14, 1915.
Punch or the London Charivari. Cartoon: “We’ll ave To Give It ‘em I Expect Chorlie!! November 1910.
Pp. 388.
Punch or the London Charivari. Cartoon: 4 page picture: The Ladies of Creation. London, Bradbury,
Agnew & Co., N.D. Artist: G.L. Stampa. Pp. 53-56.
Punch or the London Charivari. Cartoon: Leap Year; Or The Irrepressible Ski. January 1, 1908. Artist:
Linley Sambourne.
Punch or the London Charivari. Cartoon: The Militant Sex. June 24, 1908. Artist, Linley Sambourne.
[Unidentified]. The General Election in England. A Deputation on the Subject of Woman’s Rights. Large
19tb century cartoon from unidentified magazine or newspaper. London, N.D.
Punch Magazine. In the House of Her Friends. London, March 13, 1912.
Punch Magazine. Votes for Men and Women. London, June 26, 1912.
Punch Magazine. The Angel in “The House” or, “The Result of Female Suffrage”. 1884.
Punch Magazine. King Cophetua and the Beggar Maid. June 3,1908. Artist: Bernard Partridge.
[Cartoon]. Progress of Bloomerism, or a Complete Change. From the Follies of the Year. London:
Bradbury, Evans & Co., 1864. [Cartoon originally published in 1852]. Artist: John Leech.
[Cartoon]. Probably the Next Absurdity in Ladies’ Winter Costumes. Ca. 1860’s. No place, No date.
Artist: Edward Tennyson Reed.
Harper’s Weekly. Cartoon cover: "Get Thee Behind Me. (Mrs.) Satan” [Mrs. Wood hill]. February 17, 1872.
Pp. 140. Artist: Thomas Nast. Duplicates.
Harper’s Weekly. Cartoon cover: “Women at the Polls in New Jersey in the Good Old Times”.
November 13, 1880. Pp. 724. Artist: Howard Pyle
Harpers Weekly, May 15, 1869. Charles Bush, Artist Cartoon of a woman in a room reading petitions,
The Revolution [newspaper], with A sign stating: ‘Sorosis Nomination for Governess” - Women on the
Stage behind a Desk with left hand raised.
Harpers Weekly, October 30,1915. W.J. Enright, Artist “Mending His Fences”. Black print - Man
handing a woman suffrage boards on fence. Man’s vest says: Congress Man” - Woman standing behind
him with dog.
Punch or London Charivari. “Rag Time In the House”. Single sided from Punch Cartoon -Or the London
Charivari. “Suffrage Free & Easy Go As You Please” - Men dancing with arm bands Anti & Pro Sir
Edward Grey’s Woman Suffrage Amendment Produced Some Curious Partnership. 1913. Gt Br.
Punch or London Charivari. Black and white cartoons- Drop Curtain for Mr. Punch’s Benefit
Performance “Punch” Almanac for 1909.
[Anti-Suffrage]. Black and white cartoon of Rooster sitting on eggs: “Why Ma-These eggs will get all coldHen is leaving wearing a sash: “Votes for Women” - she says: "Set on them yourself old man - My Country Calls Me”.
N.P., N.D. Famous image.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract/ February 5, 1913. A Pleasure Deferred - Suffragist - "You’ve cut my
Dance - Mr. Asquith - Yes, I know. ”
Punch or London Charivari - Extract/ January 29, 1913. Rag Time in the House. Sir. Edway Grey’s Woman
Suffrage Amendment produced some curious partnerships.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract March 5, 1913. The Majesty of the Law. Drawing of a women
holding the scales in her left hand and sword in the right hand in cloth that says:
"Hunger Strike”.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract January 10, 1912. Drawing of two men standing on a platform with
their backs together yelling to a crowd: The Words: Mr. Lloyd George -Votes for Women - Don’t you listen to
my esteemed Colleague!" Mr. Hancourt”.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract January 21, 1912. The Suffrage Split Drawing of a man in a ballerina
outfit standing over an dragon on its back with the words: "Cotton Strike”.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract. March 13, 1912. In the House of Her Friends. Drawing of women
standing in a robe holding the scroll that says Woman’s Suffrage looking Back at women marching in the
street Artist: L. Raventhiu.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract. June 26, 1912. Votes for Men and Women. John Bull. "What is this
“Robust Child? - Nurse Asquith. Weil Sir, i t ' s certainly not a girl, and I very much doubt if it's a boy. ”
Punch or London Charivari. Extract. July 3, 1912. The Coming Olympic Struggle. Drawing of two women
(one a maid - the other a lady - punching a man like a punching bag. Drawing by Bernard Partridge.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract. November 15. 1911. Overdone It Drawing of three lions (each one
bigger) staring at a man tied to a post-Each lion has words in his name - Welsh Disestablishment Home
Rule, Universal Suffrage - the gate behind the Lions has the numbers 1912. Reads: Overdoing It John
Bull: “Is that the lot?”
Punch or London Charivari. Extract November 29, 1911. Sermons in Stones. John Bull (to Non-militant
Suffragist). I could listen more attentively, Madam, to your Pleas, were it not for these concrete
arguments which I find rather Distracting”.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract. December 20, 1911. The Wolf That Wouldn't. Drawing of a man [Lloyd
George] dressed like a red riding hood holding a basket, wolf is sitting in a chair with a crown on his
head, and man dressed like Grandma lying in bed. Dec. 20, 1911.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract December 27, 1911. The Judgment of Parisette. Lord Haldane, Sir
Edward Grey and Mr. Lloyd George compete for the championship of Women’s cause. Militant
Suffragette.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract. July 13, 1910. Exelsior! Drawing of a woman pushing a boulder up a
hill. Suffragist - It’s no good talking to be Sisyphus. He was only a man!.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract. A Dirty Trade. August 31, 1910. Drawing of a Man standing in water
holding a hat in his right hand. He has a sack over him with the words: The Case Home Life of the
Female Prisoner Full Details - See the Muck-Rake-Reads” A Dirty Trade- Gutter Press. “Here you are,
gents! Chuck us a few more coppers an’ I’ll roll in it”.
Punch or London Charivari. Extract The Great Election Stakes. January 19, 1910. The Great Election Stakes
- Mr. Punch: Here They Come, Now then, Ma’am, What’s Your Fancy.
[Penny Sheet - Cartoon]. “The Way You’ll Come Home in the Soon -To -Arrive New Woman Days”.
N.P., N.D. Anti. Suffrage.
Where’s the Difference? Extract from Harper’s Bazaar, July 3, 1869. Picture of a bar with men on the
left: “All Right” under the Women on the right: “All Wrong”. Page 424.
Original art:
[Charlotte Perkins Gilman] Charlotte Perkins Gilman, writer, lecturer, social critic and feminist, lived at a
time of tremendous upheaval in this country's history. From the Civil War to Reconstruction and
Industrial Revolution, and from the Women's Movement to the development of the major schools of the
social sciences, Gilman witnessed events that had a profound effect on the development of the American
society. Charlotte attended the Rhode Island School of Design from 1878 through 1883. (Kessler, 1995,
p. 18). To finance her education, Charlotte gave drawing lessons, sold watercolors and painted
advertisements for soap companies and continued to do so to support herself after the completion of her
studies. In 1880, at the age of twenty, she and her cousin Robert Brown designed trade cards for at least
four soap companies. Her original sketches are preserved among her papers and at least 30 cards have
been attributed to her.
[Series of original one of a kind hand painted cards]
2 3/4 x 4”. Hand painted card of woman in dress with sunflower around her head.
2 3/4" x 4". Hand painted card of woman carrying a bucket with a flower for a bonnet 2 3/4” x 4”. Hand
painted card of child holding a doll with a pink flower around her head.
2 3/4” x 4”. Hand painted card of woman in dress with purple flower around her head.
2 3/4” x 4”. Hand painted card of woman standing in water with white lily as around her head and the
green leaf for a dress.
2 3/4” x 4”. Hand painted card of woman standing holding a green purse, has on a gold dress - red rose
around her head.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & Archives- For the Study of The Rights of Women in History
and Law.
Suffrage Artifacts: American & British.
[Armband]. Votes for Women. Yellow felt with black lettering. Small size.
[Pennant]. Suffragette Coppette. Pennant of woman in police uniform With a dog chained to her orange felt with white lettering - woman in blue tinted Uniform -“Suffragette Coppette Who Would
Resist Arrest?” Very rare.
[Fan]. Women’s Anti-Suffrage Association of Massachusetts. Cardboard fan on wooden stick: Mrs.
John Balch, President and Mrs. Charles B. Strong, Secretary: “Vote No on Woman Suffrage / November
2, 1915”. Rare.
[Pitcher] Universal Suffrage Reform Pitcher. 5 1/2 tall pitcher - ceramic with Copper colored top,
handle, and spout with blue center images: The Great Champion of Reform - with black colored picture
of man, flag, ships. 2nd side: No Corn Bill- Universal Suffrage Annual Parliament and Vote By Ballot black picture of flags, Habeas corpus scroll, and bill of rights scroll. Repairs to top, handle and rim.
[Inkwell] Vote for Women Inkwell. 9cm tall. “Votes for Women”-Women with arms folded. Ceramic
high glaze. Royal Doulton Glaze stoneware. 1919. Series H2-No5460208.
[Bell] “This One Shall Have A Vote” Porcelain Bell. Two sided: “This One Shall Have A Vote Woman with two gold necklaces - -the other side reads: “Votes for Women” Woman with white bonnet
and blue ribbon (looks like an angry man) with the Coat of Arms and wording “City of Bangor”.
Markings inside read: A&S Stoke on Trent -Arcadian China.
[Kitten] “I Want My Vote”. Glazed Kitten. 3 1/4 blue and gray porcelain kitten. English. N.D. Ca. 19001910.
[Dog] “Votes for Women”. Glazed dog. 3 Vi gray porcelain dog with red tongue. N.P. N.D. English, Ca.
1900s.
[Bust] “She Shall Have My Vote”. Porcelain bust. Multi-sided porcelain bust: One side shows woman
with red/green necklace and the words: “She Shall Have My Votes”. Trimmed at the bottom with a gold
line. Other side show a woman (looks like a man) lips are painted red, green necklace, holding a green
striped umbrella and the words: “Votes For Women”, the letters V & W are in red on the hat Coat of
Arms show the words: AU PLAISIR FORT DE DIEU- - East Stonehouse. Bottom marking read: Swan
China England # 522477. N.D.
[Vase] “I Want My Vote”. Porcelain Black Cat Vase. 4” with tail that extends. Cat is wearing a tie with
colors blue and green. No 40 on bottom. Extremely rare.
[Card set] Women Writers. Collection of Knowledge Cards With Brief Biographies and Photographs of
48 of the World’s Greatest and Most Powerful Women Writers - Drawn from the Library of Congress.
Pomegranate Communications. 2001.
[Sash]. Yellow sash with “Votes For Women” printed in black ink. Very fine condition. N.P., N.D. Ca.
1910-1920.
[Pennant]. Votes For Women Pennant. Yellow with black lettering. N.P.N.D. Woven Yellow felt
17.1/4”x 7. 1/4". In classic black felt lettering on yellow background. Many states used the black on
yellow colors for a variety parades and rallies. Most were plain. Often destroyed after use, few survived
without problems.
[Sash]. ERA Parade Sash. 54” x 2 Gold satin sash with purple lettering - National ERA- March 1978.
[Flag] ERA YES flag. Square flag with white background with a green circle in center and green fringe
on bottom. N.P., N.D.
[Banner]. ERA banner. June 30th 1982. 4"4” x 8"9”. Rectangle banner with while background and green
lettering.
[Card] Votes For Women Playing Card. Yellow card says: Votes for Women -Red Queen Of Hearts.
N.P., N.D.
[Stamp]. Votes For Women Suffrage Amendment Nov. 2nd 1915. Green and yellow oversized stamp woman in the white dress holding U.S. flag. Capitol dome in background. N.D.,N.P.
[Mobile]. The Women’s Liberation Movement. Black And white - unopened . 20th Century
reproduction.
[Fan]. Cardboard Fan on stick. First side: Keep Cool! There will be nothing to worry about After we get
Votes for Women - Election Day November 2nd. Other side: U.S. Map with white states: Equal Suffrage
Shaded States: Campaign States - If the men of the West trust women with the Ballot - Why can*t the
women of Massachusetts be trusted? Suffrage spreads from state to state. This proves it a success - Vote
"Yes”. November 2nd. Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Association, ca. 1910.
[Statue] Pewter cast of woman standing - The Suffragettes 1908-1917-The Parade of The American
people. 1978. Modern reproduction.
[DVD] PBS - DVD movie, The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. Sealed. Not
used. Scholarly research.
[Paper Cup]. VOTES FOR WOMEN 1915: Drink to the Success of the Empire State Campaign,
measuring approximately 4 by 4 1/2 inches, printed on one side. Front panel states: "VOTES FOR
WOMEN 1915.
[Stickers] Dirigo - Votes For Women stickers. (4) stickers with Gold band around white background,
green evergreen tress, gold lettering. N.P.N.D. Dirigo (Latin "I direct” or "I lead”) is the state motto of
Maine, having once been the only state to hold its elections in September. (Politicians kept their eyes on
these elections for evidence of a trend. Prior to the New Deal, Republicans claimed " As Maine goes, so
goes the nation.") The resolutions adopting the seal upon which this motto appears, give some insight
into the meaning intended by the state motto: "...as the Polar Star has been considered the mariner's
guide and director in conducting the ship over the pathless ocean to the desired haven, and as the center
of magnetic attraction; as it has been figuratively used to denote the point, to which all affections turn,
and as it is here intended to represent the State, it may be considered the citizens' guide, and the object to
which the patriot's best exertions should be directed".
[Program]. Women in History-Preserving the Record. Notice of An Exhibition - March 4 - April 8,
2000. “We Demand the Vote”. Postcard and “Women Rights” button reproductions of original in the
LHD Collection: British and American Women in History and Law. UGA Libraries
[T-Shirt]. On the Issues - Feminist Government in Exile. The Progressive Woman's Quarterly. Warrior
Woman on Horseback. 20th Century.
[T-Shirt]. Discrimination is Not A Game. (2). Green with white lettering protest t-shirt with list of
supporters on back from the Augusta 2003. Signature on front: Martha Burk - Augusta 2003.
[Sticker] Discrimination Is Not A Game. National Council of Women's Organization. (8) Green and
while protest stickers of gold ball within a Symbol of women - Augusta National 2003.
[Sash]. -We Won’t Go Back. White and purple print-“We’ve Won’t Go Back! March for Women's
Lives. Washington, D.C., April, 1992. 2nd copies.
[Sash]. Honored Guest. Gold With Purple Print. N.P., N.D. Late twentieth century.
[Sash]. I’m A Pro-Choice Democrat - NARAL & Elect Women For A Change. N.D., N.P.
[Sticker]. You and I Will Change the World. Nisan Young Women Leaders - Israel. N.D., N.P.
[E.R.A. Memorabilia]. (7) different items. N.P. N.D. 1.) E.R.A. Yes; 2.) U.S. map un-ratified states
saying: “We’re AH From an Un-ratified County / E.R.A. Yes. 3.) Card showing front with complete tax
of The Equal Rights Amendment. 4.) Card showing back with U.S. map un-ratified states- We’re ALL
From An Un-ratified Country: National Organization For Women, Inc.(NOW). 5.) Sticker: E.R.A. Yes.
6.) 12 stickers numbered 1-12. 7.) Plain pin in E.R.A. Green colors.
[Pitcher]-blue and copper. 13cm high. Black pictures with writing on two sides: “No Corn Bill Universal
Suffrage Habeas Corpus” - Scroll: “Bill of Rights. - Annual Parliament And Votes by Ballot The Great
Champion of Reform" image of man in front of boat
[Sash]. “Votes For Women” Sash. Doubled sided with hook sewn in at one end to latch to a belt
Grosgrain cloth in white, green and purples with the lettering: “Votes For Women". The other color
theme-purple, white and green—later, after the NWP was created—purple, white and gold. Originated
with the British suffragists and symbolized loyalty, purity and hope. Alice Paul and other Americans
who worked with British suffragists brought the colors to America. The modern women's movement
later adopted the colors purple, white and gold as their own. Very rare and desirable.
[Sash]. “Votes For Women” Sash. Yellow felt hat band with black Lettering. 59cm x 3.7cm.
[Sash]. Women Overseas Service League Sash. Blue felt sash. 10cm. X 83cm. The Women’s Overseas
Service League (WOSL) was founded in 1921 by women who had served in World War I. The group
initially existed as local units, but soon became a national organization and began publishing the
quarterly magazine “Carry On". An annual convention was also established in 1921 and has been held
every year except during the World War II years of 1942-1945. WOSL was the first women’s
organization to contribute to UNICEF and was one of the first organizations to be an accredited observer
at the United Nations. N.P., Ca. 1920’s.
[Playing Cards]. Panko or Votes For Women - the Great Card Game Suffragist vs. Anti- Suffragists.
Pictures by E.T. Reed or “Punch”. Peter Gerney Ltd.1909. Panko (Short for Pankhurst) is a card game of
Suffragist versus Anti-Suffragist This complete set of 52 cards features Emmeline Pankhurst and
Winston Churchill. The cards are purple, green, and white and complete with a copy of the game
instructions.
[Axe] Carrie Nation. All Nations But Carrie. Black cast iron shape of axe and hand with profile of
Carrie Nation in Axe. “All Nations Welcomed But Carrie” Carrie Nation Bust, Cast Iron, 11 3/4 In.
Carrie Nation 1846 -1911) was a member of the temperance movement—And best known for her battles
against alcohol in pre-Prohibition America.
[Suffragette Statue]. Black women in yellow undergarments holding a club with her mouth open in
unattractive post “Votes For Women”. The Woman's Movement grew out of roots planted by the
Abolitionist Movement of the 1840s-50s. At its height, it struggled on how to include the newly freed
Black population. The juxtaposition of black women and woman's suffrage is evident in statue.. This
5.75" black woman bisque statue has been called the "Sojourner Truth" statue, whether this is true or
not the statue certainly represents the anti-suffrage movement
[Statue] Stop the Vote Anti-Suffrage Policeman Figure. Produced as an anti-woman's Suffrage item, this
cartoonish bisque policeman is a figural bottle. With great big-eyed expression and opened hand as the
stopper, he encourages others to "Stop the Vote". Made in Germany, this type of anti-Suffrage figure has
become heavily sought after by Suffrage collectors today. The more common police figure is a stiff tall
6" policeman which regularly finds its level at $1500. This version is definitely harder to find as the
"hand" stopper would often be missing or broken. Offered here is an absolutely beautiful example with
all the original paint intact. Height 7.25".
[Spoon] National Woman Suffrage 1912 Souvenir Spoon. This sterling silver demitasse spoon is 4" long
by 15/16 inches (across the bowl). Exceedingly rare and made for the NAWSA Convention in 1912 (as
marked in the bowl). Made by the Watson Co. and set with images of Philadelphia, the handle is very
ornate showing images on back and front Two scratches to the bowl are on the reverse, with this unusual
souvenir showing in very fine condition.
[Shade pull] Tin Bluebird. Mass. Woman Suffrage Assn. Blue Bird "Votes for Women" Tin and Enamel
Window Hanger. [Boston: Mass. Woman Suffrage Assn.], Nov. 2,1915. Die-stamped metal window
hanger, of blue bird, 12" long from top of head to end of tail, 3-1/2" wide across breast With stamp and
insignia of Lithographers of America at lower left corner of tail. "Votes for Women Nov. 2" in black
along gold ground (birds under belly and tail). "Mass. Woman Suffrage Assn. Gertrude H. Leonard
Theresa A. Crowley in black along outside edge of bird's tail. The bird is on a black perch, facing left,
head turning right with beak open. A striking & extremely colorful piece of ephemera, unusual in size.
Housed in custom made window frame. Generally very good+. An extraordinary image. Part of the
advertising campaign for a woman suffrage amendment waged by the NAWSA in Mass., NY, NJ, and
PA in 1915. The attempt was unsuccessful. Women would have to wait until 1917 for success in these
states. Although home to many women's rights and suffrage leaders - Margaret Fuller, Caroline Dali,
Julia Ward Howe, Alice Stone Blackwell, etc. - Massachusetts voted down woman suffrage in 1895 and
remained an anti-suffragist stronghold into the next century. The state's voters approved the woman
suffrage referendum - a humiliating defeat of all those which buffeted the movement that November.
Two years later another referendum finally succeeded. Weatherford, A History of the American
Suffragist Movement, p. 203.
Rise Suffragettes. Plastic shaped cream colored. Women in hat with strange design. N.D., N.P.
[Porcelain Cup]. My God and My Right. Porcelain cup featuring 4 sides which read:
“1897” - “1837” Drawing of Queen Victoria - and a drawing of a castle/ Above “1897” is a coat of arms
surrounded by the words: “Deiu Et Mon Droit - Honi Soit Qui. Mai y. Pense.” Above “1837” is a crown.
Rare. Extremely rare and fragile.
[Porcelain Saucer- Anti Slavery]. Porcelain Saucer. Soft lilac color. “Ladies- All I Pray Make Free and Tell
me How You Like Your Tea". Three young Girls sitting down to tea. N.P. [London), [N.P. ca. 1830’s]. WC
& Co. The Committee for the Abolition of the Slave Trade was formed in
London in 1787. Tens of thousands of books and pamphlets were issued by the committee and hundreds
of petitions were submitted to Parliament. Josiah Wedgwood & others produced anti- slavery souvenirs
for the cause.
[Token]. Anti-Slavery. "Am I Not a Woman and a Sister 1838." A fine example of this abolition / Hard
Times token depicting a kneeling female slave in chains. Obverse: A kneeling figure of a female slave,
facing right with raising elapsed hands with chains on wrists: “Am I Not A Woman and a Sister 1838”.
Reverse: “United States of America” surrounded by a wreath: “Liberty. 1838”. - The “N” is reversed. The
image of the female slave in chains surrounded by the motto was used by female antislavery societies in
printed pamphlets, on letterhead and on needlework sold at antislavery fairs. The emblem served as a
visual reminder of the humanity of the fettered slave. This coin, made of copper, may have been
exchanged among members of antislavery groups much the same way as we might use political buttons
today. Framed. [Medal]. Women of the American Revolutionary Era. Gold colored coin shaped medal.
Ca. 1985. 2 copies.
[Pitcher] Suffrage Universal Pitcher. 10’ tall and 8” wide. Blue, white and a hint of Green. Profile of
women with short hair wearing work hat; above her head is a lighthouse, At bottom of her profile are
lightly colored green leaves. Other side shows the profile of man With a mustache and a uniform above
his head is an ax and pick ax. The surface of the Pitcher is raised. Bottom of imprint is H.P. and #4
engraved into base. No auction records for the last twenty five years. Only one has been offered by a
bookseller who specializes in women’s rights in the last ten years. Very rare.
[Pennant]. Votes For Women. Suffrage Pennant - Ink on cloth. 17.25” x 7.5”. With wooden dowel.
Included at the end of the pennant are ties to attach the item to the dowel - used or carrying during a
parade. Fine condition.
[Pennant]. Anti-Suffrage- Pennant White Text on black and red felt background. The New York State
Association Opposed to Women Suffrage was founded in 1897, and by 1908, it had over 90 members. It
was active in producing pamphlets and publications explaining their views of women’s suffrage, until
the 19th Amendment to the United States Constitution was passed in 1920. The Suffragists in New York
often extended invitations to open discussion with the Anti- Suffragists. The New York association had
its own magazine, The Anti-Suffragist published by Mrs. William Winslow Crannell from July 1908 to
April 1912, later called The Woman’s Protest produced by the organization at large. Anti-suffrage was not
only limited to conservative elements. The anarchist Emma Goldman opposed suffrage for women on
the grounds that women were more inclined toward legal enforcement of morality (as in the Women’s
Temperance Leagues), that women were the equals of men and that suffrage would not make a
difference. Extremely rare.
[Pennant]. Votes for Women -[Women’s Suffrage Party]. Pennant. This design embodies the Suffrage
movement with its graphic picture of Joan of Arc calling her sisters to rise up and join the movement for
women’s rights. The yellow and black colors can be directly attributed to the Woman Suffrage Party
which was founded in 1909. Excellent in bright colors and condition.
[Pennant]. Votes for Women. Pennant Ink printing on felt 17.25” x 7.5”. An overall size of 21.75” x
11.75”. Included at the end of the pennant are ties to attach the item to a stick -so that it could be carried
during a parade. Small enough for the average Suffragette to show her support
[Toy]. Support ERA’ Yo-Yo. Two celluloid buttons dark green with ERA in large White letters and
SUPPORT in dark green letters. Badge Co. LaSalle, III.
[Doll]. Little Suffragist Doll. Reproduction. Yellow, orange, and brown stuffed cloth doll wearing
“Votes for Women” on her chest. Reproduction from the Collection of the Cincinnati Art Museum.
[Doll]. Susan B. Anthony Doll wearing a purple dress and a colorful flowered brooch. N.D. N.P.
Modern reproduction.
[Note cards]. Sewall-Belmont House. Note cards with Sewall Belmont Museum imprint with envelopes.
Johnson Creek, Wisconsin. Creeko Creations. Modern.
[Note cards]. Women’s Suffrage Statue. Note cards with Women’s Suffrage Statue imprint with
envelopes. Johnson Creek, Wisconsin. Creeko Creations. Modern.
[Towel]. Votes for Women. Towel with blue print on fabric saying: “Votes for Women”. Preservation
Society for Newport County, Rhode Island. Modern.
[Canvas Bag]. Sewall Belmont House. Black and purple canvas bad with picture of Sewall Belmont
House. Washington, D.C. Bags by Mimi. Modern.
[T-Shirt]. Jeanette Rankin Foundation. White and black “T” shirt with image of Jeanette Rankin on front
Large size. N.D., N.P. Modern.
[Sash]. Purple, yellow and white. Modern.
[Magnet]. Equality of Rights Under Law. Magnet with purple print with image of the Sewall-Belmont
House and a woman holding a flag. Equality of Rights Linder the Law Shall Not Be Denied or abridged
by the United States or by any State on Account of sex. Sewall-Belmont House Headquarters. National
Woman’s Party founding in 1916 by Alive Paul - Author of the ERA. modern.
[History of Mrs. Belmont]. Green card with information on Mrs. Alva Erskine Smith Vanderbilt
Belmont (1853-1933), was first married to William K. Vanderbilt, grandson of Cornelius in 1875.
At the time of her divorce, she was a friend of Anna Howard Shaw, noted suffragist - together they
worked the rest of their lives with most militant groups of the suffrage movement.
[Cup & Saucer]. Original blue and white cup and saucer with imprint: “Votes For Women”. Oversized.
White ground with “Votes for Women” in blue script at the upper rim of plate. Seal of the maker at the
reverse together with marks indicating this was produced in the reign of George V in 1911, marked
“Maddock”. All in near fine condition with only a bit of age discoloration, tiny chip to rim of cup.
[Cup & Saucer]. Earthenware pieces are replicas from the original which were produced for Mrs.
Belmont This china service with the motto: “Votes for Women” was used in 1909 at the famous meeting
held at the Marble House, Newport, Rhode Island. Preservation Society of Newport County, R.I. N.D.
Modern.
[Playing Cards]. Yellow and black with an image of a women holding a sign stating: “Votes for Women”.
Modern.
[Goose Quill Pen with ink]. Sewall-Belmont House. Authentic Goose Quill Pen with Powered writing
ink hand carved for the Sewall-Belmont House. Historic American Quill & Doc. Co. Modern.
[Coffee Cup]. Jeannette Rankin Foundation. Black and white coffee cup with image of Jeannette Rankin
and imprint: “Jeannette Rankin Foundation”. N.P., N.D.
[Gray-blue porcelain cat]. Votes for Women Cat. 3.25” tall gray blue porcelain kitten calls for "Votes
for Women”. Representing the famous hunger strikes dealing known as The Cat and Mouse Act”. 1913.
[PBS Video]. Jazz. A film by Ken Burns. 10 videos: Gumbo, The Gift of Language, The True
Adventure, A Master-Piece by Midnight. PBS Home video. Modern.
[Cassettes]. Frederick Douglass’s Greatest Speeches. Including: “Why I Became A Woman’s Rights Man”.
Delivered by Fred Morsell. Modern.
[Video]. Equality- A History of the Women’s Movement in America. Video cover shows three women
standing together. The video offers a compelling look at women: Susan B. Anthony, Jane Addams,
Eleanor Roosevelt, and others. Schlesinger Video Productions. Modern
[Video]. Votes for Women. Video cover shows a women holding the newspaper: “The Woman’s Journal”.
Film by Kay Weaver and Martha Wheelock. Wild West Women, Inc. Modern.
[Video]. The Equal Rights Amendment. Video cover shows a woman standing: The Equal Rights
Amendment, Unfinished Business for the Constitution, Equality of Rights under the Law Shall Not Be
Denied or Abridged by the United States or any State on account of sex. Ruth Pollack Educational Film
Center, 1998. Modern.
[PBS Video]. One Woman, One Vote. Video cover shows woman marching with banner saying
National American Woman Suffrage Association. - 1000 Branches Organized in 38 states - Oval picture
of woman with sash with the words: Votes for Women. Modern.
[Video]. Alice Paul - We Were Arrested -Of Course!. Video cover shows women holding a banner
saying: Mr. President How Long Must Women Wait for Liberty?” EPH Productions.
[Video]. Welcome to the Jeannette Rankin Foundation. Video label: “Welcome to the Jeannette Rankin
Foundation ”. Modern.
[Video]. Give the Ballot to the Mothers - Songs of the Suffragists. Video cover shows a drawing of a
woman holding a flag with sash saying: Votes For Women. Francie Wolff.
[Sash]. Votes for Women - Yellow with black printing. Sash and bow in a green clamshell box. Used at
parades and marched. Ca. 1909-1915. Very rare. Use of the symbolic suffrage colors. Early accounts of
the woman suffrage movement have described parades as successful publicity tactics that garnered
significant attention and notoriety for the women’s cause (See Stevens. Flexner. lrwin-in Rare &
Scholarly Books section). More recent scholarship attempts to recover a better understanding of these
parades by considering their larger contributions to the movement For example, by inquiring into the
role that the First Amendment’s right to assembly played in the 20th century suffrage protest, reveals that
women’s public agitation for the vote - in the form of parades, pageants, and pickets - helped them
elevate their cause to a national level. A fragile and rare survivor of a most important historical period of
the 20th Century.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & Archives- For the Study of The Rights of Women in History
and Law.
American and British Individuals of Significant Achievement.
Photographs. Cabinet Photograph. Carte-de-Visite:Signed, Unsigned and Inscribed.
1.
Abzug, Bella. 8 1/2 x 11 black and white photographed. Signed. Bella Savitsky Abzug (July 24,
1920 - March 31, 1998) was a well-known American political figure and a leader of the women's
movement. She is remembered as saying: “This woman's place is in the House: — the House of
Representatives," in her successful 1970 campaign to join that body.
2.
[American Suffragette]. 8 1/2 x 11. Black and white photograph of girl and boy standing in front
of Office: Girl is handing the boy a booklet - she has a bag across her shoulder that reads: American
Suffragette. Reproduction photograph. N.D.,N.P.
3.
Anthony, Susan B. Susan B. Anthony and Her Sister at S.B.A’s Birthday. 14x11 1/2" Tinted
photograph by G.A S. Woodworth. Copyright 1905. Envelope attached to back of frame.
4.
Anthony, Susan B. and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Mounted to 4 1/8’ X 2 7/16‘ photographers
board. Women are sitting at round table. Photographer: Napoleon Sarony (1821- 1896) succeeded
Matthew Brady as America's pre-eminent portrait photographer. [Carte-de-Visite].
5.
Anthony, Susan B. and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Suffragettes: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan
B. Anthony. Black and white photograph of them seated at a table. Photographer, Sarony / 680
Broadway, New York. Writing on back: Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton- Two leaders in
the Woman's Suffrage. [Carte-de-Visite].
6.
Anthony, Susan B. and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Black and white photographs. Cream colored
matte. Modern reproduction.
7.
[Anti-Suffrage]. Black and white photograph. 5" x 7”. Five Men standing facing window- front
National Association Headquarters Opposed to Women Suffrage. Reproduction.
8
Barton, Clara. Original cabinet photograph signed. Black and white photograph Barton standing
in full length black dress facing away from photographer. Verso: "Clara Barton. Dansville. New York. Nov.
26.1880-DavenDort Tour December 1867
9.
Beaumont, Florence M. Black and white photograph of Miss Florence M. Beaumont. Equal
Rights Political Committee. Photographer: Vaughan & Freeman.
10.
Beecher, Harriet Stowe. Original black and white cabinet photograph 5 7/16’ x 3 13/16'. Original
cabinet photograph of Calvin and Harriet Beecher Stowe home in Mandarin, Florida - three women and
man sitting under tree in front of home. |Dr. Stowe and his wife, Mrs. Thomas C. Perkins, and her
daughter Eliza). Signed by Harriet Beecher Stowe. Verso is inscribed by Her sister: “Faith Fenton from
Isabella Beecher Hooker”. Photograph is mounted on photographer card stock. On the back is a printed
except from House and Home Papers (1864) entitled: Harriet Beecher Stowe on Woman Suffrage. A
very unusual and rare image of Harriet Beecher Stowe and her immediate family.
11.
Catt, Carrie Chapman. Black and white photograph. Signed. Inscription below image: “To Bette
Ruth ”. Ca. 1910.
12.
[Photograph]. Shirley M. Hufstedler. Black and white photograph. Shirley Mount Hufstedler
LHD/Photographs/Summaiy/ June 3rd 2008.
1.
(born August 24, 1925 in Denver, Colorado) was United States Secretary of Education under President
Jimmy Carter. Hufstedler has had a distinguished career at the highest levels of legal and public service.
Signed with a presentation inscription to colleague, Herman Goldberg.
13.
[Photograph]. Sally Ride. Color photograph signed. Image of Ms. Ride wearing a NASA
jumpsuit Duplicate.
14.
Shirley Chisholm. Black and white photograph. Signed with quotation: “Always Aim High/ Shirley
Chisholm”. Duplicate in LHD Private Collection.
15.
Susan B. Anthony and Anna H. Shaw. Black and white photograph by Manceau, San Francisco.
Unusual image. With a faint impression of an unknown photo which had bled through when the
photographs Sad been stacked, to leave a ‘ghostly’ impression. Rarely seen image.
16.
[Photograph]. Patricia Roberts Harris. Black and white photograph Signed. Patricia Roberts
Harris (May 31, 1924 - March 23,1985) served as United States Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development, the last United States Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare and the first United
States Secretary of Health and Human Services in the administration of President Jimmy Carter.
17.
[Photograph] Carrie Chapman Catt. Ms. Catt is holding a Bouquet of flowers. Signed. In a
special maroon case.
18.
[Photograph]. Fettes College. (3) black and white photographs showing damage done by
Suffragettes at Fettes College. Broken windows. VI classroom damage. Fettes College as seen from
Kimmershame House. Edinburgh, Scotland. August 1913. Gt.Br.
19.
[Photograph]. Laygan (?) (3) Black and white photographs of people -Presumably Suffrage
supporters. Photographs taken by Misses Mavjavg and Helen Moove. House with list of names. N.D.,
N.P. Gt.Br.
20.
[Photograph]. Mrs. [W.A.]. McKeown. Black and white photograph of Mrs. Keown standing on
a park bench with other women in background. Verso: “Mrs. McKeown House.
Boundary, 1908 Mrs. McKeown was active in Helena, Montana Federation of Women’s Club, Mid- West
Suffrage Organizations.
21.
[Magazine-Photograph]. Black and white photograph of Jane Addams. On 5” x 7” card with the
inscription: “Faithfully Yours, Jane Addams, Hull House, Chicago ”. Laura Jane Addams (September 6,1860 May 21, 1935) was a founder of the U.S. Settlement House Movement and the first American woman to
be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.
22.
Claflin, Mrs. Tennie C. Black and white sepia photograph with printed legend below: “Mrs.
Tennie C. Claflin/Broker”. A beautiful image.
23.
[Colored Women’s Suffrage Club]. Black and white photograph of the 1919th Century Parade
Up Fifth Avenue including the African American “Hellfighters Band” followed by the Colored Women’s
Suffrage Club.
24.
Corbett-Ashby, Margery S. Black and white photograph. With newspaper clippings glued to
back. Ca. 1929. Ms. Corbett-Ashby was President of the Woman’s National Liberal Federation.
25.
Dickinson, Anna Elizabeth. Black and white of Ms. Dickinson sitting. Verso: Anna Dickinson.
Stamped: E. & H. T. Anthony / 50 Broadway - New York from Photographic Negative Brady’s National
Portrait Gallery. With original 2 cent tax stamp. [Carte-de-Visite]
LHD/Photographs/Summary/ June 3 rd 2008.
26.
Dickinson, Anna Elizabeth. Black and white image. Signed in image. San Francisco. [186-].
[Carte-de-visite].
27.
Dickinson, Anna Elizabeth. Black and white of Ms. Dickinson sitting. Trimmed to fit into an
oval brass frame. N.P., N.D.
28.
Douglass, Frederick. 14” x 11”. Black and white photograph. Cream colored Matte. Modern
reproduction.
29.
Faithful, Emily. 5” x 7” black and white mounted photograph. Miss Faithful Dressed in black
dress and bonnet Verso in pencil: Advanced Interests of Women - First Lady Lecturer on Social topics in
England, 1868. Emily Faithful. 1835-1895. FIRST woman to join the Women's Trade Union League and
FIRST secretary of the Society for Promoting the Employment of Women in 1859. After a good
education she became interested in the lack of career openings for women and after hearing of the role of
women in the 15th century printing industry she decided to set up her own firm in Edinburgh in 1857
employing women only. In 1859 she founded the Victoria Press in London and employed men to do the
heavy work. This met with a lot of hostility with the print unions which said that it encouraged
immorality. In 1862 she earned the title of Printer and Publisher in Ordinary to the Queen. She was also a
writer and poet and was involved in the publications produced by her of the English Woman's Journal
and the Victoria Magazine.
30.
Fawcett, [Mrs]. Millicent Garrett. Black and white photograph mounted on card- stock of Mrs.
Fawcett sitting holding A book. Photographer: W. & D. Downey. N.D.,N.P.
31.
Feinstein, Mayor Diane Black and white photograph Signed. Photographer: Roger Ressmeyer.
N.D. N.P. Dianne Goldman Berman Feinstein (b. 1933) is the senior U.S. Senator from California,
having held office as a senator since 1992. She is a member of the Democratic Party. Feinstein holds a
number of "firsts"; she was the first woman President of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, San
Francisco's first and only female mayor, the first woman to serve in the Senate from California, one of
two first female Jewish senators, the first woman to serve on the Senate Judiciary Committee, and the
first woman to chair the Rules and Administration committee of that body.
32.
Friedman, Betty. Black and white photograph. Signed twice in image. Betty Friedan
1921- 2006, was an American feminist, activist and writer, best known for starting what is commonly
known as the "Second Wave" of feminism through the writing of her book The Feminine Mystique.
33.
Ginsburg, Ruth Bader. Black and white photograph signed. N.P., N.D. Ruth Joan Bader Ginsburg
(b.1933) is an Associate Justice on the U.S. Supreme Court. Having spent 13 years as a federal judge,
but not being a career jurist, she is unique as a Supreme Court justice, having spent the majority of her
career as an advocate for specific causes, as a lawyer for the National Organization for Women (NOW)
and an in-house counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). She served as a professor at
Rutgers University School of Law, Newark School of Law and Columbia Law School and a federal
judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. She is widely
considered to be one of the Court's two most liberal justices. She is the second woman and the first
Jewish woman to serve on the United States Supreme Court. Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Black and white
photograph. Signed in print. Duplicate in LHD Private Collection.
34.
Grayson, Frances. Black and white photograph of Ms. Gayson signed. Verso: “Hello Jack, Kindly
have this pix autographed for me”. Photographer: Ed. N. Jackson, 1927. Frances Wilson Grayson (circa
1890 - December 25, 1927) was an American aviatrix who died flying to Newfoundland just prior to her
trip to cross the Atlantic Ocean.
LHD/Photographs/Summary/ June 3 rd 2008.
35.
[Irish Women’s Rights]. Stop Strip Searches. Black and white photograph of women standing
holding a banner stating: “Stop Strip Searches”. Verso: 1984 International Woman's Day Picket outside
the Armagh Jail. Proceed to the Prisoners Book Scheme. N.D., N.P. Message on back: “Dear Mar
Guenite.,.I am writing this at 5 a.m. at home -I was released on Friday Morning for 5 days - / return on Monday, but
out seeing everyone at present... ”
36.
Jordan, Barbara . 8 x 1 0 black and white photograph signed. N.D., N.P. Barbara Charline Jordan
(February 21, 1936 - January 17, 1996) was an American politician from Texas. She served as a
congresswoman in the United States House of Representatives from 1973 to 1979. Charles Guerrero,
1990.
37.
Linton, Mrs. Lynn. Black and white photograph. London, W & D. Downey, [188-]. Eliza Lynn
Linton 1822-1898, was a British novelist, essayist, and journalist
38.
Livermore, Mary. Black and white photograph of head and shoulders - With her signature on
back. Writing on back: Historical information. [Carte-de-Visite]
39.
MacDonald, Margaret. (3) Black and white photographs taken of Mrs. MacDonald in 1895,1906
and 1909. Printed and sold by the Women's Labour League/Independent Party. Margaret MacDonald,
1870 - 1911 was a feminist, social reformer, and the wife of British politician and future Prime Minister
of the United Kingdom.
40.
Mead, Margaret. 4” x 5” black and white photograph of Margaret Mead smiling, hands folded,
wearing glasses: Signed: “Margaret Mead”. N.D., N.P.
41.
Notable Women Photographic Display. National Women's History Project Revised in 1994. 24
photographs in folder.
42.
Notable Women Photographic Display. National Women’s History Project Revised in 1996. 24
photographs in folder.
43.
O'Connor, Justice Sandra Day . People Magazine cover signed. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
became one of the most powerful women in America. October 12,1981.
44.
O'Connor, Justice Sandra Day. Colored photograph signed of. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
became one of the most powerful women in America.
45.
Pankhurst, Mrs. Emmeline. Black and white photograph of Mrs. E. Pankhurst talking with
fellow Suffragette, Mrs. Dacre Fox at train depot. Signed. E. Pankhurst. 1915.
46.
Pankhurst, Emmeline. Black and white photograph signed below image. Nov. 13, 1913.
Chicago: Matzene. |1913|. Emmeline Klaus Pankhurst (14 July 1858 -14 June 1928) was one of the
leaders of the British suffragette movement (the WSPU - Women's Social and Political Union). It is the
name of "Mrs. ", more than any other, which is associated with the struggle for the enfranchisement of
women in the United Kingdom immediately preceding World War I.
47.
Pankhurst, Richard M. Black and white photograph signed. Manchester, [England]. C.A. Du
Val & Company. Ca. 1890. Richard Pankhurst married Emmeline Goulden, better known as Emmeline
Pankhurst, who was some 20 years younger than him, in 1879. With her, he was instrumental in
establishing the Independent Labour Party. Together they formed the Women's Franchise League in
1889. They were part of a political circle which included Keir Hardie, Annie Besant, William Morris and
George Bernard Shaw. They were present at the Bloody Sunday riot in Trafalgar Square.
LHD/Photographs/Summary/ June 3 rd 2008.
48.
Parks, Rosa. Signed. Black and white signed photograph of Rosa Parks in her later years-sitting
on a bus, looking out of the window. N.D., N.P. On Dec. 1. Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat to a
white man on a racially segregated bus. She was arrested, fingerprinted, jailed by police and fined $14.
She stands trial and on Dec. 5 is found guilty of breaking the segregation laws. The Montgomery bus
boycott begins and lasted 381 days. The boycott brings the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. to national
prominence as President of the Montgomery Improvement Association." Rosa Parks is Often referred to
"The mother of the Civil Rights Movement".
49.
Paul, Alice. Black and white photograph signed. Washington, D.C., Harris & Ewing.
Ca. 1920. Written on back: “As we look at history - we see the gradual emerging of women from the silence of the
past First only Queens were mentioned, now women as individuals are coming to be acknowledged to be equal factors
with men in the development of nations”.
50.
Perkins, Frances. New Service Photograph. Black and white photograph of Frances Perkins with
Dr. Robert Gordon Sproul. Ms. Perkins, Secretary of Labor is greeted By Dr. Sproul of the University of
California on arrival to speak at Charter Day exercises in the Hearst Theatre at Berkeley. 1935.
51.
Rankin, Jeanette. Black and white photograph. Modern reproduction.
52.
Sand, George. Black and white photograph of George Sand. Photographie Du Grand Hotel Navar
Boulevart Des Capucines. N.P., N.D. |Carte-de-visite|.
53.
Sewell, May Wright. Oversized Cabinet photograph with facsimile Signature affixed to bottom
mount.
54.
Shaw, Anna Howard. Anna Howard Shaw sitting at desk reading a letter. Glass Negative Picture.
Keystone View Company Factories - Meadville Pa. Underwood & Underwood.
55.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady & Susan B. Anthony. (2) Black and white photograph. Reproduction..
Dated Nov. 20, 1893. New York City. One photograph with an original cut signature of Elizabeth Cady
Stanton.
56.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Black and white photograph. Stamped on back: Burgess & Company Successors to Brady - 627 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C. 1870’s. [Carte-De- Visite].
57.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Black and white photograph. Ca. 1860. [Carte-de-visite].
58.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Black and white photograph. Philadelphia, Pa.: J.W, Hurn, Ca. 1870.
59.
Steinem, Gloria. (2) Black and white photographs signed. No date, No place.
60.
Stone, Lucy. Black and white cabinet photograph signed. Boston, MA. The Notman
Photographic Co. [1876?]. Written on verso: “ From Mr. & Mrs. Blackwell". Also, Lucy Stone has written
twice her name, once in ink and another in pencil.
61.
Stowe, Harriet Beecher. Black and white profile portrait of Ms. Stowe. With her signature
below portrait. Writing on back: “Mrs. Hoteh. Kiss from Mrs. Hooker, June 1,1895/ Mrs. Isabella Beecher
Hooker/Sister to Mrs. Stowe was the guest of Judge I.E. Baldwin - During the Convention.
62.
[Suffrage]. Black and white photograph of women on wash day - washing laundry by hand. N.D.,
N.P. Modern reproduction.
63.
Suffragettes.Black and white photograph of three women standing in rain gear, standing in front
of White Householding banners that say: “New York - Mr. President, What will you do For Woman Suffrage".
LHD/Photographs/Summary/ June 3 rd 2008.
Modern reproduction.
64.
[Suffragist]. Black and white photograph of an unknown Burat Mongolian Suffragette. New
York Associated Press, 1930.
65.
[Suffragists].Black and white photograph of four elderly suffragists holding American flags.
Manton, Michigan. Ca., 1890’s. Identified as Mrs. S. Burr, Mrs. Westbrook, Mrs. Boer and Mrs. Seaton.
66.
[Suffragists].Black and white photograph of three women protestors outside the gates of the
White House holding banners: “Mr. President - What will you do for woman suffrage?". Modern
reproduction.
67.
[Suffragists]. Black and white photograph of Suffragist pickets before the Headquarters of the
National Woman’s Party. Washington, D.C., Scherer Studio [1917]. Group of eleven women from the
Pennsylvania delegation who had taken part in the March 4th 1917 demonstration in Washington, D.C.,
standing in a semi-circle before the Headquarters of The National Woman’s Party [still bearing its
original sign:] CONGRESSIONAL UNION FOR WOMEN SUFFRAGE/21 Madison Place. Two
women holding banners with the tri-colors of The Woman’s Party; another holding the banner with the
famous question: “Mr. President - What will you do for woman suffrage?" Caroline Katzenstin, author of
“Lifting the Curtain", standing third from the right in this photograph. Inscribed by Katzenstin: “To My
Mother, 1927. March 4th. Signed in the top margin.
68.
[Suffragists]. Black and white photograph of the Headquarters of the World’s Woman’s Party,
Geneva, Switzerland. Ca. 1900’s
69.
[Suffrage-National Women’s Party]. Let Women Vote. National Women Suffrage Association 1919./ Modern reproduction
70.
[Suffrage-National Women's Party]. Black and white photograph. National Women’s Party
Reorganized. 6 1/2’ x 8 1/2' Meeting was launched in Washington - Newly elected members of the
National Council of the National Woman’s Party. Ca. 1921. News Service Photograph.
71.
[Suffrage Parade]. Oversized black and white photograph. Unidentified Woman in white cap
with tiara riding a white horse - parade with onlookers. Suffrage Related.
72.
[Suffrage Parade]. Black and white photograph of 1915 Suffrage Parade - women in Alaska
costume. Annotations by Margaret Vale. Reproduction.
73.
[Suffrage Parade]. Black and white photograph of 1915 Suffrage Parade - women in Alaska
costume. Annotations by Margaret Vale. Reproduction.
74.
[Suffrage Parade]. Black and white photograph of March 3,1913 Suffrage Parade. Keystone
View Company. Information gives details of this event Manufactures Copyright made in the U.S.
75.
[Suffrage Parade]. Black and white photograph of women marching in a parade. N.D., N.P.
76.
[Suffrage Parade ?]. Black and white photograph of a girl in a white flowing Gown riding a
horse. N.P., N.D. Modern reproduction.
77.
[Suffrage Parade]. Suffrage Parade. Black and white photograph showing the start of the
Suffrage Parade Passing Treasury Building with a sign that reads: “We Demand an Amendment to the
Constitution of The United States Enfranchising The Women of This Country. ” N.P. N.D. Modern
reproduction.
LHD/Photographs/Summary/ June 3 rd 2008.
78.
[Suffrage Parade]. Original Photograph of Suffragette Parade - March 3, 1913. Black and white
mounted pictures: Suffrage Parade - G. Marshall, Mrs. Richard Burleson: Heard: Miss Inez Milholland
And other Prominent Works on Horseback. Members of the Congressional Union organized a suffrage
parade, carefully scheduling it for the day before Pres. Wilson's inauguration (it is said that when Wilson
arrived in town, he found the streets empty of welcoming crowds and was told that everyone was on
Pennsylvania Avenue watching the parade). Not all of the parade observers were suffrage supporters.
Hostile members of the crowd swarmed and insulted the marching women. The publicity resulting from
this incident instigates an investigation by District of Columbia Commissioners and provides further
momentum for the suffrage campaign.
79.
[Suffragists]. Original snapshot of Suffragists at a Local fair. Meridale, New York. 1910- 1917.
Black and white photograph of A Suffragist on a speaker's stand reading: “Who Levy and collect taxes on
women‘s property? Men Alone - They expend this money as they choose without regard to women". Unpublished.
80.
[Suffragists]. Original snapshot of A tent displaying Suffrage material with “Equal Suffrage" and
“Votes for Women” pennants along the front of the tent, and a table laden with books. Meridale, New York,
1910-1917. Unpublished.
81.
[Suffragists]. Original snapshot of An older women, possibly the leader of the local Suffrage
group, behind the speakers stand. Meridale, New York. 1910-1917.Unpublished.
82.
[Suffragists]. Original snapshot of the Suffragist tent with two suffragists - one wears "A Votes
For Women”. Meridale, New York, 1910-1917. Unpublished.
83.
Tarbell, Ida M. Black and white photograph signed: “Ida M. Tar bell, November 1933”. Photograph
is a reproduction.
84.
Truth, Sojourner. Black and white image of Sojourner Truth sitting at a cloth-covered tabled
reading. Reverse is printed: Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1864,
in the Clerk’s Office, of the U.S. District Court, for the Eastern District of Michigan. With printed
legend: "I Sell the Shadow to Support the Substance/Sojourner Truth ”. [Carte-de-visite].
85.
Truth, Sojourner. Black and white image of Sojourner Truth sitting with a bowl of yarn which is
knitting from. Reverse is printed: Entered according to Act of Congress in the year 1864, in the Clerk’s
Office, of the U.S. District Court, for the Eastern District of Michigan.
[Carte-de-visite).
86.
Truth, Sojourner. Black and white photographic reproduction.
87.
Tubman, Harriet. Black and white photographic reproduction.
88.
[Votes for Women]. Votes for Women. Black and white photograph of a Stage with Women and
Men standing- Sign held up says “Vote for Women”. N.P., N.D.
89.
Mary E. Walker, M.D. Black and white photograph of Mary E. Walker with her Note and
signature: “Never Use Tobacco - Mary E. Walker, M.D”.
81.
Woman Suffrage Headquarters. Black and white photograph. Men of Ohio! Give the Women A
Square Deal. Vote for Amendment No. 23 on September 3,1912.
82
[Women]. Black and white photograph of women doing heavy industrial work during World War
II. Ca. 1940’s.
83.
Woodhull, Victoria. [Victoria Claflin]. Black and white photograph. “April 6, 1870”. With
printed legend: “Mrs. Woodhull/Broker”. [Carte-de-Visite].
LHD/Photographs/Summary/ June 3 rd 2008.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & ArchivesFor the Study of The Rights of Women in History and Law.
Artifacts: Women’s Suffrage and Women’s Rights
First Wave:
1840’s - 1960.
Second Wave: Feminist Movement: 1960’s-1990’s.
Third Wave:
Liberation Movement: 1990 to present day.
THE USE OF TRI-COLORS: BRITISH & AMERICAN - First Wave.
The use of gold began with Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony's campaign to help pass a
state suffrage referendum in Kansas in 1867. The pro-suffrage forces adopted the Kansas state symbol, the
sunflower as their own. Thereafter, the flower and the color gold or yellow were associated with the suffrage
cause. Suffrage supporters used gold pins, ribbons, sashes, and yellow roses to denote their cause. During the
nation's centennial celebrations in 1876, suffrage supporters sang "The Yellow Ribbon" song that associated
the color with "God's own primal color; born of purity and light" and with the "flame of freedom's fires."
The second color theme widely employed in the American movement was the use of the tricolors
purple, white, and green and, later, the use of purple, white, and gold. Purple, white, and green originated with
the Women's Social and Political Union in the British suffrage movement to symbolize loyalty, purity, and
hope. The use of these colors was transferred to the American scene by Harriot Stanton Blatch (daughter of
Elizabeth Cady Stanton) and others returning from their work with Emmeline, Christabel, and Sylvia
Pankhurst, leaders of the militant suffrage movement in England. The use of the colors purple, white, and
green was concentrated primarily in New York, where Blatch set up her suffrage association, and in the
neighboring states of New Jersey and Connecticut. As these states had strong suffrage organizations, these
colors also became symbolic along with the more traditional American color, gold or bright yellow. Suffrage
parades and demonstrations in New York often featured the use and intermingling of both color themes.
[Badge] 1884 Franchise Demonstration Badge This 4" x 2" metal badge relates to a major demonstration held
in Glasgow on September 6, 1884 in support of expanding the rights to vote to a greater percentage of citizens.
This included women as photographs exist that show posters with this date and women asking for the right to
vote. This wonderful badge has the Glasgow Coat of Arms, and the GLA at the top stands for "Glasgow
Liberal Association. 50,000 women and men marched in this demonstration as part of a country wide wave of
marches and planned demonstrations asking for "Suffrage or the Franchise for All". Earlier women's suffrage
agitation can be traced in Chartism. A woman weaver from Glasgow argued in 1838 that women deserved the
vote. The anti- slavery movement, in which Glasgow Quakers were prominent, led some women to consider
equal rights. The cause was championed by the socialist newspaper Forward and the poet Marion Bernstein.
The city council passed a resolution of support. Other key organizations were the Scottish Churches League
for Woman Suffrage, and the Men's League for Women's Suffrage started by playwright Graham Moffat after
his wife, the actress Maggie Moffat, became the first suffragette to be imprisoned in Scotland. Many
campaigners were also involved in labor politics. The first women's suffrage society in the city was formed
ca.1870 and a large open-air women's suffrage meeting was held in April 1872 on Glasgow Green - an unusual
event for the time. Campaigning included the sustained, law-abiding efforts of the Glasgow and West of
Scotland Association for Women's Suffrage, such as drawing room meetings and petitions to Parliament. After
1906 the militant suffragettes of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) and the breakaway, nonviolent Women's Freedom League (WFL) made headlines. Very rare.
[Lapel Pin], “Votes For Women” - Lapel pin. Purple, green and white WSPU. London, England. The WSPU
otherwise known as the Women’s Social and Political Union was founded in 1903 by Emmeline, Christabel
and Sylvia Pankhurst They had been part of the NUWSS (National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies)
But had become frustrated by its lack of success. They formed this new organization that became known for
its more militant tendencies; their approach was very different from the moderate law-abiding NUWSS.
Members of the Union became known as Suffragettes’. Whenever possible members were to wear the three
colors of the Union: purple, white and green to show their support for the Cause. Purple stood for dignity,
white for purity and green for hope for the future. Gt.Br.
[Badge]. National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies Badge. Red and green enamel, 22mm, pin back,
W.O. Lewis, Birmingham maker's mark, in fine condition. Carrie Chapman Catt and Dr. Anna Shaw were
members of this organization that prided itself on its non-militant efforts to secure the vote for women. This
badge/ pin commemorates this organization founded by 17 individuals who sought equal treatment between
the sexes.
[Ribbon]. Women Vote In Norway. 2 pieces of cream colored ribbon With black print Housed in black box
with glass top. N.P., N.D. Ca. 1910-1913. Norway was one of the first countries in the world to allow women
to vote, in 1913. Since then Norway continues to ensure equal rights for men and women. Rare.
[Badges]. Two paper badges. Green-white-purple. “Votes for Women” in purple with WCSA in center.
"Purple stands for the royal blood that flows in the veins of every suffragette...white stands for purity in private and public
life...green is the color of hope and the emblem of spring."
[Ribbon]. 5.5cm x 3 cm. Green, white and purple ribbon with “Votes For Women”. Very rare. Seldom seen
or offered to the public.
[Delegate Pin & Ribbon]. National Suffrage Convention Delegate Pin and Ribbon.
Delegate: Atlantic City, 1916. Ribbon is yellow and black letters. Writing on back: "Alice Morgan Wright-New
York", At this convention the NAWSA President Carrie Chapman Catt unveils her "winning plan" for
suffrage victory at a convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Catt's plan required the coordination of
activities by a vast cadre of suffrage workers in both state and local associations.
[Delegate Badge & Program]. Annual Convention League of Women Voters of New York City, Hotel
Pennsylvania. Monday, March 12th 1923. Contains the program for the Afternoon and Evening sessions. List
of participants. Inside the program is a yellow ribbon with wording: “Delegate”. Held together with straight
pin.
[Equality pin.] Silver pin with words “Equality’ with a wreath around the bottom. Hangs from top. On a red
felt base with black case. N.P. Ca. 1915-1920. With the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the
Constitution, American women gained one of the most cherished rights and fundamental responsibilities of
citizenship: the right to vote. Very rare.
[Lapel & Ribbon]. New York Woman Suffrage Association - Delegate. N.Y. W.S.A. 26th Annual
Convention, Ithaca. 1894. Souvenir of the 600,000 Petition. [New York]: New York Woman Suffrage
Association,, 1894. Original silk delegate ribbon from the 26th Annual Convention of the New York Woman
Suffrage Association, held in Ithaca, New York in 1894. The convention was held in Ithaca, New York,
November 12 - 14th, 1894. Earlier in 1894, New York State held its Constitutional Convention to revise the
State constitution, which included a proposed amendment aimed at striking the word "male,” and granting
woman suffrage. The suffragists were denied representation, and female delegates were not allowed. The New
York State Woman Suffrage Association, with the help of Susan B. Anthony, and the Women’s Christian
Temperance Union, had collected roughly 600,000 signatures in favor of giving women the vote. The
petitions ultimately failed to persuade the delegates, however it marked an important moment in the
movement for woman suffrage in New York. Gold silk delegate ribbon, measuring circa 2 5/8 by 5 3/4 inches,
printed in black, with rolled hem at top edge and fringe at bottom, illustrated with small sunburst device at top
and bottom of ribbon, and with smaller sunburst device at each side of "N.Y.W.S.A.”. Yellow (or gold) was
the official color of the National Woman Suffrage Association. A near fine copy.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes for Women. 1” round pin. National Equipment Co., New York. N.D.
[Lapel]. W.S.A. Silk Rosette purple/maroon and white pin with the blue letters attached to white And purple
ribbon made to look like a flower. N.D., but 1907. Listed in Diane Atkinson: The Purple, White and Green.
Very Rare. Seldom offered to the public.
[Lapel Pin]. Enamel Pin. One inch enamel on metal in green, white and purple with the words: “Vote For
Women” in black. Very rare and sought after. As exhibited at the London Museum and the National Women’s
History Museum website.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes for Women with six gold stars - Trimmed in gold with lettering in gold. National
Equipment Co., 12 East 23rd St., New York City.
[Lapel Pin]. Color pin. “Opposed to Woman Suffrage”. Black lettering with red center. N.D., N.P.
[Lapel Pin]. Color pin. “Vote No on Women Suffrage”. Red with cream center. N.D., N.P.
[Pin -back Collection.] (4). Attached with a ribbon to an 8” x 5”. #1. Black pin with “Votes for Women”
printed in gold. #2. White pin with “Votes for Women - Indiana” printed in gold. #3. A gold pin with “Equal
Suffrage” and 6 stars in Blue. #4. Navy blue with “Penna-Votes for Women- 1915”. and shows an American
Flag. First pin is attached to ribbon - others to card. Stunning collection.
[Lapel Pin ]. Votes for Women. Center of pin is a red circle. The Whitehead and Hoag Co., Newark, N.J. Pin
is behind cellophane, between two pieces of 2” x 2”. which is stapled together.
[Lapel Pin]. “Votes for Woman”. Gold pin back with “Votes for Women” printed in black. Pioneer
M’F’G Co. New York.
[Ribbon]. Yellow ribbon with purple Print: “Celebrate International Women’s Day March 8,1995”. 61/2” x 1
1/2". (2).
[Lapel Pin]. Color pin. “Opposed to Woman Suffrage”. Black lettering with red center. N.D., N.P. U.S.
[Lapel Pin]. Color pin. “Vote No on Women Suffrage”. Red with cream center. N.D., N.P. U.S.
[Badges]. Two paper badges. Green-white-purple. “Votes for Women” in purple with WCSA in center.
"Purple stands for the royal blood that flows in the veins of every suffragette...white stands for purity in private and public
life...green is the colour of hope and the emblem of spring." U.S.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes for Women 1915 - printed in teal. Gold sunrise Against white background in center
of pin. Teal color around edges. The Whitehead And Hoag Co.
[Lapel Pin]. West Virginia]. National Junior Suffrage Corp. Button. Green and yellow button with Tree.
‘Youth Today - Tomorrow Power’. N.D, ca. 1916. N.P.
[Jewelry]. Women's Suffrage Enamel Brooch. Women's Suffrage hallmarked enamel broach measures 1
1/4" across and is vivid red, green and white. It has a slight flaw where either the enamel did not fill in
completely or there is the slightest chip-otherwise very good.
[Lapel]. Women's League Ribbon. Cream ribbon with blue letter Women’s League Attached to a silver pin
at the top with the wording: “Pilgrimage to Boston”. The League of Women Voters was founded by Carrie
Chapman Catt in 1920 during the convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. The
convention was held just six months before the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified,
giving women the right to vote after a 72-year struggle.
[Lapel Pin]. Woman’s Apparel Unit- Women’s Overseas Hospitals. USA pins. Red-white-blue - Woman
standing in white gown with flags behind her. N.P., N.D.
Collection of Suffrage Lapel Pins. American and British. Ca. 1900-1920. Pro and Con for Women's Rights.
Lapel Pin #1. Votes for Women -with ten stars printed in navy blue on gold.
Lapel Pin #2. Votes for Women June 5 - printed in black on gold. Local No. 4. .Union Amalgamated
Lithographers of America; Chicago - printed on back of pin.
Lapel Pin #3. Votes For Women 1915 - printed in teal. Gold sunrise against white background in center of
pin. Teal color around edges. The Whitehead & Hoag Buttons, Badges, Novelties & Signs. Newark, N.J. printed on back of pin.
Lapel Pin #4. Vote YES on Woman Suffrage - printed in black on green and white pin. YES printed on
white circle in center of pin. Votes on Woman Suffrage printed on green Edges of pin. Woman’s Political
Union, 25 West 45th Street, New York City - Whitehead And Hoag Co., Newark, New Jersey - printed on
back of pin.
Lapel Pin #5. Vote NO on Woman Suffrage - printed in black on pink and white pin. NO Printed on white
circle of pin. Vote on Woman suffrage printed on pink edges around pin. Bastion Bros. Co., Mfrs. Of
Ribbon and Metal and Celluloid Novelties. Rochester, N.Y. printed on back of pin.
Lapel Pin #6. Vote NO on Woman Suffrage - printed in black on pin and white. NO printed on white circle in
center of pin. Vote on Woman Suffrage printed on pink edges around pin. Bastion Bros. Co., Mfrs. Of Ribbon
and Metal and Celluloid Novelties. Rochester, N.Y. printed on back of pin.
[Lapel Pins]. Collection of Pins: “Pennsylvania Votes for Women-1915“; (2) “Don’t Let It Suffer” - With
picture of women with her mouth open; “Votes for Women” with gold ribbon with black letters “California
not Nevada” - “Cast My First Vote At a Municipal election in red rose city For Kennedy and the straight
Republican ticket -November 8th 1921”. “Votes for Women-lndiana “; WPU attached to two ribbons- one
with green letters “Votes for Women”; “Vote No On Women Suffrage"; “Opposed to Women Suffrage”;
Anti Suffrage pin-white pin with red dot in center lettering black. [10 pin backs for Suffrage; 3 AntiSuffrage].
[Celluloid Pin]. Amelia Earhart 1 1/4" Celluloid Pinback showing Amelia Earhart, Lou Gordon, Wimer
Stultz- Friendship Flyer. This piece of women's history celebrates Amelia Earhart's 1928 flight across
the Atlantic Ocean. Earhart then took on her position as a groundbreaking role model for other women,
both inside and outside the world of aviation. Compared to Lindberg, very few items were made to
celebrate this woman of many firsts.
[Pin/ Ribbon]. Overseas Suffrage Club pin with ribbon. O.S.C. Overseas Suffrage Club. Pin with purple,
white, yellow ribbon. Pin has red, white, blue flag - Back reads: Women’s Political Union - 46 East 29th St,
New York. This item was produced by the Women's Political Union, New York City (paper in the back).
2nd U.S. Feminist Movement (also known as the Women's Movement or Women's Liberation) is a series of
campaigns on issues such as reproductive rights (including abortion), domestic violence, maternity leave,
equal pay, sexual harassment and sexual violence. Feminists continue fighting conditions which they perceive
as oppressive to women. Feminists observe that in more or less all areas of the world, women still earn less
than men on average, and hold less political and economic power. It is believed that women's lesser earning
power is due to being paid less than men for equivalent work on a significant scale. Feminists believe that
women are often the subject of intense social pressure to conform to relatively traditional gender expectations.
The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) was a proposed amendment to the United States Constitution intended
to guarantee equal rights under the law for Americans regardless of sex. Amendments can be approved
according to the process in Article V of the Constitution. The final deadline for approving the ERA passed in
either 1979 or 1982—depending upon one's view of a controversial extension of the ratification time
constraint. In the intervening years, public discussion on the ERA has been greatly reduced, though the
proposal has been reintroduced in every Congress since 1982. In the current 110th Congress, the "Equal
Rights Amendment" has been offered in the Senate as S.J. Res. 10 by Democrat Sen. Edward Kennedy, MA,
lead sponsor, and in the House of Representatives as H.J. Res. 40 with Democrat Representative Carolyn
Maloney, NY, as lead sponsor The political tide changed direction in the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s.
At the 1980 Republican National Convention in Detroit, Michigan, the Republican Party platform was
amended to qualify its support for the ERA. One of the most prominent opponents to the ERA was Phyllis
Schlafly, a conservative Republican. According to its critics, the ERA would have granted more power to
Congress and to the Federal courts, a stance unpopular at a time when public opposition to expanded Federal
government authority—and Federal judicial activism in particular—was growing. Opponents, and even most
supporters of the ERA, agree that if freshly re-proposed by Congress, the ERA would have to start from
scratch and would need to gain state ratifications all over again—the state approvals achieved during the
1970s being non-transferable.
Box One:
1.
ERA Lapel Pin. “Equal Rights Amendment-Vote Yes”- White with red and Blue lettering. 4cm. N.P.,
N.D.
2.
ERA Lapel Pin. “AllPeople Are Created Equal” -White with red and blue Lettering. 4cm.
3.
ERA Lapel Pin. “AllPeople Are Created Equal” -White with red and blue Lettering. 4cm.
4.
ERA Lapel Pin. “AllPeople Are Created Equal” -White with red and blue Lettering. 4cm.
5.
ERA Lapel Pin. “AllPeople Are Created Equal” -White with red and blue Lettering. 4cm.
6.
ERA Lapel Pin. “All People Are Created Equal” -White with red and blue Lettering. 4cm.
7.
ERA Lapel Pin. “All People Are Created Equal” -White with red and blue Lettering. 4cm.
8.
ERA Lapel Pin. “All People Are Created Equal” -White with red and blue Lettering. 4cm.
9.
ERA Lapel Pin. “ERA Our Legacy Our Goal” -White with Purple and Gold Lettering. 5.5cm.
10.
ERA Lapel Pin. “ERA Our Legacy Our Goal”-White with Purple and Gold Lettering. 5.5cm.
11.
ERA Lapel Pin. “ERA Our Legacy Our Goal”-White with Purple and Gold Lettering. 5.5cm.
12.
ERA Lapel Pin. “ERA YES”. Green with white lettering. 5.5 cm.
13.
ERA Lapel Pin. “People of Faith for E.R.A. Light green with black lettering. 5.5 cm.
14.
ERA Lapel Pin. “National Woman’s Party E.R.A. Equality of Rights Under the Law Shall Not Be
Denied or Abridged by the United States or by any State on Account of Sex. White with purple lettering.
7.5cm.
15.
ERA Lapel Pin. “National Woman’s Party E.R.A. Equality of Rights Under the Law Shall Not Be
Denied or Abridged by the United States or by any State on Account of Sex. White with purple lettering.
7.5cm.
16.
ERA Lapel Pin. “ERA YES”. Green with white lettering. 7.5cm.
17.
ERA Lapel Pin. “ERA YES”. Green with white lettering. 7.5cm.
18.
ERA Lapel Pin. “NO WAY ERA” -Green with white lettering. 7.5cm.
Box Two:
19.
[Lapel Pin Designed by LHD]. “Women Don’t Need Balls To Play Golf: Sports Equality USA”. White
with red and blue lettering. 5.5cm.
20.
[Lapel Pin Designed by LHD]. “Women Don’t Need Balls To Play Golf: Sports Equality USA”. White
with red and blue lettering. 5.5cm.
21.
[Lapel Pin Designed by LHD]. “Annual Roe Rally 2003 Choice Ask Me Why I Fight!”. White with
black and purple letterings. 7.5cm.
22.
[Lapel Pin Designed by LHD]. “1st Georgians for Choice Roe Rally For Choice Roe vs. Wade-197232003”. White with Capital Building background With gold and black lettering. 7.5cm.
23.
[Lapel Pin Designed by LHD]. “War On Women! Danger You Only Have Your RIGHTS to Lose!”.
White with black and red lettering. 7.5cm.
24.
[Lapel Pin Designed by LHD]. “Never Again!!! No Illegal Abortions! Roe vs. Wade. GA. Annual Roe
Rally”. White with black lettering. Crossed out Clothes hanger image. 7.5cm.
Roe v. Wade. 410 U.S. 113 (1973) was a United States Supreme Court case that resulted in a landmark
decision regarding abortion.[1] According to the Roe decision, most laws against abortion in the United States
violated a constitutional right to privacy under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment The
decision overturned all state and federal laws outlawing or restricting abortion that were inconsistent with its
holdings. Roe v. Wade is one of the most controversial and politically significant cases in U.S. Supreme Court
history.
25.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Abortion is not “Silly and Irrelevant”. Navy blue and white lettering. 4cm.
26.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Witness for Women’s Lives, June 8,1985”. Blue with white lettering. 4cm.
27.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Abortion Is A Reproductive Right Committee to Defend Reproductive
Rights”. - White With black lettering. 3.5cm.
28.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “’’Forced Pregnancy Increases Church Membership”. -White with blue
lettering. 4cm.
29.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. Image of Crossed out Clothes Hanger. With red and black Lettering. 3cm.
30.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Right to Abortion: YES/NO: Forced Sterilization YAWF Women”. - Yellow
with Green lettering. 4cm.
31.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Another Man for Women’s Rights”. White with Blue lettering. 4cm.
32.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Freedom of Choice”. - White with maroon. 3.5cm.
33.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Just Say NO to Sex with Pro-Lifers”. White with Red and black lettering.
3.5cm.
34.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Every Child A Wanted One”. - Yellow with Navy Lettering. 4cm.
35.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Every Child A Wanted One”. - Yellow with Navy Lettering. 4cm.
36.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Every Child A Wanted One” - Yellow with Navy Lettering. 4cm
37.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Motherhood by CHOICE not CHANCE”. Navy with white lettering. 4cm.
38.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Choice”. Yellow with red lettering. 2.5cm.
39.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Defend A Woman’s Rights To Choose”. - White With blue lettering - Purple
and Green flower image. 4cm.
40.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. Image of a black clothes hanger on a white background. 3.5cm.
41.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Choice”. Red with white lettering. 2.5cm.
42.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Choice”. - Red with white lettering. 2.5cm.
43.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Someone you know may need a Choice”. Purple with white lettering. 3.5cm.
44.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Someone you know may need a Choice”. Purple with white lettering. 3.5cm.
45.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “I’m for Abortion & I Vote”. - White with Pink lettering. 2.5cm.
46.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “I’m for Abortion & I Vote”. - White with Pink lettering. 2.5cm.
47.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “I’m for Abortion & I Vote”. - White with Pink lettering. 2.5cm.
48.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “RU486?” - Pink with white lettering. 2.5cm.
49.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Abortion: For Survival”. - Pink with white Lettering. 2.5cm.
50.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Pro-Choice & I Vote For It”. - Pink with White lettering. 2.5cm.
51.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Real Men Use Condoms”. Tan with blue Lettering. 3.5cm.
52.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Keep Abortion Legal”. -Blue with white Lettering. 2.5cm.
53.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Another Man for Choice” - Tan with blue Lettering. 2.5cm.
54.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Freedom of Choice” - White and blue. 3.5cm.
55.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Our Bodies Our Lives-Abortion Is Every Woman’s Right”. White with red
lettering. 4cm.
56.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “U.S. Out of My Uterus”. White with purple And teal lettering. 4cm.
57.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “It’s My Right to Choose”. - Blue with white Statue of Liberty's face. 5.5cm.
58.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Pro Child Pro Choice”. Blue and white. 4cm.
59.
4cm.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Forced Pregnancy Increases Church Membership”. - White with blue lettering.
60.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Respect the Right Reduce the Need”. Purple and white. 4cm.
61.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “My Body, My Choice”. - Purple with white Lettering. 3.5cm.
62.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Right to Life - Your Name’s a Lie- You Don’t care If Women Die” Hot pink
with black lettering. 3cm.
63.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Support Abortion Rights Action Weeks October 22-29, 1979”. Purple with
white lettering. 3.5cm.
64.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Against Abortion? Have A Vasectomy”. White and red. 3.5cm.
65.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Against Abortion? Have A Vasectomy” White and red. 3.5cm.
66.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Keep Abortion Safe and Legal” White With red lettering. Image of Statue of
Liberty. 4cm.
67.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Pro-Choice” Purple with white lettering. 3.5cm.
68.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “I’m Pro life jacketing and I BOAT”- White with orange lettering. With a
fishing boat image. 4cm.
69.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “March for Women’s Equality Women Lives April 9,1989 - Washington DC.
Keep Abortion Safe and Legal Pass the Era” White with purple lettering - Capital Building image. 5.5cm.
70.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “March for Women’s Equality Women Lives April 9,1989 - Washington DC.
Keep Abortion Safe and Legal Pass the Era” White with purple lettering - Capital Building image. 5.5cm.
71.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. National March for Women’s Lives - March 9,1986 Washington D.C. Keep
Abortion Safe and Legal Pass the Era”- White with purple and gold lettering. 5.5cm.
72.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Keep Abortion Safe and Legal - NARAL National Abortion Rights Action
League” - Green with white lettering. 5cm.
73.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Keep Abortion Safe and Legal - NARAL National Abortion Rights Action
League” - Green with white lettering. 5cm.
74.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Abortion: A Personal Decision NARAL National Abortion Rights Action
League” - Blue with white lettering. 5cm.
75.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Use Your Vote Pro Choice N.O.W - N.Y.C.” Yellow with black lettering.
5.5cm.
76.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “I’m Pro-Choice and I Vote” - Yellow and Blue lettering. 5.5cm.
77.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “NOW 1,000 Points of Light Keep Abortion Legal - Inauguration Day - Jan.
20,1989” White with blue and black lettering. 5.5cm.
78.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Aborto llegal Jamas - NYS NARAL- National Abortion Rights Action
League”. Red with black and white lettering And a black broken clothes hanger. 5.5cm.
79.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Keep Abortion Legal” - Red with white Lettering and a black clothes hanger.
5.5cm.
80.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Illegal Abortion- Never Again! National Abortion Rights League”. Teal with
white and black lettering and a black broken Hanger. 5.5cm.
81.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “National Abortion Rights League - Never Again- NARAL” White with black
lettering and a black clothes hanger. 5.5cm.
82.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Pro-Choice”- Public Education Project” Blue with white lettering and a red
outlines U.S. map. 5.5cm.
83.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “I’m Pro-Choice”. Teal and white with white Lettering and partial head of the
Statue of Liberty. 5.cm.
84.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Pm Pro-Choice”. Teal and white with white Lettering and partial head of the
Statue of Liberty. 5.cm.
85.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Pm Pro-Choice”. Teal and white with white Lettering and partial head of the
Statue of Liberty. 5.cm.
86.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Pm Pro-Choice”. Teal and white with white Lettering and partial head of the
Statue of Liberty. 5.cm.
87.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Life is a Human Life - Keep Abortion Legal! Committee to
Defend Reproduction Rights” - White with Purple lettering. 2 partial face images. 5.5cm.
88.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “A Womb Of My Own”-Blue and white lettering. 6cm.
89.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “We Will Decide November 3rd NARAL – April 5,1992 -Washington DC” White and black lettering - Partial Statue of Liberty. 5.5cm.
90
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin.“We Will Decide November 3rd NARAL - April 5,1992. Washington DC” White with black lettering - Partial image of Statue of Liberty’s face. 5.5cm.
91.
Pro Choice Lapel Pin. “Its Either Pro-Choice or No Choice”- Blue and white. 4.5cm.
92.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin.“Its Either Pro-Choice or No Choice”- Blue and white. 4.5cm.
93.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Protect Your Family From the Christian Coalition” - Black and white lettering.
4.5cm.
94.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “If You Can’t Trust Me with A Choice, How Can you Trust Me with a Child?”
Blue with white lettering. 4.4cm.
95.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “I’m Marching for Women’s Rights- April 9,1989 - Washington, DC.” 5.5cm.
96.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Choice” - Yellow with maroon lettering. 1.x6cm.
97.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin.“Frankfort 1989 Rally For Women’s Lives” - White with green lettering Partial image of statue of liberty. 5.5cm.
98.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Keep Your Laws Out Of My Body” - White and red lettering. Partial image of
statue of liberty. 5.5cm.
99.
Pro-Choice Lapel Pin. “Roe vs. Wade- The Law of the Land. Pink with black lettering. 5.5cm.
100.
[Artifact-Car Plaque]. Pro-Choice - “Choice” - Black with raised Silver lettering. 4.5 x 13cm.
The Feminist Movement (also known as the Women’s Movement or Women's Liberation) is a series of
campaigns on issues such as reproductive rights (including abortion), domestic violence, maternity leave,
equal pay, sexual harassment, and sexual violence. Feminists continue fighting conditions which they perceive
as oppressive to women. Feminists observe that in more or less all areas of the world, women still earn less
than men on average, and hold less political and economic power. It is believed that women's lesser earning
power is due to being paid less than men for equivalent work on a significant scale. Feminists believe that
women are often the subject of intense social pressure to conform to relatively traditional gender expectations.
Box Four:
101.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. Women’s Rights are Human Rights” - Wood with Purple and green
lettering - Image of woman enclosed behind wire. 3x4cm.
102.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “This Is What A Radical Feminist Looks Like. Yellow with red
lettering. 3.5cm.
103.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Ordain Women or Stop Baptizing Them”. Red with black lettering.
3.5cm.
104. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Ordain Women or Stop Baptizing Them”. Red with black lettering.
3.5cm.
105. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Stop Sexual Harassment”. Maroon with White and yellow lettering.
3.5cm.
106. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Stop Sexual Harassment”. Maroon with White and yellow lettering.
3.5cm.
107.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Feminization of Power”. White with pink Lettering. 2.5cm.
108.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Feminization of Power”. White with pink Lettering. 2.5cm.
109.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Thelma & Louise Live”. Purple with white Lettering. 3.5cm.
110.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Thelma & Louise Live”. Purple with white Lettering. 3.5cm.
111.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Call Me Ms.” - Purple with hot pink lettering. 3.5cm.
112.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Free and Female”. White with Navy lettering. 3cm.
113.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Failure Is Impossible”. Hot pink with black Lettering. 3cm.
114.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Hate Is Not A Family Value” - White with Black lettering and
border. 4cm.
115.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Women: break tradition’s chains! YAWF Women” - Yellow and
blue. 2 Rallying Figures with Fists Raised. 4.5cm.
116.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin.“Trust In God - She Will Provide”. Yellow With Navy lettering. 3cm.
117.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Oh, So That Explains the Difference in our Salaries” - Red with
black lettering. Drawing of 2 children looking in their diapers. 3.5cm.
118. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Oh, So That Explains the Difference in our Salaries” - White with
blue letterings. Drawing of 2 children looking in their diapers. 3.5cm
119. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “If the People Lead - the Leaders Will Follow”. Blue with white
lettering. 3.5cm.
120. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “If the People Lead - the Leaders Will Follow”. Yellow with blue
lettering. 3.5cm.
121.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Women Make Policy, Not Coffee”. Black with white lettering. 3cm.
122.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Women Make Policy, Not Coffee”. Red with white lettering. 3cm.
123.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Women Make Policy, Not Coffee”. Blue with white lettering. 3cm.
124.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Adam Was A ROUGH DRAFT”. Blue with a white lettering. 3.5cm.
125.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Proud to be a Feminist”. White and Maroon. 3.5cm.
126.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Proud to be a Feminist”. White and Maroon. 3.5cm.
127.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Fly You”. Blue with Black lettering. 2.5cm.
128.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “I’m Entitled”. White with black lettering. 2.5cm.
129.
3cm.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Women, Don’t Agonize, Organize”- Yellow with black lettering.
130.
3cm.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Women, Don’t Agonize, Organize”- Yellow with black lettering.
131.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Don’t Call Me Girl” - Red With white lettering. 2.5cm.
132.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Don’t Call Me Girl” - Hot pink with Navy Lettering. 3cm.
133. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “The Best Man for A Job May Be ...A WOMAN’ White with purple
lettering. 3.5cm.
134. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “The Best Man for A Job May Be... A WOMAN”- White with purple
lettering. 3.5cm.
135.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Woman Power” - White with black lettering. 4x4cm.
136.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “I’m A Sportswoman and Proud of It”- White with red lettering. 3cm.
137. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Women’s Liberation”. White with red Lettering - Statue of Liberty
Extending Fist. 4cm.
138. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Place is EVERY Place!” - White with red and blue
lettering. 3.5cm.
139. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Place is EVERY Place!” - White with blue lettering.
3.5cm.
140. Women's Liberation Lapel Pin.“Phyllis Schafly is a Female Impersonator”- Blue with yellow
lettering. Blue with yellow lettering. 4cm.
141.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Your Silence Will Not Protect You”. Audre Lorde” - Green with
yellow lettering. 4cm.
142. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Your Silence Will Not Protect You' Audre Lorde” - Blue with white
lettering. 4cm.
143. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “50/50 by 2000” - White with red lettering. Zeros in 50s are Male and
Female Symbols. 3.5cm.
144. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Every Mother Is A Working Woman”- Purple with white lettering.
Small butterfly. 3.5cm.
145
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Roosters Crow...Hens Deliver” – White With maroon lettering.
3.5cm.
146. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “This is What A Radical Feminist Looks Like” - Yellow with red
lettering. 3.5cm.
147. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “There Can Be No Free Men Until There Are Free Women!” Black
with white and pink lettering. 2.5cm.
148.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Call Me Ms, Not Mrs. Him” - Yellow with Green lettering. 3cm.
149. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Just Say NO to Sex with Pro Lifers” - White With red and black
lettering. 3.5cm.
150. Women's Liberation Lapel Pin. “Just Say NO to Sex with Pro Lifers” - White With red and black
lettering. 3.5cm.
151.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “We Don’t Need Balls to Play” - White with Red lettering. 3cm.
152. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “God Created Women in Her Own Image”- Orange with black
lettering. 3cm.
153. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “A Man of Quality is not threatened By A Woman of EQUALITY” White with blue lettering. 4cm.
154.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Another Man for Women’s Rights”- White with blue lettering. 4cm.
155.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Different but Equal” - Green with Purple lettering. 4cm.
156. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “If I Can’t Dance...I Don’t Want to be Part of Your Revolution Emma
Goldman” - Tan with brown lettering. Image of a lady In a hat 4cm.
157.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Kindness Spoken Here” - Yellow with Black lettering. 3.5cm.
158.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Wild Women Don’t Get the Blues”- Pink with blue lettering. 3cm.
159. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Place is in The House... And the Senate” Hot pink with
white lettering. 2.5cm.
160.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Lead Follow or Get Out of the Way” White with blue lettering.
161. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Place is in her Union - Union United Steelworkers of
America - AFL CIO CLC” - Blue and white lettering. On SED Business card - “Joe Comite Union Pin $8
95/96”. 4cm.
162.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Give A Woman Credit$” -= Green with White lettering. 6cm.
163. Women's Liberation Lapel Pin. “The Best Man for a Job May Be A Woman”- Yellow with red
lettering. 5.5cm.
164. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “The Best Man for a Job May Be A Woman”- Yellow with red
lettering. 5.5cm.
165. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “The Hand That Rocks the Cradle Should Rock The Boat!. White
with red lettering. 5cm.
166. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Patchwork Majority” - Multi-colored background With white
lettering. Various Symbols in black print. 6cm.
167. Women's Liberation Lapel Pin. “The Power to Stop Violence Begins With Me”- White and purple
with white and yellow lettering - Capital Dome background with red, purple, and yellow. 5.5x5.5cm.
168. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “21st Century Party Now” - Purple with white And green lettering. “A” of Party is a Star”. 5.5cm.
169.
Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. “Trust in God She Will Provide” - Pink and green lettering. 5.5cm.
170. Women’s Liberation Lapel Pin. ‘Statue of Liberty” - Blue with black Lettering - Statue of Liberty
holding a bra image. 8.5cm.
Activism: Over the course of the 20th century women took on a greater role in society. For example, many
women served in the U.S. government — some as senators and others as members of the President's Cabinet.
Many women took advantage of opportunities to become educated. In the United States at the beginning of the
20th century less than 20 percent of all college degrees were earned by women. By the end of the century this
figure had risen to about 50 percent. Opportunities also expanded in the workplace. Fields such as medicine,
law, and science opened to include more women. At the beginning of the 20th century about 5 percent of the
doctors in the United States were women. As of 1998,23 percent of all doctors were women, and today,
women make up more than 50 percent of the medical student population. While the numbers of women in
these fields increased, many women still continued to hold clerical, factory, retail, or service jobs.
Box Five: 1970-1980.
171.
Activist Lapel Pin. “I Can't Even Think Straight” - Purple with white lettering. 3.5cm.
172.
Activist Lapel Pin.“Terrorism Is Not A First Amendment Right”. Yellow with Black lettering. 3.5cm.
173. Activist Lapel Pin. “Sorry I Missed Church - I’ve Been Busy Practicing Witchcraft And Becoming A
Lesbian” - White with purple lettering. 3.5cm.
174. Activist Lapel Pin. “” I Choose Womyn” - White with purple lettering - “Os” in Choose has female
signs. 3.5cm.
175.
Activist Lapel Pin.“Different But Equal” - Green with purple lettering. 3.5cm.
176.
Activist Lapel Pin.“If You Not Outraged You’re Not Paying Attention” - White with black lettering. 4
x 4cm.
177.
Activist Lapel Pin.“Youth is a Gift of Nature / Aging is a Work of Art” - Blue and white. 4cm.
178.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Enjoy Your Age” - Yellow with black lettering. 2.5cm.
179.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Closets are for Clothes” - Purple with white lettering. 3.5cm.
180.
Activist Lapel Pin. “I’m Not Here!” - Green with yellow lettering. 3.5cm.
181.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Flush Rush” - Yellow and black. 3.5cm.
182.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Flush Rush” - Yellow and black. 3.5cm.
183.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Attitudes are the Real Disability” - White with blue lettering. 3.5cm.
184.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Attitudes are the Real Disability” - White with blue lettering. 3.5cm.
185. Activist Lapel Pin. “Never Again” - Pink triangle crossed out by red slash- Text across the slash.
3.5cm.
186. Activist Lapel Pin. “Never Again” - Pink triangle crossed out by red slash- Text across the slash.
3.5cm.
187. Activist Lapel Pin. “Never Another Battered Woman” - white and black - Figure of a Woman cracked
down the center. 3.5cm.
188. Activist Lapel Pin. “Never Another Battered Woman” - white and black - Figure of a Woman cracked
down the center. 3.5cm.
189.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Practice Nonviolence” - Yellow with black text 4 x 4cm.
190.
Activist Lapel Pin. “”No More Violence Against Women” - Black and yellow
Background with black text. 4 x 4cm.
191.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Sister” - Black with white text White border. 3cm.
192. Activist Lapel Pin. Two pink interlocked Female Symbols in Upside - Down Black Triangle - white
background. 3.5cm.
193.
Activist Lapel Pin. “I’m Straight - Not Narrow”. Light blue with green lettering. 4cm.
194. Activist Lapel Pin. “If Gay and Lesbian People are given civil rights, then everyone Will want them” Yellow with red lettering. 3.5cm.
195.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Darwin” - Brown with yellow lettering. Inside yellow Christian Fish symbol with
legs. 3.5cm.
196.
Activist Lapel Pin. “So Much Evolution so little progress” - Maroon and white. 2.5cm.
197. Activist Lapel Pin. “Why Do We Kill People Who Kill People to show People that Killing People is
wrong?” Hot pink with black lettering. 3.5cm.
198.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Every Mother is A Working Woman” -White with blue lettering. 3.5cm.
199.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Kindness Spoken Here” - Yellow with black lettering. 3.5cm.
200.
Activist Lapel Pin. “I Got This Way from Kissing Girls”. White with purple lettering. 2.5cm.
201.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Please Don’t Fee or Tease the Straight People” - Peach with Navy lettering.
3.5cm.
202. Activist Lapel Pin. “Its as Bad As You Think and They’re Out To Get You” - Teal with green
lettering. 3cm.
203.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Racism Is A Social Disease” - Yellow with maroon lettering. 3.5cm.
204.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Fight Racism GGIU” - Black with white lettering. 3cm.
205.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Live Simply So that Others May Simply Live” Yellow with Black lettering.
3.5cm.
206.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Real Men Hug” - Black with hot pink lettering. 3cm.
207.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Health Care is a Right not a Privilege” - White with Navy lettering. 3.5cm.
208.
Activist Lapel Pin. “The Moral Majority Is Neither” - Yellow with red lettering. 3.5cm.
209.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Wild Women Don't Get the Blue” - Pink with blue lettering. 3.5cm.
210.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Teach Peace" - White with pink lettering. 2.5cm.
211.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Question Authority” - Yellow with black lettering. 3.5cm.
212.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Wearing Lapel Pins Is Not Enough" - Green with orange Lettering. 3cm.
213.
Activist Lapel Pin. “The Meek Are Getting Ready” - Maroon with white lettering. 3cm.
214. Activist Lapel Pin. “BAN Discrimination based on Race-Creek-Color of SEX” - Green with black and
orange lettering. 4cm.
215.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Question Authority” - Tan with black lettering. 3.5cm.
216.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Sexism is a Social Disease" - White with maroon lettering. 3.5cm.
217.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Take the Power” - White with pink lettering. 2.5cm.
218.
4cm.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Terrorism in Not A First Amendment Right" - Yellow with Black lettering. 4 x
219.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Youth is a Gift of Nature / Aging is a Work of Art” - Blue and white. 4cm.
220. Activist Lapel Pin. “I Think Therefore -I Don't Listen to Rush Limbaugh" - White with black
lettering. 4 x 4cm.
221. Activist Lapel Pin. “Ditto said Tweedledum. “Ditto, Ditto,” said Tweedledee- Through the Looking
Glass - Lewis Carroll - “Megadittoes', said the Rush Limbaugh show Listener” - White with black letterin. 4 x
4cm.
222. Activist Lapel Pin. “The Power to Stop Violence Against Women Begins With Me"-White and purple
with white and yellow lettering - Capital Dome background in red, purple, And yellow. 5.5 x 5.5cm.
223. Activist Lapel Pin. “It Takes A Whole Village to Raise A Child - African Proverb” Tan with black
lettering. Grid of 12 face images. 5.5. X 5.5cm.
224. Activist Lapel Pin. “Never Doubt that a Small group of thoughtful citizens can Change the world:
indeed it's the only thing that ever has. Margaret Mead” Green and blue Glove image with white lettering.
6cm.
225. Activist Lapel Pin. “ It will be a great day when our schools get all the money They need and the air
force has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber” - Orange with yellow Lettering - image of children playing on a
jungle gym. 5.5cm.
226. Activist Lapel Pin. “21st Century Party Now!” - Purple with white and green Lettering. “A” of party is
a Star. 5.5cm.
227. Activist Lapel Pin. “180 Days /180 Ways Women’s Action Campaign “95” - Yellow with
purple lettering - Upside down world image inside female symbol. 5.5cm.
228. Activist Lapel Pin. “National Museum of Women’s History Seneca Falls 98 www.nmwh.org” - White
with black, gold, and purple lettering. 5.5cm.
229. Activist Lapel Pin. “National Museum of Women’s History SenecaFalls- 98 www.nmwh.org ” White with black, gold, and purple lettering. 5.5cm.
230. Activist Lapel Pin. “National Museum of Women’s History Seneca Falls 98 www.nmwh.org” - White
with black, gold, and purple lettering. 5.5cm.
231. Activist Lapel Pin. “Women + Women = Power Federally Employed Women We Can Make A
Difference” - Tan with purple and green lettering. 5.5cm.
232. Activist Lapel Pin. “End Racism and Sexism YWCA” - White with black Lettering - Red symbol.
5.5cm.
233. Activist Lapel Pin. “Gray Panthers Age and Youth in Action” - White with Black and red lettering.
Gray cat image. 4 x 7cm.
234.
Activist Lapel Pin. “UP With People” - Blue with white lettering. 5.5cm.
235.
Activist Lapel Pin. “Peace on Earth / Good Will to People” - Green with red Lettering. 5.5cm.
236. Activist Lapel Pin. “Pro Plan Keep Agenda Moving /Let Every Issue Be Heard” Yellow with red
lettering. 5.5cm.
237. Activist Lapel Pin. “March to Fight the Right! April 12,1996. San Francisco. White with red and black
lettering - Image of Golden Gate Bridge. 5.5 x 5.5cm.
238. Activist Lapel Pin.“March to Fight the Right! April 12,1996. San Francisco. White with red and black
lettering - Image of Golden Gate Bridge. 5.5 x 5.5cm.
239. Activist Lapel Pin.“Peace on Earth / Good Will to People” - White with green And red lettering.
5.5cm.
240.
Activist Lapel Pin.I’m 1 in 100,000 for 2000 WLF Women’s Leadership Forum”- Red, white and
blue. 7.5cm.
Celebration of Suffrage Legacy
Box Six:
241. Activist Lapel Pin. “100 Years of Progress of women 1848-1948”. US 6cent Stamp on yellow
background. 5.5cm.
242. Activist Lapel Pin. “100 Years of Progress of Women 1848-1948” - US 3cent Stamp on light green
background. 5.5cm.
243. Activist Lapel Pin. “Women’s Rights March / August 26,1995 Washington D.C. 75th Anniversary
of Woman Suffrage Celebrate the Vote Make Your Future” - White with Purple lettering - Upside Down
purple triange with 2 female images. 6cm.
244. Activist Lapel Pin. “Suffrage for Women Susan B. Anthony” 3cent Stamp on Pink background.
5.5cm.
245. Activist Lapel Pin. “Suffragist State Ceremony June 26,1997”. White with Purple lettering - Image
of woman holding “Victory” banner. 7.5cm.
National Organization for Women. [NOW] was founded on June 30, 1966 in Washington, D.C., by 28 women
and men attending the Third National Conference of the Commission on the Status of Women, the successor
to the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women. It had been three years since the Commission
reported findings of women being discriminated against However, the 1966 Conference delegates were
prohibited by the administration's rules for the conference from even passing resolutions recommending that
the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) enforce its legal mandate to end sex discrimination.
During the 1970s NOW promoted the Equal Rights Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The organization's
membership is not limited to women, and has included many men who support its goals. The organization
remains active in lobbying legislatures and media outlets on women's issues.
Box Seven:
246.
NOW Lapel Pin. “NOW New York”. White with black lettering. 4cm.
247. NOW Lapel Pin. “NOW National Organization for Women” - Blue with White lettering.
2.5cm.
248. NOW Lapel Pin. “Lesbian Rights Are Women’s Rights” - Purple with white Lettering.
Upside-down triangle with NOW symbol inside - 4cm.
249. NOW Lapel Pin. “NOW National Organization For Women” - Blue with white Lettering - Text
surrounded by stars- white cross at bottom. 3.5cm.
250.
3cm.
NOW Lapel Pin. “NOW” White with blue text - “O” is female symbol with ‘=‘ inside.
251. NOW Lapel Pin. “You Can’t Stop NOW Houston 1974”. Yellow with black And red
lettering. 3.5.
252. NOW Lapel Pin. “You Can’t Stop NOW Houston 1974”. Yellow with black And red
lettering. 3.5.
253. NOW Lapel Pin. “You Can’t Stop NOW Houston 1974”. Yellow with black And red
lettering. 3.5.
254.
NOW Lapel Pin. “Liberty-Equality-Sisterhood N.O.W.” Yellow with black Lettering. 3cm.
255. NOW Lapel Pin. “NOW for Justice & Equality” - Green with yellow lettering. Text inside of female
symbol. 3cm.
256. NOW Lapel Pin. “NOW National Organization for Women” - Blue with white Lettering.
2.5cm.
257. NOW Lapel Pin. “Until Justice is Ours NOW National Organization for Women” White with blue
lettering. 5.5cm.
258. NOW Lapel Pin. “Now Let’s Get to Work Equality Reproductive Freedom Violence Lesbian
Rights Racism Health Care / National Organization for Women” Purple and gold with White and blue
lettering. Image of a female worker with a flexed arm. 5.5cm.
259. NOW Lapel Pin. “Lift the Ban NOW National Organization for Women” - Black And white
lettering. Upside down pink triangle image. 5.5x5.5cm.
260. NOW Lapel Pin. “Women United Will Never Be Defeated Lesbian Rights Now Stop the
violence!” (202-331-0666) NOW National Organization for Women” - White and black lettering -Upside
down pink triangle image. 5.5x 5.5cm.
261. NOW Lapel Pin. Women United Will Never Be Defeated Lesbian Rights Now Stop the violence!”
(202-331-0666) NOW National Organization for Women” - White and black lettering -Upside down pink
triangle image. 5.5x 5.5cm.
Box: 8.
Women Topics and Politics comprises a number of social, cultural and political movements, theories and
moral philosophies concerned with gender inequalities and equal rights for women.
Politics:
262. Political Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Vote Counts Women USA”. White with blue
Lettering. Check mark image - 3.5cm.
263.
Political Lapel Pin. “Women’s Equity Action League” - Red with white lettering. 3.5cm.
264. Political Lapel Pin. “National Women’s Political Caucus” - Brown with white
Lettering - 5 females symbols connected. 3.5cm.
265. Political Lapel Pin. “National Women’s Political Caucus” - Brown with white
Lettering - 5 females symbols connected. 3.5cm.
266.
Political Lapel Pin. “Politically Correct” - Hot pink with white lettering. 2.5cm.
267.
Political Lapel Pin. “U.S. Out of My Uterus” White with hot pink lettering. 2.5cm.
268.
Political Lapel Pin. “Vote Feminist” - Hot Pink with white lettering. 2.5cm.
269.
4cm.
Political Lapel Pin. Politics-Women Don’t Need BALLS to Play”. Yellow with Black lettering. 4 x
270.
4cm.
Political Lapel Pin. Politics-Women Don’t Need BALLS to Play”. Yellow with Black lettering. 4 x
271.
Political Lapel Pin. “No Newt is Good Newt” - White with pink lettering. 3.5cm.
272.
Political Lapel Pin. “Doris F. Johnson for National President” - Yellow with Red lettering. 3.5cm.
273. Political Lapel Pin. “Home for Confederate Women” - White with red letlering- Confederate
flag image. In protective packaging. 2.5cm.
274.
Political Lapel Pin. “McGovern” - Nacy with white lettering. 3cm.
275.
Political Lapel Pin. “Betty Ford for President” Red with white lettering.
276. Political Lapel Pin. “Don’t Blame Me I Voted for Chisholm” - Green with black Lettering.
3.5cm.
Rights of Women - Political - Bella Abzug.
277.
Political Lapel Pin. “Re-Elect Bella” - Orange with purple lettering. 3.5cm.
278.
Political Lapel Pin. Image of Bella - orange background. 4cm.
279.
Political Lapel Pin. “Bella” - White with blue lettering - blue star image. 3.5cm.
280.
Political Lapel Pin. “Bella for Senate” - Blue with silhouette of Bella with blue Lettering. 4cm.
281.
Political Lapel Pin. “Bella for Senator” - Blue with white bonnet image with blue Lettering. 4cm.
282.
Political Lapel Pin. “Bella Abzug for Congress” - Purple with orange lettering. 3.5cm.
283.
Political Lapel Pin. “Re-Elect Bella!” - Orange with purple lettering. 3.5cm.
284.
Political Lapel Pin. “Bella is Able...to cut the Mustard” - Yellow with red lettering. 5.5cm.
285.
Political Lapel Pin. Silhouette of Bella - White with blue image. 5cm.
Political:
286. Political Lapel Pin. “Catalyst for Change -Shirley Chisholm for President”- White with red
and blue lettering - in protective packaging. 4.5cm.
287.
Political Lapel Pin. “Slave” Orange with black lettering - in protective packaging. 3.5cm.
288. Political Lapel Pin. “Join Rosalynn and Joan Vote Democratic” - Blue, white, And orange with white
lettering. Photograph of women. 5.5cm.
289. Political Lapel Pin. “Elect Women or Have A Stagnation” - White with red and Blue lettering - Statue
of Liberty image. 6.5cm.
290.
Political Lapel Pin. “51%” - Red with white lettering. 6.5cm.
291. Political Lapel Pin. Working Women Vote '96’ AFL-CIO” Green with purple Lettering. Purple and red
strips at bottom. 7.5 x 5cm.
292. Political Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Place is in the House, the Senate, and the Oval Office” - Blue with
yellow lettering. 5.5cm.
293.
Political Lapel Pin. “WEAL” Gold pin.
294.
Political Lapel Pin. “It’s a Man’s World - Unless Women Vote”. White with black
And green lettering. 6.5cm.
295.
Political Lapel Pin. “Women’s Caucus -Clinton - Gore ‘96’ Monday August 26th
Democratic National Convention Chicago “96” - White with blue and red lettering - Image of Heralding figure
holding flag. 5.5cm.
296.
Political Lapel Pin. “After 191 years, Its ABOUT TIME Sandra Day O’Connor U.S. Supreme Court
July 7,1981” - White with black lettering - Image of figure holding newspaper With headline: “Woman is
High Court Nomineed”. 5.5cm.
297.
Political Lapel Pin. “NOW 1984” - Red, white and blue. Image of women in center.
298.
Political Lapel Pin. “Clean Up Politics...Elect Women” - red, white and blue. A flag Iconographic
images. 5.5cm.
299.
Political Lapel Pin. “Draft Anne Armstrong - Vice President ‘76’” - White with blue Lettering. 6.5cm.
300.
Political Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Place is in the House...And in the Senate!” White With red lettering.
5.5cm.
301.
Political Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Place is in the House...And in the Senate!” White With red lettering.
5.5cm.
302.
Political Lapel Pin. “Give Em Health Hillary” - Purple with white letters. 5.5 x 5.5cm.
303.
Political Lapel Pin. “When Women Vote, Women Win. Emily’s List” - Red and orange with black
and white lettering. 7.5 x 5cm.
304.
Political Lapel Pin. “The Real Voices of Change for the U.S. Senate” Baby blue with black lettering images of Missouri and Illinois with 2 female candidate Pictures - 5.5cm.
305.
Political Lapel Pin. “On the Issues Feminist Government In Exile” - White with black and red
lettering. Image of female figure on horseback- 6.5cm.
306.
Political Lapel Pin. “On the Issues Feminist Government In Exile” - White with black and red
lettering. Image of female figure on horseback- 6.5cm.
307.
Political Lapel Pin. “Mondale Ferraro in 84” - Red, white and black with Red and blue lettering.
Image of candidates - Mint condition in protective packaging. 6.5cm.
308.
Political Lapel Pin. ‘Gender Gap HR119 Contract with Women” -Purple With white lettering - 4cm
with purple ribbon attached to back.
309.
Political Lapel Pin. “A Woman’s Place Is In The Senate 1992” Blue with white Lettering - Image of
God and Angel. 7.5cm.
310. Political Lapel Pin. “I Could Have Sworn I Created Them Equal” - White with green lettering - Image
of God and Angel. 7.5cm. White with red and blue lettering - 5 female symbols connected. 7.5cm.
312. Political Lapel Pin. “Women for Clinton-Gore ‘96 - Protect Our Gains” - Purple and white
with white lettering - image of female heralding figure holding flag -7.5cm.
APIC Convention – Americal Political Conventions.
313.
Political Lapel Pin. “Ordain Women or Stop Baptizing Them” - White with blue Lettering. 4cm,
314. Political Lapel Pin. “Child Abuse Kills” - Red with white lettering- Text in Stop Sign with
black slash across - 4cm.
315. Political Lapel Pin. “Older Women’s League” - Gray with black lettering -image of Owl perches
inside female symbol. 4cm.
316.
Political Lapel Pin. “Warning: Schools Spread Sexism” - Red with white lettering. 3cm.
317. Political Lapel Pin. “Toronto Rape Crisis Center” - Pink with white lettering - two Female
symbols overlap. 4cm.
318.
Political Lapel Pin.“Sexism is a Social Disease” - Light blue with black lettering. 3cm.
319.
Political Lapel Pin. “Emily Stowe Shelter For Women” - Bridge with maroon lettering. 4cm.
320.
Political Lapel Pin.“Rape is Violence Not Sex” Maroon with white lettering. 3.5cm.
321.
Political Lapel Pin. “Castrate Rapists” White with black lettering. 3cm.
322. Political Lapel Pin. “Stop Crimes Against Women” - Beige with black lettering - Image of face with
mouth open. 3.5cm.
323. Political Lapel Pin. “Women Against Violence in Pornography and Media” - Red With white
lettering - Shield Design and female symbol. 3.5cm.
324.
Political Lapel Pin. “Battered Women Need Refuges” -White with black lettering. 3cm.
325. Political Lapel Pin. “Never Another Battered Woman” - White and black - Figure of a Woman
cracked down the center. 3.5cm.
326.
Political Lapel Pin. “It’s Not Kosher to be a Male Chauvinist Pig” - Beige with black Lettering. 3cm.
327.
Political Lapel Pin. “Male Chauvinist” - White with blue lettering. 3cm.
328. Political Lapel Pin. “NFBPWC 1919” - Green with Gold lettering - image of Bird on a stump? Boat in
background. 2.5cm.
329.
Political Lapel Pin. “Women and Men Equal yet Individual14 - Orange with brown Lettering. 3cm.
330.
Political Lapel Pin. “Support ERA” - White with red lettering. 3cm.
331.
Political Lapel Pin. “ERA Yes” - Yellow with black lettering. 3cm.
332.
Political Lapel Pin. “ERA Yes” - White with red and blue lettering. 4cm.
333.
Political Lapel Pin. “GOP for ERA” - Yellow with red lettering. “O” is GOP Is female symbol. 3.5cm.
334.
Political Lapel Pin. “WEAL” - Purple with hot pink lettering - Female symbols with ‘=‘. 3cm.
335.
Political Lapel Pin. “United Nations Decade for Women” - Blue with white lettering- Image of
dove with female symbol. 4cm.
336.
Political Lapel Pin. “Women Strike for Peace and Survival 1975” - White with blue Lettering Image of dove with female symbol. 4cm.
337.
Political Lapel Pin. “Chapter Rights” - White with black lettering. 3.5cm.
338.
Political Lapel Pin. “NOW National Organization for Women” - White with black Lettering. 3.5cm.
339. Political Lapel Pin. “On with our Second Decade! NOW New York Chapter 1967-1977” - Blue with
white lettering. 3.5cm.
340.
Political Lapel Pin. “NOW National Organization for Women” – Black And white lettering. 4cm.
341.
Political Lapel Pin. “NOW New York” - White with black lettering. 4cm.
342.
Political Lapel Pin. “NOW” - Blue with white text - “O” is female symbol With ‘=‘ inside. 3cm.
343.
Political Lapel Pin. “Liberty Equality Sisterhood N.O.W.” Yellow with black Lettering. 3cm.
344.
Political Lapel Pin. “National Organization for Women NOW” - Orange with Maroon lettering - ‘O’
of NOW is female symbol with ‘=‘ inside. 4cm.
345.
Political Lapel Pin. “National Organization for Women - Susan B. Anthony Eastern Regional
Conference Feb 12-13,1972” - Image of Susan B. Anthony - white with black lettering-3.5cm.
346. Political Lapel Pin. “Maryland NOW National Organization for Women” – Yellow With black
lettering. 4cm.
347.
Political Lapel Pin. “Discrimination is Sin” - White with blue lettering - ivy leaf Border - 6cm.
348.
6cm.
Political Lapel Pin. “Stop Sexism Now” - Text in three lights of a traffic light On white background.
349.
Political Lapel Pin. “Stop Sexual Harassment N.U.P.G.E.” White with white and Black lettering - Red
stop sign image. 5.5cm.
350.
Political Lapel Pin. “Stop Rape” - White with white lettering - Red Stop sign with Female symbol.
5.5cm.
351.
Political Lapel Pin. “Women Against Sexual Violence” - Black with lavendar lettering Female
symbol containing a fist 5.5cm.
352.
Political Lapel Pin. “Some Lovers Break More Than Hearts” - White with white Lettering - Red
broken heart image. 5.5cm.
353.
Political Lapel Pin. “Don't Hurt the one you [heart] My Sister's Place Shelter for Battered Women
and Their Children” - White with red and black lettering. 5.5cm.
354.
Political Lapel Pin. “1972-1982 D.C. Rape Crisis Center - 333-RAPE - 232-0202”- White with
navy text - 4 African fertility idols - 5-5cm.
355.
Political Lapel Pin. “Women’s Hall of Fame Inc- Seneca Falls-New York” - White With navy
lettering - Athena image. 5.5cm.
356.
Political Lapel Pin. “Equality Now” - Yellow with navy lettering - Male and female Figures
holding hands - “Q” and “O” are male and female symbols. 6cm.
357.
Political Lapel Pin. “Until Justice Is Ours NOW- National Organization For Women” - White with
green lettering - 5.5cm.
358.
Political Lapel Pin. “Elizabeth Cady Stanton - November 12,1815 to Octob26,1902” - Black and
white image of Stanton with white lettering - 5.5cm
359.
Political Lapel Pin. “1975 International Women’s Year” - White with navy Lettering - image of
dove with female symbol - 5.5cm.
360.
Political Lapel Pin. “Worlds of Ohio Women 1977....to form a more perfect Union...” White with
navy lettering - image of dove with female symbol inside image of Ohio. 5.5cm
361.
Political Lapel Pin. “North Carolina State International Women's Decade 1975-1985” - Yellow with
green lettering - image of dove with female symbol inside outline Of North Carolina - 5.5cm.
362.
Political Lapel Pin. “National Women’s Conference Houston 1977” - White With blue lettering Image of Texas and female symbol with ‘=' -5.5cm/
363.
Political Lapel Pin. “Oregon Women's Conference Path Breaking” - Yellow With black lettering Drawing of Mountains with sun. 5.5cm.
364.
Political Lapel Pin. “ERA-Yes” - Yellow with black lettering. 5.5cm.
365.
Political Lapel Pin. “I Walked in the Last ERA Walk” - Green with white Lettering - image of tennis
shoe. 5.5cm.
366.
Political Lapel Pin. “E.R.A. for U.S.” - Light green with dark green lettering - Outline of the U.S.
5.5cm.
367.
Political Lapel Pin. “On the Run 8/22/81 for the ERA” - White with green Lettering Female Symbol Around text - 5.5cm.
368.
Political Lapel Pin. “You’ve Got A Friend in Pennsylvania, PA-ERA-1971-1981” Green and white.
5.5cm.
369.
Political Lapel Pin. “A Day Without Human Rights Is Like A Day Without Sun- Shine - The Dawn of
ERA” - White with orange and black lettering. 5.5cm.
370.
4cm.
Political Lapel Pin. “It’s About E.R.A. time” - Orange with black lettering - On red and black ribbon.
371.
Political Lapel Pin. Sunflower medal on yellow ribbon: “Another Kansas Feminist” printed on ribbon.
3.5cm.
372.
Political Lapel Pin. “Join NOW National Organization for Women”- White with Purple and yellow lettering 7.5cm.
373.
Political Lapel Pin. “Seneca Falls 1848-1977 Houston” - Orange with brown Lettering - image of torch “IWY” - printed on torch. 7.5cm.
374.
Political Lapel Pin. “Ellensburg July 8-10,1977” - Image of dove with female Symbol. 7.5cm.
375.
Political Lapel Pin. “ERA N.W.P.C” - White with navy lettering. 7.5cm.
376.
Political Lapel Pin. “May 16-20 1980 Bloomington Indiana NWSA” White with red lettering. 7.5cm.
377.
Political Lapel Pin. “BPW salutes Working The National Federation of Business and Professional
Women’s Clubs, Inc.” - Green with yellow lettering - Female Symbols with ‘=‘ 7.5cm.
The 2nd U.S. Women’s Rights Feminist Jewelry Collection, 1960s-1980s
378-413.
[Jewelry - The Third Wave]. Ca. 1968-1982. Equal Rights Amendment Etc.etc. 35 individual
pieces. [To be identified, catalogued and individual images].
414.
[Jewelry]. Carrie Nation hatchet pin. Hand is gold with the words: “Carry A Nation” With pearl
hatchet and diamond. N.D. N.P.
415.
[Jewelry]. Silver plated charm. Memorial Francis E. Willard charm with her profile. Memorial
medal on front "I solemnly promise God Helping me to abstain from all alcoholic Liquors including wine, beer, and
cider and to use all right means to end the drink habit and liquor traffic". N.P., N.D.
416.
[Badge & Lapel Pins]. Naral Pro-Choice Delegate Badge. 2” x 3”. Democratic Convention ‘96. Green
colored - badge lacks the back clip. N.P., N.D.
417.
[Lapel Pin]. National Woman’s Party. Eggplant purple text on off-white background. National
Woman’s Party E.R.A. Quotation: “Equality of Rights Under the Law Shall not Be Denied or Abridged by the United
States or any State on Account of Sex”. N.P., N.D.
418.
[Lapel Pin]. Women’s Rights March. Pinkish-purple text on white background. Women’s Rights
March / Washington D.C./ August 2, 1895. “75th Anniversary of Woman Suffrage. N.P. 1995.
419.
[Lapel Pin]. Forward Into Light. Gold Text on blue / white background. Figure of a horseback rider in
center of button.
420.
[Lapel Pin]. Forward Into Light. Gold Text on red / white background. Figure of a horseback rider
in center of button.
421.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes For Women. Black text on multi-colored pin, eagle with American flags with
shield above the word “Patriotism”. Small round button.
422.
[Lapel Pin]. “Yes”. Red text on white and blue background. The word “Yes” is overlaid on the word
“Alaska”.
423.
[Lapel Pin].Votesfor Women. Black text on gold background- centered on white with red ribbon tails.
424.
[Floral Ribbon]. “I Cast my First Vote at a Municipal Election in the Red Rose City for Kenney
and the straight Republican ticket. November 8,1921”. Black text on yellow ribbon, pink flower with
photograph of J. Kennedy in center.
425.
[Lapel Pin].Votes for Women. Black text on gold/brown background. Small round button.
426.
[Lapel Pin]. Francis Willard. Black and white photograph on a small round button.
427.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes for Women June 5th. Black text on gold background. Small round button.
428.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes for Women June 5th. Black text on gold background. Small round button. 2nd copy.
429.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes for Women Nov. 6th. Black text on yellow background. Medium sized round
button.
430.
[Lapel Pin]. Votesfor Women. Black text with purple, green, white and gold background. Small round
button.
431.
[Lapel Pin]. Votesfor Women. Blue text on gold background with stars. Small round button, text
centered and circled by blue stars.
432.
[Lapel Pin]. Votesfor Women. Blue text on gold background with stars. Text centered and circled by
blue stars. Small round button.
433.
[Lapel Pin]. Votesfor Women 1915. Gold pin with crest in center with stars. Small round pin.
434.
[Lapel Pin]. Vote Yes Nov. 2nd. Black text on yellow background. Small round button.
435. [Lapel Pin]. Votes For Women/New York/1915. White text on green and purple backgrounds.
Green background in center of button, purple band around outside edge. Very rare.
436. [Lapel Pin]. West Virginia Vote for Women Suffrage / November 1916. Black text on yellow
and white back grounds. Small oval button.
437. [Lapel Pin]. Vote NO on Woman Suffrage. Black text on red and white background. Small round
button.
438. [Lapel Pin]. Mr. Suffer-Yet. Image of a man washing clothes by hand with a crying baby in the
background. Small round button.
439. [Lapel Pin]. Women’s Rights! Black text on white background. Image of women baring shins in
lower portion of button. Small round button.
440. [Lapel Pin]. Vote No. Red text on white background with blue band around outside edge. Small round
button.
441.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes For Women / Indiana. Gold text on white background. Small round button.
442.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes for Women. Black text on gold background.
443. [Lapel Pin]. United Nations. Dove shape with female symbol in blue with white andredwings. Small
gold pin.
444. [Medallion]. Untied Nations. Dove shape with female symbol in blue with white and red wings.
Gold medallion.
445.
[Medallion]. United Nations. Dove shape with female symbol etched onto surface.
446.
pin.
[Lapel Pin]. Jeanette Rankin Foundation. Gold pin with white and black background. Small rectangle
447. [Lapel Pin]. Abortion - A Woman’s Right to Choose. March on Washington, DC & SF. Nov. 20.
WONACC. Medium round button with black text on white and yellow background.
448. [Lapel Pin]. Abortion Is A Reproductive Right. Committee to Defend Reproductive Rights. Black text
on orange background. Medium round button.
449. [Lapel Pin]. Celebrating Woman Suffrage 1920-1995. Blue text on white background. Woman
holding a banner. Blue text on white background.
450. [Lapel Pin]. We Won’t Go Back. March for Women’s Lives. Abortion Rights and Reproductive
Freedom. April 5th. Red, black and white large rectangle button.
451. [Lapel Pin]. We Won’t Go Back. March for Women’s Lives. Abortion Rights and Reproductive
Freedom. April 5th. Multi-colored medium sized rectangle button.
452.
[Lapel Pin]. Votes For Women. Illinois 1920 with one yellow and one red rose. Button attached to
ribbon. Button has black text on gold background, pinned to a hand-painted ribbon. Small round button.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & Archives For the Study of The Rights of Women in History
and Law.
Ephemera. Printed Material, etc.
[Lithograph]. Harriet Beecher Stowe. 51cm x 41cm. Inscribed on a slip of paper pasted below image:
“H.B. Stowe to Rev. Dr. Beecher and Sady”. The Rev. Dr. Beecher was Henry Beecher, brother of Harriet
Beecher Stowe.
[Advertising]. Practical Politics. Color advertisement All Parties Unite In Support of The Oliver Chilled
Plow - Protection (Couple); Woman’s Rights (Woman holding a broom- Man Holding a Baby - opposite
side shows portrait of James Oliver and two other illustrations of plows. NP., ND. Incomplete.
[Advertising]. “Twelve Good Reasons Why the Woman’s Suffrage Stove Polish is Preferred to All
Others”. Color picture of girl sitting with arms folded wearing a pink dress with white lace collar. Four
felt pads at corners. Manufactured only by the Phoenix Mn’fg. Co. Taunton, Mass. N.D. 2copies.
[Advertising]. Charlotte Gilman Perkins. Sixteen trade cards for Curtis Davis & Co., “Welcome Soap”;
and Kendall Mfg. Co.: “Soapine Laundry Soap”. [1880].
[Advertising]. Anti-Suffrage Display Card. “ A Suffragette, You Are Going To Wed.” 5 5/26’ x 3 5/l6‘.
Printed with blue, black and orange on white stiff card. The card prints A cartoon figure - a
hermaphroditic figure with short hair, wearing a woman’s hat, skirt, carrying a hatchet (Carrie Nation).
Chicago, Ex. Sup. Co., ca. 1900-1920.
[Advertising]. Scribner’s Magazine Advertiser. Votes for the Woman Suffrage Amendment. No. 2.
Black and white drawing of woman standing holding flag with the word ’Votes”. Crowd of women in
background.
[Advertising]. Kellogg’s Toasted Corn Flakes. Votes for Women. Full page advertisement on back of
magazine’s cover.
[Advertising]. Fairy Soap. Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton says - “I Have tried “Fairbanks Fairy Soap and
find it delightful.” With image of Stanton. N.P. 1899.
[Advertising]. Woman’s Rights Number. Life Publishing Co. March 25,1909. Miscellaneous sheet from
Life magazine. Colored pencil drawings of two women looking down at a child With wings and a heart
laying on the ground. Copyright 1909 by Life Publishing Company - show woman with black coat and
White scarf overhead.
[Advertisement-Anti-Suffrage]. Geographical Ages of Women. 9” x 3” cardstock From 15 to 25, she is
like AFRICA, half virgin, half explored. From 25 to 35, she is Like ASIA, hot, torrid and mysterious.
From 35 to 45, she is like AMERICA, Streamlined, efficient and cooperative. From 45 to 55, she is like
EUROPA, devastated, But still good. From 55 to 65s, she is like AUSTRALIA, everyone know where it
is, But nobody goes there. The National Post Card Service. P.O. Box 1017. Sebring, Florida. N.D.
[Announcement]. Shaw, Anna Howard. Important Announcement - Dr. Anna Howard Shaw Will speak
at Ebling’s Casino. 136th Street and St. Ann’s Avenue. Friday Eve’ng Dec. 1st. 1916. Tickets on sale at
Woman Suffrage Party Headquarters, 406 East 149th St. New York City.
[Autographs Card]. Phyllis Schlafly.
[Autographs Card]. Gloria Steinem.
[Business]. Mrs. George Birney Jennison. Prominent Chicago Suffragist Black print on white.
3 sets.
[Calendar]. World’s Dispensary Medical Association. Ladies Notebook Calendar -1902. The calendar is
from the World’s Dispensary Medical Association and markets: Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets - marketed
to women specifically. N.P.
[Calendar]. Woman’s Cause. Women’s Writers Suffrage League. Black and white drawing of a woman:
Woman’s Cause by Laurence Houseman with small calendar designed by Mrs. Houseman. February
page slightly torn. Inscription: “To Mr. & Mrs. W.D. Dale/A Happy Christmas and New Year from Dr. &. Mrs.
Soder [?|. December 2, 1912. Prologue written for the Scala Theatre Matinee. November 12, 1909. Very
rare.
[Admittance ticket] Hammersmith and Shepherd’s Bush Unionist Lecture Society. Founded in 1909.
President Sr. William Bull, M.P...admit Jocelyn Brandon Esq. L.C.C. [name written in] and two friends
to The Third Lecture of the Session: Women Suffrage, on Tuesday, 5tb December 1911 at 8:30pm. at 54
Uxbridge Road W. Speakers: Miss Helen Ogston, Miss Hessie (of The New Constitutional Society for
Women’s Suffrage). Against Speakers: Dr. Milton Townsend, Mr. Wilfred Travers. Chairman
Alderman: S.Brewsher. Ladies Specially Invited.
Feminist Women’s Health Center. Yellow card with black printing. “Legal-But Out of Reach-Six
Abortion Stories - Tuesday, September 25, 6:30pm. National C.A.R.E. 2000 Campaign. Addressed to
LHD. Georgia, 2 September 2001.
Family Violence Council. Yellow advertising postcard. “We Need Your Discards - Can You Help
battered women and children? Scheduled stop: October 9,th. Addressed to Resident: 11 Nacoochee
Place, N.W. Atlanta, Ga. 30305.
[Clippings]. TV Guide - Nov. 6-12, 1999. Marcelle Clements - Forgotten Hero. Ken Burns documentary
about American Suffragists, Not For Ourselves Alone. With photograph of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and
Susan B. Anthony seated on a porch outside of Anthony’s House in Rochester, N.Y;; Also a picture of
three unidentified suffragists holding umbrellas with the words “Votes For Women”. Show Aired
Sunday, November 7tb - Monday, November 8 pm. PBS.
[Coins]. 20 Miscellaneous coins and values: XII Commonwealth Games. Brisbane. 50 cents: Elizabeth
H and Austrian Centenary of Women’s Suffrage: a one dollar with Elizabeth II on front / on back:
Austria. 2003.
[Coin]. 1976 Franklin Mint Proof with head shots of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony 125 Anniversary- National Organization for Women.
[Ephemera Collection]. Six items attached to a folded piece of coarse paper. #1. Meisterschaft School of
Practical Linguinstry. #2. The Meisterschaft System. #3. Letter written on the stationary of the
Meisterschaft School of Practical Linguist (sic) Nov. 27,1886. #4. Royal College of Music Letter. #5. A
Summary of Chief Arguments for and Against Marriage with A Deceased wife’s sister. #6. Letter on
Marriage Law Reform Association Letterhead to His Worship the Mayor Warlock from T. Paynter
Allen, Secretary. The Meisterschaft System was a scientific adaptation of the natural mode mastering
modern tongues. 1883-1887.
[Sticker]. Weaving Peace for Human Needs. Sticker: WILPF -80th Anniversary - white with blue print.
[Ephemera]. Michigan Equal Suffrage Association. Four cut sheets of cream paper. Typed on onion
paper authorizing and appointing women to serve as a ‘challenger’ at Polling Place. 1912. N.P. A scarce
artifact - seldom seen.
[Ticket]. Protest Mass Meeting - Carnegie Hall - Monday - March 10 at 8pm. Suffragist were beaten by
New York Police while petitioning the President this week will tell their own story. Suffrage prisoners
from Washington to convict garb will tell their experience servicing jail terms for liberty. Vida
Milholland will sign prison ballads. Admit one -printed on one side. N.D. Ca. 1915-1916.
[Ephemera]. Label for Change of Address: The Headquarters of the Empire State Campaign Committee
has been removed to 303 Fifth Avenue, New York City. Ca. 1915.
[Ephemera]. 500 Flyers for Anti-Suffrage Rally. A Receipt of payment from Miss Hennessy. The Austin
Print, DR Commercial & Society Printing - October 8, 1915.
[Paper seals] Votes For Women, CWSA. Two green, white and purple pressed seals on white paper.
N.D. 2 sets.
[Ephemera]. “Women Suffrage”. R. Ash of Brixham. 9 lines. December 3, 1907. “We’ve heard a lot of
suffrage - But do you think it is right -For women to claim such liberties -As to try to take away Men's rights -1 think
Myself that it would Wiser Be, if to their homes they stay; And let the members Of Parliaments - Have a little of the
say. (Are You With Me Men). Vote Yes",
[Ephemera]. Invitation to visit Exhibit 2002 - Official Program Woman Suffrage Processions - March 3,
1913 on cover. Modern.
[Sticker] “Not A Choice it’s a Child”. Round sticker showing picture of child in womb. Words circle the
outside: “It’s a Child not a Choice!” N.P., N.D.
[Ephemera]. Silver plated charm. Memorial of Francis E. Willard charm with her profile. Memorial
medal on front. “I solemnly promise God Helping me to abstain from all alcoholic Liquors including wine, beer,
and cider and to use all right means to end the drink habit and liquor traffic". N.P., N.D.
[Badge]. Naral Pro-Choice Delegate Badge. 2” x 3”. Democratic Convention ‘96 green colored - badge
lacks the back clip. N.P., N.D.
[Ephemera]. Letterhead. The Leslie Woman Suffrage Commission, Inc.
[Ephemera]. Letterhead. The Pennsylvania Limited Suffrage League. Orange and black printing. Listing
officers: Treasurer: Mrs. Francie G. Okie, Berwyn, Pa.; Recording Secretary: Mrs. Imogen B., Oakly;
President: Miss Mary Winson, Haverford, Pa.; Vice Presidents: Mrs. Richard Peters, Mrs. Joseph P.
Munford, Mrs. Russell Duane, Mrs. Horatio Gates Lloyd, Mrs. John Read Pettit Corresponding
Secretary: Mrs. Edward Yarnall, Hartshorne, Merion Station, Pa.
Postal First Day Covers-Stamps-Envelopes:
Gandhi, Indira. Autograph Signature. First Day Issue envelope. Washington, DC. Sept 29, 1975. Indira
Priyadarshini Gandhi (19 November 1917 - October 31, 1984) was the Prime Minister of India for three
consecutive terms from 1966 to 1977 and for a fourth term from 1980 until her assassination in 1984.
She was India's first and to date only female prime minister. She is noted for creating a dictatorship by
declaring Emergency after a court struck down her election in 1975, and also for her handling of the
Operation Blue Star against Sikh militants, which eventually resulted in her assassination.
Mary, Dr. Walker. American Commemorates. Dr. Mary Walker. 8 VS x 11’ sheet With four stamps
showing Dr. Mary Walker, U.S. Army Surgeon- Medal of Honor Recipient United States Postal Service.
June 10, 1982. 2 sets.
Alice Paul. Envelope with history of Alice Paul in purple print - envelope is marked Mount Laurel, NJ.,
August 18,1995. First Day of Issue.
Susan B. Anthony. Envelope with side image of Susan B. Anthony- Commemorating the 16th
Anniversary of Woman Suffrage - 1920-1936. With a set of Four stamps - U.S. Postage - 3 cents in
purple with picture of Susan B. Anthony with the Words: Suffrage for Women. Postmark: Chicago,
Illinois.
Womens’s Suffrage Envelope -One of the First Women To Vote in 1869. Color picture of women
standing in line and one woman handing a piece of paper through the window. Postmarked: Washington,
D.C., 26, 1995. 19th Amendment 1920-1995.
“If I Cannot Fight, I Can Feed Those Who Do”. Cream colored envelope with red drawing and red print
- woman with rolling pin in kitchen. N.D., N.P.
Jessie Fremont. Envelope with black and white photograph of Jessie Fremont. On the right side is red,
white & blue with words on ribbon “North and South” and the words: “In Union There Is Strength” two
swords crisscrossing behind the shield with stars - axe coming out at top.
Emmeline Pankhurst. 1981 Commemorative Cover - Isle of Mann- Benham Women’s Suffrage - Votes
For Women. 1981 marks the Centenary of the first actions toward Women’s suffrage in the Isle of
Mann. The Left side of envelope shows Miss Emmeline Goulden -(Mrs. Pankhurst) with her mother,
Mrs. Sophia Jan Goulden. Stamp is in color, images taken from BBC Production- BBC copyright, “100
Years of Women’s - Isle of Man Votes For women”.
“Votes For Women-A Success - The Map Proves it. Suffrage Map shows white States - Equal suffrage
for men and women. Shaded states: Partial suffrage for Women. Black states: No suffrage for women.
New Jersey Next! Vote “Yes” For Women Suffrage October 19, 1915.”. Cream colored envelope with
black writing on front right side.
[Anti-Suffrage]. Small envelope With Suffrage stamp: “Vote No on Woman Suffrage”. Addressed To
Rev. Francis Brown, Aug. 27 1915. U.S.
Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Carrie Chapman Catt First Day of Issue. Color Envelope. First
Day of Issue Commemorating 100th Anniversary of the First Woman’s Right Convention held July 1920, 1848 at Seneca Falls, N.Y. With images of Mott, Stanton, Catt With 3 cent stamp in purble with
images of Mott, Stanton, Catt -100 Years of Progress - 1848 of women 1948. U.S.
Susan B. Anthony. First Day of Issue. 1920-1970.50th Anniversary 19th Amendment to the Constitution
Voting Rights for American Women. Image of Anthony and her birth place in Adams, MA., With 3
stamps: “5 cents Register to Vote With American flag. A 6 cents Woman Suffrage with picture of car
with women inside and a woman voting. A 5 cents General Federation Of Women’s Club - 75 Years of
Service to Freedom and Growth.
Susan B. Anthony (2) 50 cents stamps and Lucy Stone (1) 50 cents. Ca. 1955-1968.
Color stamp - Green, purple and red. “USA Equality Progress - 19th Amendment 1920- 1995”.
Color stamp - Blue color with Woman Suffrage and 50th Anniversary written on them. Car on left
Women in car - Woman on right casting vote.
Book of stamps. 1971 Woman Suffrage Booklet of Stamps. Foreign: Kerstine Hesselgren Sverig 45. 10
stamps.
Sheet of 50tb Anniversary Stamps on Woman Suffrage. 6 cents stamps. Showing women and ballot
West Virginia Equal Suffrage Association -State Headquarters, Parkersburg, W. Virginia in blue letter wording at bottom front: “Votes for Woman Suffrage, November 1916” in blue letters. Addressed to
Miss Violet Dandridge, Shepherdstown, W. Va. Dec. 6-16. Stamp on back is picture of capital with
wording: “National Suffrage Convention Votes for Women -Washington D.C. December 14-19, 1915”.
[First Day Cover-Envelope], National Woman’s Party. Purple colored envelope #47. The Spirit of 1776Onto the Senate. Allender, January 30,1915. Image of ladies marching with a flag. Postmarked with 19th
Amendment 1920-1995 stamp. Postmarked, Washington, D.C., August 26,1995. First Day of Issue. 2
copies.
[First Day Cover-Envelope]. Alice Stokes Paul. Purple colored envelope with picture of Alice Stoke
Paul and her Paulsdale Home birthplace. Postmarked with an Alice Paul Suffragist stamp. Mount
Laurel, New Jersey, August 26,1995. First Day of Issue.
[Stamp]. Votes for the Woman Suffrage Amendment in November! Yellow/black/blue stamp showing
equal suffrage states and the man suffragettes. 7cm. x 5cm.
[Stamps]. Six stamps: Two women in long Greek style white gowns. Writing is in Hungarian.
Budapesten, 1913. Junius 15. 20 one blue stamps.
Lyndon B. Johnson- First Day of Issue. August 27,1973. Signed: Lynda Bird Johnson Robb. Official
first day of issue 36th President of the United States In Memoriam Lyndon B. Johnson 1908- 1973/
Postmarked August 27, 1973.
Ann Richards. First day of Issue. International Women’s Year. August 26, 1975. Signed: Ann W.
Richards. Former Governor of Texas, Feminist and Reformer.
Envelope with “Free Frank” of Dolly Madison addressed to Mrs. Henry D. Gilpin at 99 Walnut Street,
Philadelphia, Pa. With a color picture of Mrs. James Madison framed With envelope. A Circular
Washington postmarked dated Oct. 19 and a stamped “FREE”.
Frances Perkins. Four 15 USA stamps. Frances Perkins is wearing a hat and smiling. Ca. 1980.
Book-stamp. George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans). “It is Never Too Late to Be What You Might Have Been”. Card
with envelope. World's Greatest Minds, Ltd. England, 1997. Barbara Charline Jordan. First Day of Issue
Signed. February 1,1978. Left side of envelope shows a map of the Northern States of the U.S. Showing
the Tubman Route. Bottom of map writes Slavery Conductor on the Underground Railroad.
Anna C. Chennault. First Day of Issue Envelope. Envelope signed - Left side of envelope showing
sketch of Claire Lee Chennault next to a P-40 War hawk (Flying Tiger). Sept. 6,1990. Beneath the
sketch reads: “Before the United States entered the war against Japan. The group, known as the “Flying
Tigers” Won a series of outstanding victories against the Japanese the Japanese December 1941 and July
1942. In 1943, Claire was made a major general, and he headed the U.S. Air Force in China from 1943
to 1945. Envelope is signed bv Anna C. Chennault
Coretta Scott King. “Martin Luther King. / First Day of Issue: Signed by Coretta Scott King. Atlanta,
Ga., January 13, 1979. Left side of envelope: In full color, is a drawing of Martin Luther King giving a
speech in front of four Microphones: Underneath the drawing: “Martin Luther King, Jr. He had a
Dream. Atlanta, Ga. January 13, 1979.
Marva N. Collins. First Day Issue envelope signed. September 12,1980. “Learning Never Ends”. Images
of great educators: John Dewey, Horace Mann, Marva Collins, Emma Marva Collins is a nationally
known educator who concentrates on teaching as well as on creating and implementing progressive
educational concepts. Collins established Westside Preparatory School in Chicago, a school which is an
alternative educational institution for African American children on Chicago's west side in 1975. She
created an environment conducive to learning and assembled a teaching staff with broad liberal arts
training and a dedication to children and teaching.
Phyllis Schlafly. First Day Issue envelope signed. Carmel, N.Y., March 25, 1975. With two .08 cent
“Sylvia Ludington, Contributors to the Cause stamps which Show a girl on a horse galloping with a
purple sky above her and a Are behind her.Envelope is signed by Phyllis Schlafly. Plus additional
stamps (4) issued in 1975 to Honor unheralded persons who played an important part in the American
Revolution.
Kay Orr. First Day Issue envelope signed. With Dwight D. Eisenhower August 6, 1970. Envelope is
signed by “Kay Orr”. Left side of envelope has an Image of Dwight Eisenhower, in military uniform,
holding his hat; behind him is a Rendering of a battle scene in Normandy.
Stamps. Elizabeth Blackwell U.S. stamps. Signature of Rosalyn S. Yalow. With newspaper clippings
relating to Dr. Yalow. First Day of Issue envelope with (4) cancelled Stamps showing Elizabeth
Blackwell - (Shades of black and white). Posted from Geneva, New York, January 23, 1974. Signature
on front of Rosalyn S. Yalow - 2/2/80. Copy of a newspaper notice of a lecture by Dr. Yalow at City
University - Graduate Center in New York City. Rosalyn Sussman Yalow (born on July 19, 1921 (age
86)) is an American medical physicist, and a co-winner of the 1977 Nobel Prize in Physiology or
Medicine for her development of the radioimmunoassay (RIA) technique.
Miscellaneous printed material:
[Handbook] Copy of 1915 Convention Handbook. Proceedings of the 1915 - Forty-Seventh Convention.
Pages 110-111 from this handbook. Held at Washington, D.C., December 14-19, 1915. Refers to Indiana
Equal Suffrage Association and the Woman's Franchise League.
[Matchbook]. Color matchbook. Black and red print. “1920 Women Win The Right to Vote In the
United States - Famous Dates in History - Drawings of Woman standing In Crowd Holding red flag.
Signs in Crowd - “Women Right to Vote - Votes For Women”. 23 December 74. Series
[Membership Form]. League of Women Voters of New York City. Our Aim: 50,000 new members, Join
Now - Dues $1.00. Sent to City Headquarters, 37 West 39 th Street N.Y.C. Listed the Reason why?
Never be Afraid to tell the Truth. League Of Women Voters. N.D., ca. 1922.
[Membership Form]. League of Women Voters of New York City, Our Aim- 50,000 new Members Join Now - Dues $1,00. Sent to Headquarters, 37 West 39th Street- New York City - List the reasons
why? Never be Afraid to Tell the Truth. League of Women Voters. N.D.,ca. 1922. 2nd copy.
[Membership-Form]. Yellow paper printed on one side. “ 1 believe that women should be allowed to
vote on the same terms as men“ -gives a place for name, street, town, assembly district., election district.
Addressed to Mabel L. Watkine. NP. N.D. U.S.
[Membership-Form]. The Empire State Campaign Committee Victory for Woman Suffrage in
1915....City believes that the vote should be granted to the Women of New York in 1915. The 1915
Amendment was one of four in the largest Eastern states held in 1915 - Massachusetts, New Jersey,
Pennsylvania were the other three - that was part of Carrie Chapman Catt's "Winning Plan." The women
were not successful in any of the four, despite a monumental effort The Empire State Campaign
Committee, that is, the New York women, led by Harriot Stanton Blatch, mounted a public relations and
advertising campaign that was to mark the beginning of the modern political campaign. They had to wait
until 1917 for passage of the suffrage amendment in New York. Interestingly, in the 1917 campaign,
they used exactly this same mustard colored handbill.
[Membership Form]. The Woman Suffrage Party of Pennsylvania - A Woman of Suffrage Association.
Yellow membership form believing that women as well As men should vote, hereby join the Woman
Suffrage party with the understanding that it required no dues. Return to: Miss Hannah J. Patterson,
Chairman of the Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association, 3044 Jenkins Arcade, Pittsburgh, Pa.
[Form] Blanche K. Bruce signed. August 21, 1890. Release Form for a real estate transaction. Recorded
in the District of Columbia. Stamped by Notary. Thos. J. Fisher Real Estate Brokers, 1324 F Street
Northwest, Washington, D.C. Blanche Kelso Bruce (March 1, 1841- March 17, 1898) was an American
politician. Bruce represented Mississippi as a U.S. Senator from 1875 to 1881 and was the first black to
serve a full term in the U.S. Senate. Hiram R. Revels, too of Mississippi, was the first to ever serve in
the U.S. Congress, but did not serve a full term. Senator of the Reconstruction era.
[ERA Card]. Jeanette Marks. The Equal Rights Amendment Before Congress is printed in red on front
of the card. Back of card has Ms. Marks asking people to appear in person to the editors with some of
the published information on the card. National Woman’s Party, 1944.2 copies.
Legal history. The Heirs of Francis Jackson contest his gift of $5,000 to Wendell Phillips, Lucy Stone
and Susan B. Anthony, which was to be used toward securing Woman Suffrage. To The Honorable
Justices of the Supreme Judicial Court, Holden at Boston, Merchant, as he is executor of the last will
and testament of Francis Jackson, late of said Boston, Gentlemen, deceased, brings this his bill against
Wendell Phillips...Lucy Stone, of the City of New York, in the State of New York lecturer: Susan B.
Anthony, of Rochester, in the State of New York. Lecturer, et al, et al. April 30, 1865. 11 Pp.
Jordan, Joan. Protective Legislation. San Francisco, 1970. Amend The Equal Rights Amendment To
Extend the State Protective Laws to Men - Co-publishers: Women Incorporated & San Francisco
Women's Liberation Inter-Group Council, San Francisco, 1970. Marked: 25 cents.
Discrimination Against Women: Hearings Before the Special Committee On Education and Labor. Part
I & Part II. House of Representatives, 91st Congress. 2nd Session. To prohibit discrimination Against
Women in federally assisted programs. And in employment in education; to extend the Equal Pay Act
Washington, D.C. 1970.
Lund, Carolina & Betsey Stone. Women and the Equal Rights Amendment. Based on a series of articles
Lund & Stone wrote for the weekly socialist newspaper, The Militant, in 1970. This pamphlet offers
country arguments to anti ERA rhetoric and cites the need for A Federal Statute to establish definitively
women's rights as citizens to equal standing and equal protection under the law. Printed self-wrappers
with Picture of women marching on both sides of Covers. Section include: Introduction: “What Are
Equal Rights?" ; “The ERA And the Trend Toward Women's Rights, etc., etc. Marked 25 cents.
Voters Registration card for Edna R. Hean. No 10169 (red ink) Ward II. Prct. 8. Certifies that Ms. Hean
Female Citizen of Wyandotte, County, Kansas. Witness my hand and the seal of Office this Aug. 27,
1958. William Bradish Election Commissioner by JB Deputy. With Commissioner seal. 2nd copy.
[Music]. Ethel Smyth. The March of Women. Cardboard-two sided: front side: Music & Lyrics for ‘The
March of Women" by Ethel Symth. Other side: Songs of Sunrise. Dedicated to Women's Social And
Political Union. The Women's Press, London, 1911. Dame Ethel Mary Smyth, (23 April 1858 - 8 May
1944) was an English composer and a leader of the women's suffrage movement.
[Music] The Anti-Suffrage Rose. 13 1/2 x 10 '1/2”. Song sheet book. Dedicated to the Women’s AntiSuffrage Association. 4 pages. N.P., N.D. Ca. 1915.
[Music]. Dale, Mary. Miss Eagle - The Suffragette. 44 pages plus music in back. “Women! Let Us Be
Beautiful, Let Us Be Homely, Let Us Be Merry, Let Us Be Wise, But Above All Things - Let us be
womanly. Previous owners inscription. Aberdeen Publishing Co., 1909.
[Petition]. Margaret Sanger. The Present Federal Birth Control Laws. Petition (With signatures of 3
women supporting Margaret Sanger). Nation Committee On Federal Legislation for Birth Control, Inc.
[Margaret Sanger's Address: 1343 H. Street, Washington, D.C. 4 pages. The petition asks the President
to recommend to The 74th Congress the immediate passage of a bill to amend sections 211-245-312-Of
the Criminal Code in order that parents may obtain proper scientific instructions On birth control to
enable them to control the size of families in consideration of the Health of mothers and the earning
capacity of the fathers. Very rare.
[Playing Card]. “Help! Help! Help!”. Blue tint playing card #10 in orange showing policeman and
woman walking - woman is wearing a long gown with a large hat with flowers and feather Boa policeman is holding her hand as if arresting her. Marked copyright N.D., N.P. (2)
Playing Card. Toot! Toot! Toot!. Blue tint playing card #10 in green sowing man in kilt Playing bag
pipes. - top of socks has purple color. Marked copyright. N.D., N.P. (2)
[Pledge Card Form]. Cambridge University. Pledge Card. 1897. Asking that this postcard be signed and
returned to The Memorial Office, 25, Guildhall Place - women students question giving title of degrees
would prove injurious to the position and efficiency of this University if all degrees
are issued from a University for men only.
[Pledge Form]. I Will Vote for Equal Suffrage. Name...Address...City...I will vote for equal suffrage in
November 1915. Send to 585 Boylston Street, Room 12, Boston, Ma.
[Pledge Form]. I Am Opposed to Woman's Suffrage. Mrs. E.A. Dan forth [Signature] 69 Downing Street
[added in] N.D. [London?]. Gt. Br.
[Petition]. Margaret Sanger. The Present Federal Birth Control Laws. Petition [With signatures of 3
women supporting Margaret Sanger]. Nation Committee On Federal Legislation for Birth Control, Inc.
[Margaret Sanger's Address: 1343 H. Street, Washington, D.C. 4 pages. The petition asks the President
to recommend to The 74th Congress the immediate passage of a bill to amend sections 211-245-312-Of
the Criminal Code in order that parents may obtain proper scientific instructions On birth control to
enable them to control the size of families in consideration of the Health of mothers and the earning
capacity of the fathers. Very rare.
Jeanette Rankin Foundation. Purple tinted picture of Ms. Rankin. “Educate A Woman and You Educate
A Home - A Community - And A Nation. Women’s Education Fund. The Women - The Foundation-Our
Mission. N.D.
[Program]. The People's Course, Mechanics Hall. Program for the Winter of 1875-1876 showing Mrs.
Livermore appearing on October 19th [1875]. Publishers: Tyler & Seagrave.
[Program]. Kelley, Jessie A. Baker's Edition of Plays -The Suffragettes Convention-An Entertainment in
One Scene For Twelve Female Characters and One Male. H. Baker & Co., Boxton Copyright, 1889 by
Walter H. Baker & Co.
[Program]. Program of Work for the National League of Women Voters. National League of Women
Voters, 1928. Adopted in Convention at Chicago, Illinois, April. 1928. The program contents include
Board of Directors, Program Of Work, Recommendations on Methods of Work, Efficiency in
Government Public Welfare in Government Legal status of Women. National League of Women voters.
1928.
[Program]. Speaker: Carrie Catt Chapman. League of Women Voters Of New York City Annual
Convention - Hotel Pennsylvania, 33rd Street and 7th Avenue-invitation to Afternoon Meeting. At the
bottom is a detachable form: Detach and return to Mrs. Thomas B. Wells, 37 West 39th Street League Of
Women Voters, 1922.
[Program]. League of Women of Voters New York City Invites You To Be Present At the Opening
Luncheon of the Membership Campaign. Speakers: Mrs. Robert McCurdy Marsh, Mrs. Dwight Morris,
Mrs. F. Louis Slade, and Mrs. Carries Chapman Catt, presiding: Miss Mary Garrett Hay, ChairmanLeague Of Women Voters of New York City. Verso: Lists Membership Drive Committee and General
Committee which includes the Bronx Borough, Brooklyn Borough, Manhattan Borough, Queens
Borough, and Richmond Borough. League of Women Voters, ca. 1922.
[Program]. League of Women Voters of New York City Invites You to be Present At the Opening
Luncheon of the Membership Campaign - Hotel McAlpin 33rdSt and Broadway. New York City Speakers: Mrs. Robert McCurdy Marsh, Mrs. Dwight Morrow, Mrs. Louise Slade, Mrs. Carrie
Chapman. Reservations will be made in order of receipt And must be sent to Mrs. Willard Straight,
Luncheon Chairman. N.D., ca. 1922.
[Program]. New York League of Women Voters - 10th, 15th and 17th Assembly Districts. Meeting at 99
Park Avenue. To hear Senator Meyer Levy, Assemblyman Joseph T. Flynn, etc., etc. To discuss the
United States and the International Court. New Members to write Gov. Smith regarding the 18th
Amendment And the Mullan Gage Law - Prohibition Law passed in 1921. 2x.
[Scrapbook]. Spiers, Helen Mary. Ca. 1925-1930. Handwritten scrapbook of author with entries by
friends, signatures of politicians cut from unknown letters, new clippings, cards, magazine pictures,
cartoons, (3) photographs, cancelled envelopes, official notice of passing nursing exam.
[Stationary]. Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage Non-Partisan National Headquarters. 21
Madison Place, Washington, D.C. List of names on left side: National Executive Committee and
National Advisory Council. Montana Branch. N.D.
[Stationary]. The Leslie Woman Suffrage Commission, Inc. The Bureau Suffrage Education and the
Department of Publicity and News. New York, N.D.
[Autograph Manuscript]. Woman Suffrage. Debate Speech by Ralph H. Cary. Autograph manuscript
signed by author. N.P., N.D. 2 Pp.
[Poster]. March for Women’s Lives. 17”x11”. White poster with purple print March for Women’s Lives
- Washington, D.C. April 25,2004. 10:00am - Assembly on Mall. LHD’s personal notebook with copy of
poster inserted in front cover.
[Ephemera]. Women In History: Preserving the Record. A Program Celebrating Women’s History
Month - Black and white with purple ribbon binding. Agenda for Lynne M. Smith luncheon, Friday
March 3, 2000. 6 Pp. Athens Country Club, Sponsored by the Athens Area Chamber of Commerce,
Women in Business Council & The University of Georgia Libraries.
[Invitation]. Invitation to visit Exhibit 2002 - Official Program Woman Suffrage Processions.
LHD/Ephemera/Summary/May 17th 2009.
9.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & ArchivesFor the Study of The Rights of Women in History and Law.
NEWSPAPERS, PERIODICALS, JOURNALS,
American and British 1878-1970
British Newspapers
WORKERS DREADNOUGHT - [Newspaper]
E. Sylvia Pankhurst was a member of the Workers’ Socialist Federation in the East End of London. In March
1914, Zelie Emerson, a fellow member, suggested that Pankhurst should start a socialist newspaper that
focused on the problems of working women. Pankhurst agreed and together with a small group of women
made plans to produce a weekly paper for working-class women. Pankhurst favoured calling it the Workers'
Mate but the group preferred the title the Women's Dreadnought.
The first edition of the Women's Dreadnought appeared on 21st March 1914. It was hoped that adverts
would make up 50% of the four pages and therefore Sylvia Pankhurst could keep the newspaper at a price that
working women could afford. However, by the time the first edition was published, the women had only sold
3 inches of advertisement. Although two companies, Neave's Food and Lipton's Cocoa, paid for large adverts
in the newspaper, the Women's Dreadnought failed to make money. In 1917 the paper's name was changed to
the Workers'Dreadnought.
"It was my earnest desire that it should be a medium through which working women, however unlettered, might
express themselves, and find their interests defended. I took infinite pains in correcting and arranging their manuscripts,
endeavoring to preserve the spirit and unsophisticated freshness of the original I wanted the paper to be as far as possible
written from life; no dry arguments, but a vivid presentment of things as they are, arguing always from the particular, with
all its human features, to the general principle” Sylvia Pankhurst
1.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, April 9,1921. Volume VIII. Number 4.
2.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, April 16,1921. Volume VIII. Number 5.
3.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, April 23,1921. Volume VIII. Number 6.
4.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, April 30,1921. Volume VIII. Number 7.
5.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, May 7,1921. Volume VIII. Number 8.
6.
Worker’s Dreadnought London, England. Saturday, May 14,1921. Volume VIII. Number 9.
7.
Worker’s Dreadnought London, England. Saturday, May 21,1921. Volume VIII. Number 10.
8.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, May 28,1921. Volume VIII. Number II.
9.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, June 4,1921. Volume VIII. Number 12.
10.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, June 25,1921. Volume VIII. Number 15.
11.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, July 2,1921. Volume VIII. Number 16.
12.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England.Saturday, July 9, 1921. Volume VIII. Number 17.
13.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England.Saturday, July 16,1921. Volume VIII. Number 18.
14.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England.Saturday, July 23,1921. Volume VIII. Number 19.
1.
15.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England.Saturday, July 30, 1921. Volume VIII. Number 20.
16.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, August 27,1921. Volume VIII. Number 24.
17.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, September 10, Volume VIII. Number 26.
18.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, September 17,1921. Volume VIII. Number 27.
19.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, September 3,1921. Volume VIII. Number 25.
20.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, September 24,1921. Volume VIII. Number 28.
21.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, October 15, 1921.Volume VIII. Number 31.
22.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, October 22, 1921.Volume VIII. Number 32.
23.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, November 26, Number 37.
24.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, December 3, 1921. Volume VIII. Number 38.
25.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, December 10, 1921 Volume VIII. Number 39.
26.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, January 28, 1922. Volume VIII. Number 46.
27.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, February 4 1922. Volume VIII. Number 47.
28.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, March II, 1922. Volume VIII. Number 52.
29.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, April 29, 1922. Volume IX. Number 7.
30.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, May 6,1922. Volume IX. Number 8.
31.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, May 27, 1922. Volume IX. Number 11.
32.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, June 3,1922. Volume IX. Number 12.
33.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, June 10, 1922. Volume IX. Number 13.
34.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, June 17, 1922. Volume IX. Number 14.
35.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, July 8,1922 Volume IX. Number 17
36.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, July 15, 1922. Volume IX. Number 18.
37.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, August 5, 1922. Volume IX. Number 21.
38.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, October 21,1922. Volume IX. Number 32.
39.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, October 28, 1922. Volume IX. Number 33.
40.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, November 4, Volume IX. Number 34.
41.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, November II, Volume IX. Number 35.
42.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, November 18, Volume IX. Number 36.
LHD/Newspapers/Summary/May 26-08
43.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, January 13, 1923. Volume IX. Number 44.
44.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, February 3, 1923 Volume IX. Number 47.
45.
Worker’s Dreadnought. London, England. Saturday, February 10, 1923 Volume IX. Number 48.
VOTES FOR WOMENFrederick Lawrence, the son of Alfred Lawrence, was born in London on 28th December 1871. His wealthy
parents were Unitarians and members of the Liberal Party. Frederick was educated at Eton and Trinity
College, Cambridge, where he achieved a Double First and became President of the Union. At university
Lawrence was influenced by the ideas of Alfred Marshall, who argued that the knowledge of economics
should be applied to help the poor. While studying to become a lawyer, Lawrence gave free legal advice at the
Nonconformist settlement Mansfield House in the slums of East London. He also worked with Charles Booth
collecting information on poverty in the area. While working with the poor Frederick Lawrence met the social
worker, Emmeline Pethick. The couple fell in love but Emmeline refused to marry Frederick because he did
not share her socialist beliefs. It was not until 1901, when Frederick had been converted to socialism, that
Emmeline agreed to marry him. On marriage, he added his wife's name to his own. In 1901 Frederick PethickLawrence became the owner of The Echo, a left-wing evening newspaper. He recruited friends from the
socialist movement such as Ramsay MacDonald and H. N. Brailsford to write for the newspaper. James Keir
Hardie introduced Frederick and Emmeline Pethick-Lawrence to Emmeline Pankhurst. As a result Emmeline
joined the Women’s Social and Political Union (WSPU). The organization did not allow men to become
members but Frederick used his legal training to represent the WSPU in court
In 1907 Frederick and Emmeline started the journal Votes for Women. The Pethick- Lawrence's large
home in London became the office of the WSPU.
46.
Votes for Women.
October 29, 1908. Volume II, Number 34.
47.
Votes for Women.
November 19, 1908. Volume II. Number 37.
48.
Votes for Women.
November 26, 1908. Volume II. Number 38.
49.
Votes for Women.
December 3, 1908. Volume II. Number 39.
50.
Votes for Women.
December 10, 1908. Volume II. Number 40.
51.
Votes for Women.
December 17, 1908. Volume II. Number 41.
52.
Votes for Women.
January 28, 1909. Volume II. Number 47.
53.
Votes for Women.
Friday, October 1, 1910. Volume III. (New Series), No. 82.
54.
Votes for Women.
Friday, October 7, 1910. Volume IV. (New Series), No. 135.
55.
Votes for Women.
April 19, 1912. Volume 5. (New Series) 215.
56.
Votes for Women.
May 3, 1912. Volume 5. (New Series) 215.
EQUAL RIGHTS. The National Women’s Party Newspaper. The Suffragist (1913-1921), and its later title:
Equal Rights (1923-1953). Documented the events and activities of the National Women’s Party, their
participation in the suffrage movement, and their efforts to pass the Equal Rights Amendment. 1932-1954.
57.
Equal Rights.
Saturday, September 24,1932. Volume XVIII. Number 34.
57a.
Equal Rights.
Saturday, October 1,1932. Volume XVIII. Number 35.
3.
58.
Equal Rights.
Saturday, February 18, 1933. Volume XIX. Number 3.
59.
Equal Rights.
Saturday, July 15, 1933. Volume XIX. Number 24.
60.
Equal Rights.
Saturday, July 22, 1933. Volume XIX. Number 25.
61.
Equal Rights.
March 15, 1935. Volume XXI. Number 3.
62.
Equal Rights.
April 15, 1935. Volume XXI. Numbers.
63.
Equal Rights.
May 15, 1935. Volume XXI. Number 7.
64.
Equal Rights.
August 1, 1935. Volume XXI. Number 12.
65.
Equal Rights.
August 15, 1935. Volume XXI. Number 13.
66.
Equal Rights.
September 1, 1935. Volume XXI. Number 14.
67.
Equal Rights.
September 15, 1935. Volume XXI. Number 15.
68.
Equal Rights.
December 15, 1935. Volume XXI. Number 21.
69.
Equal Rights.
February 15, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 4.
70.
Equal Rights.
April 1, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 7.
71.
Equal Rights.
June 1, 1936. Volume XXII. Number II.
72.
Equal Rights.
July 15, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 14.
73.
Equal Rights.
August 1, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 15.
74.
Equal Rights.
August 15, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 16.
75.
Equal Rights.
September 1, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 17.
76.
Equal Rights.
September 15, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 18.
77.
Equal Rights.
October 15, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 20.
78.
Equal Rights.
November 15, 1936. Volume XXII. Number 22.
79.
Equal Rights.
December 15, 1936 Volume XXII. Number 24.
80.
Equal Rights.
January 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 1
81.
Equal Rights.
February 1, 1938. Volume XXIII. Number 2.
82.
Equal Rights.
February 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 3.
83.
Equal Rights.
March 1, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 4.
84.
Equal Rights.
March 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 5.
85.
Equal Rights.
April 1, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 6.
LHD/Newspapers/Summary/May 26-08
86.
Equal Rights.
April 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 7.
87.
Equal Rights.
May 1, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 8.
88.
Equal Rights.
May 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 9.
89.
Equal Rights.
June 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 11.
90.
Equal Rights.
July 1, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 12
91.
Equal Rights.
July 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 13
92.
Equal Rights.
August 1, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 14.
93.
Equal Rights.
August 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 15.
94.
Equal Rights.
September 15, 1937. Volume XXIII. Number 17.
95.
Equal Rights.
October 15,1937. Volume XXIII. Number 19.
96.
Equal Rights.
January 15, 1938. Volume XXIV. Number 2.
97.
Equal Rights.
February 15, 1938. Volume XXIV. Number 4.
98.
Equal Rights.
March 1, 1938. Volume XXIV. Number 5.
99.
Equal Rights.
March 15,1938. Volume XXIV. Number 6.
100.
Equal Rights.
May 15,1938. Volume XXIV. Number 10.
101.
Equal Rights.
August 1.1938. Volume XXIV. Number 15.
102.
Equal Rights.
October 1, 1938. Volume XXIV. Number 19.
103.
Equal Rights.
October 15, 1938. Volume XXIV. Number 20.
104.
Equal Rights.
November 1,1938. Volume XXIV. Number 21.
105.
Equal Rights.
January 1,1939. Volume XXV. Number 1.
106.
Equal Rights.
January 15, 1939. Volume XXV. Number 2.
107.
Equal Rights.
February 15,1938. Volume XXV. Number 4.
108.
Equal Rights.
March 1, 1939. Volume XXV. Number 5.
109.
Equal Rights.
March 15,1939. Volume XXV. Number 6.
110.
Equal Rights.
April 1, 1939. Volume XXV. Number 7.
111.
Equal Rights.
July 1939. Volume XXV. Number II.
112.
Equal Rights.
September 1939. Volume XXV. Number 13.
113.
Equal Rights.
October 1939. Volume XXV. Number 14.
5.
114.
Equal Rights.
January 1940. Volume XXVI. Number 1.
115.
Equal Rights.
February 1940. Volume XXVI. Number
116.
Equal Rights.
March 1940. Volume XXVI. Number 3.
117.
Equal Rights.
April 1940. Volume XXVI. Number 4.
118.
Equal Rights.
May 1940. VolumeXXVI. Numbers.
119.
Equal Rights.
January 1941. Volume XXVII. Number 1.
120.
Equal Rights.
February 1941. Volume XXVII. Number 2.
121.
Equal Rights.
April 1941. Volume XXVII. Number 4.
122.
Equal Rights.
May 1941. Volume XXVII. Number 5.
123.
Equal Rights.
June 1941. Volume XXVII. Number 6.
124.
Equal Rights.
December 1941. Volume XXVII. Number II.
125.
Equal Rights.
January 1942. Volume XXVIII. Number 1.
126.
Equal Rights.
February 1942. Volume XXVIII. Number 2.
127.
Equal Rights.
March 1942. Volume XXVIII. Number 3.
128.
Equal Rights.
November 1942. Volume XXVII. Number 11.
129.
Equal Rights.
January-February 1945. Volume XXXI. Number 1.
130.
Equal Rights.
September, October, November, December, 1947. Volume XXXIII. Number 5.
131.
Equal Rights.
January, February, 1948. Volume XXXIV. Number 1.
132.
Equal Rights.
October, 1954. Volume XL. Number 1.
[Scrapbook]. British Suffrage - Newspaper clippings from various British newspapers. Ca. 1908.
Miscellaneous:
The Suffragette: Official Organ of the Women’s Social and Political Union. Edited by Christabel Pankhurst
Lincoln’s Inn House, Kingsway, London, Telegraphic. Address: Wospolu, London. Telephone 2724. Holborn,
Friday June 12,1914.
The Inland Post.
The Sphere. Great New Street, London, April 1,1910. Volume XLI. No. 532. Article: Modern Portia’s:
Women Who Act As Barristers in France and Italy. Visually very nice.
The Illustrated London News, May 4,1912. Folio. “Forcible Feeding trough the Nose of Women Suffragist
Prisoners - Pronounced as Dangerously by many Leading Members of the Medical Profession”. Including
portions of letters regarding the above practice including one by Sylvia Pankhurst
The Daily Graphic. An Illustrated newspaper. No. 4125, Vol. VI. May 4,1891. Picture of woman looking
through window: “A Privileged Spectator”. An important Victorian newspaper: The Daily Graphic London.
LHD/Newspapers/Summary/May 26-08
1890 - 16 October 1926.
The Graphic. January 1,1910. The Season of Good Intent The Graphic" was founded by William Luson
Thomas, a wood engraver and social reformer.
The Graphic. October 8,1910. The Autumn campaign-A Fantasy by David Wilson - Votes for Women.
Suffrage article. The Graphic"
The Graphic. May 30,1914. The Mad Militants’ Demonstrations at last weeks Royal Matinee. Suffrage article.
The International Woman Suffrage News. London: Williams, Lea & Co., May-June 1923. Volume i7,
Number 8. Articles in Italian, English, French and German. International Committee Reports. Congress
Number. JVS SVFFRAGI1. The Monthly Organ of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance. Red marks
on Pp. 122-123.
French Newspapers
Le Petit Journal. Article: Un True des Suffragettes Anglaise Deguisees en Pomperis, Elies Parcourent un
Quarier de Honres Sur Une Pom pel a incendie. 21 me Annee, No. 1,001. Dimanche - 3 AVR1L1910. With
color illustrations of parade in background of parade on backpage: Votes for Woman Meeting at Albert
Hall, Pp. 112.
La Voix Des Femmes. Journal Quotidien Socialiste et Politique. Organe des Inferets de Toutes. Bureau a
Paris, Samedi 22 Avril, 1948.
American Newspapers
The Somerset Democrat November 3,1915. Header: “Predatory Interest That Defeated Women Suffrage
/Thrive on Sin and Vice, Former Secretary of State Bryan Declared in Great Speech in the Somerset Opera
House: War and Liquor Traffic Bitterly Denounced by “Commoner” / No Reason Can be Given By Those
Who Claim Suffrage as a Right of Manhood Which Does Not Make It a Right of Womanhood. Official
The Woman’s Journal. Official Organ of the National American Association. Boston, MA. Saturday, May 6th
1911. The issue Commemorating New York Parade of May 6,1911. Carton on front with classical Trumpeter
carrying a flag with five stars representing the five states who have already Voted for Suffrage. Including
biographies of significant women in parade. Very fragile.
American Anti-Slavery Society. Volume 1, Number 2. September 1836. Grimke, A.E. An Appeal To The
Woman of the South. - Colorful cover of red, blue, white bound with strings. 36 Pp. Rare.
[Periodical Magazine]. Leslie's: The People's Weekly. Votes for Women. November 7,1912. Drawing of
Suffrage marchers in automobile with pennants and megaphones.
New York Weekly Tribune. Article: The Rights of Woman, Great Convention of Women in Ohio. Saturday,
May 4,1850.
Public Ledger. Article: The Rights of Woman. Married Women Property Rights Legislation. Philadelphia,
Wednesday, January 26,1858. Volume XXIV. Number 106. Swain, Abell & Simmons, January 26,1848.
Forest-Grove Independent. Articles: Mark Twain On the Temperance Crusade / Henry Ward Beecher On
Liquor Traffic. Oregon, Volume 11, Number 12, June 11,1874. H.B. Luce, June 11, 1874.
Maryland Suffrage News. Dr. & Mrs. Donald Hooker, [Editors]. Saturday, April 4,1914.8 Pp. Just
Government League of Maryland, Published weekly.
[Newspaper-Magazine]. Votes For Women. The magazine that won equal suffrage in Washington. Votes
7.
for Women. Vol. I, Seattle, Washington, 1910. No. 11. Mrs. M.T.B. Hanna, Editor And proprietor.
December, 1910.
The Signal of Liberty. Article: The Inviolability Of Individual Rights Is The Only Security to Public
Liberty. Ann Arbor, Michigan, July4,1846. Volume 6, No. 11, Whole No. 271. Foster and Dell.
The Woman’s Journal. Volume IV. Boston, Chicago, and St Louis. September 6,1873.
The Woman’s Journal. Volume XXXIX. Boston, Saturday, January 18,1908. Number 3. Articles include:
Awaking, Editorial Notes, Taft on Labor Unions, College and Alumnae, Michigan Suffrage Hearing, More
Testimony from Australia concerning women A Weekly Newspaper, published every Saturday in Boston,
devoted to the interests of Woman - to her educational, industrial, legal and political Equality, and
especially her right of Suffrage.
The Woman’s Journal and Suffrage News. Alice Stone Blackwell, Editor. August 15,1915. Volume 46,
Number 33. A Weekly Newspaper Devoted to Winning Equal Rights and Especially in Winning Equal
Suffrage for Women. Lucy Stone’s Vision on front cover. Pp. 256-262. ”.A Weekly Newspaper, published
every Saturday in Boston, devoted to the interests of Woman - to her educational, industrial, legal and
political Equality, and especially her right of Suffrage. Julia Ward Howe, Lucy Stone, Henry B. Blackwell,
Editors. W. K. Moody, Publisher. T. W. Higginson, Mary A. Livermore, Editorial Contributor.
The Woman’s Journal and Suffrage News. Boston, MA. Volume 46. No. 15. Saturday April 10,1915.
Article include: Woman sweep records away in Windy City. The Weaker Sex cartoon - Courtesy of Puck.
The Woman’s Journal and Suffrage News. Boston, M A. Volume 47, No. 48. November 25, 1916. Articles
include: “Sex Barrier is gone in Holland”.
Woodhull & Claflin Weekly. Volume V. No. 12. Whole No.116. New York. February 22,1878.
The New Northwest. Mrs. A.J. Duniway. Editor. Portland, Oregon, Friday, February 23,1872.
The New Northwest March 15,1878. Volume VII. Portland, Oregon. Friday - March 15, 1878. Number 26.
To the Editor of the New Northwest letter: Equality Of Citizenship. Number 3.
The New Northwest March 15,1878. Volume VII. Portland, Oregon. Thursday, August 1,1878. Number 40.
Article: The Influence of A Good Woman.
The New Northwest Friday, May 31, 1878. Volume VII. Portland, Oregon, Friday, May 31,1878. Mrs. A.J.
Duniway, Editor and Proprietor. Articles included: Her Lot or How She Was Protected, Our Washington
Letter, For Husbands.
The Washington Times. Monday Evening March 3,1913. Ten Thousand Women March Down Avenue in
Fight for Ballot Article picture on front cover of women. Last edition.
Fort Wayne Journal Gazette. Thursday June 5,1919. News of the World, Thursday, Morning June 5,1919
(by Associated News)-Price Three Cents - Headlines: Suffrage Amendment Passes Senate - Action by
Congress end fight Lasting 40 years. Susan B. Anthony resolution adopted by Vote of 56 to 25
The Augusta Herald. May 22 1919 issue. Article:" House Passes Equal Suffrage Bill After Three Hours of
Debate”.
The Augusta Herald. August 26,1920. Article: "Colby Signs Suffrage - Proclamation - Suffrage
Amendment to Constitution is Proclaimed Ratified” Secretary signs document at his home at 8 o'clock on
Thursday Morning -Announcement Disappoints Group of Suffrage Workers who wanted to see event
The Corner Stone. Newspaper. Volume II. Lansing, Michigan, August 1894, No. 9. Articles include: "Miss
Anthony’s Position Marching as to War”. Emery & Emery Publisher, Sarah E.V. Emery, Editor. 2 copies.
LHD/Newspapers/Summary/May 26-08
Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly Newspaper Established in 1855.0ctober 28,1915. Illustrated by James
Montgomery Flagg. Picture of woman dressed in blue coat, red pants holding a rifle, with sash: “Votes for
Woman - Taxation With Representation. Leslie-Judge. 1915.”
New York Weekly Tribune. Article: The Rights of Woman, Great Convention of Women in Ohio.
Saturday, May 4, 1850. Vol. IX, No. 451. Editors:Greeley & McElrath. May 4,1850.
Miscellaneous Periodicals -Magazines.
[Scrapbook]. British Suffrage - Newspaper clippings from various British newspapers. Ca. 1908.
Judge. Volume LXII, No. 1584. February 24,1912. The Family Jewel; Picture of a Baby in the Setting of a
ring: Article: Why Should Women Vote? By G. Desoney O’Neill. Published weekly by Leslie Judge Co.
Pp. 11.
The Outlook. Volume 102. No. 17. December 28,1912.
Article; A Crisis In the Woman Suffrage Party. New York. The Outlook Co. Published weekly.
Pp. 931-934.
The Outlook. Volume 114. No 1. Sept. 6,1916. Article: Idaho Twenty Years of Women Suffrage, by Pearl
Tyler. President of the Base Chapter National Council of Woman Voters. New York. The
Outlook Co. Published weekly. Pp. 35-39.
Current Opinion. Article by Edward J. Wheeler, Editor.
Eastward The Tide of Woman Suffrage Takes Its Way. Volume LIX. Number 5. The Current Literature
Publishing Co., New York City. November 1915. Pp. 297-299.
McClure’s. Article by S.S. McClure, Editor. A Character Sketch of Inez Milholland & The Spokesman for
Suffrage in America. New York. The McClure Publications, Inc. July 1912. Pp. 335- 337. Previous owners
initials.
Harper’s Weekly. Volume LX. 3046. Norman Hapgood, Editor. Special Suffrage Issue. The Protected Sex,
May 8,1915.
The Alkahest-The Literary Magazine of the South. Brown cover with image of man standing on a skull on
the table - smoke rising. Richmond, Va., B.F. Johnson Publishing Co., November 1900. Listed in Modern
Magazines of Literary or Artistic Significance Operating During the Period 1890 -1922.
Life Magazine. New York, February 27,1913. Articles on Suffrage.
The Christian Herald. New York City, January 23,1918. Suffragist Win a Victory in the House of Lords on
January 10th. Visually very nice.
The Woman Citizen. January 19,1918. Volume II. (Old Style). Volume IV (New style).
Number 37.
The Woman Citizen. February 23,1918 for Justice And Mercy. Words at bottom: “Women’s Over Sea
Hospital Unit Sails for France. New York, 1918.
The Woman Citizen. April 3, 1920. Volume I. (Old Style). Volume IV (New style). Number 37.
The Ladies World. Charles Dwyer. Editor. Article: A Common Sense View of Woman Suffrage - S.H.
Moore Company, New York. The Christmas Number. S.H. Moore Company, New York, December 1910.
National Bulletin. February, 1891. Volume I, Number 5. Published Monthly at the Office of The Women’s
Tribune, Washington, D.C.
National Bulletin. March, 1896 Volume 2, Number 12. Published Monthly at the Office of The Women’s
Tribune, Washington, D.C.
9.
National Bulletin. August, 1896. Volume 2, Number 12. Published Monthly at the Office of The Women’s
Tribune, Washington, D.C. 1891-1896.
Putnam’s Magazine-Original Papers on Literature, Science, Art and National Interests. G.P. Putnam Son,
661 Broadway, New York, 1868. New Series - Second Volume.
July - December, 1868. Index reflect articles: Letters on Woman Suffrage.
New York Suffrage Newsletter. November 1910. Volume XI.
Woman Patriot. May 31,1919. Volume 3, Number 7.
The official organ of the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage.
Woman Patriot. April 17th, 1920. volume 4, Number 16.
Woman Patriot. April 24, 1920. Volume 4, Number 17.
Woman Patriot. May 31,1919. Volume 3, Number 7. 1910-1920.
Woman Patriot. June 5,1920. Volume 4, Number 23.
Woman Voter’s Bulletin. March 1930. Volume X. Number 3.
Woman’s Bulletin. December 1913. Volume II. Number 7.
Woman Citizen. January 19,1918. Volume II. (Old style). Volume IV (New Style) Number 37. Woman’s
Column. January 10, 1903. Volume XVI. Number 1.
The Arena. November 1895. Pp. 401-418. Article: Gardner,
Helen H. A Battle for Sound Mortality: Final Paper.
The Humanitarian. May 1896. Volume III, No. 5. Edited by Victoria Woodhull Martin. Article: “IS the
New Women A Myth?” Artist: C. Morgan-Dockrell.
The Galaxy - June 1872. Vol. 13,No. 6. New York, 677 Broadway, Sheldon and Company.
Contains article: The Woman Movement in Wyoming, General Custer, Female Suffrage.
The American Review. October 1848. A Whig Journal Devoted To Politics and Literature. New Series, No.
IV. Whole Number XLVI. Article: John W. Nevin, “To Stand By the Constitution”.
Life Magazine. Front cover showing women dressed in white with four men standing behind her - words at
bottom: “Four Voters”. Pro-Suffrage Number - October 1,1913. All words in blue type.
The Annals of the American Academy of Political And Social Science. Volume LVI,
Whole Number 145. November 1914. Article: “Women In Public Life”.
The Annals of the American Academy of Political And Social Science. Supplement. May 1910. Article:
“Significance of the Woman Suffrage Movement”.
Ladies Home Journal. February 1910. Volume XXVII-Number 3. February 1910.
Cheltenham Ladies’ College Magazine. Dorothea Beale Centenary Number. July 1931.
New Statesman. Saturday, November 1,1913. Volume II-Number 30. Article: “The Awakening of
Women”. Special Supplement with articles by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Mrs. Henry Fawcett’s article:
“The Remedy of Political Emancipation”. Mrs. Sidney Webb (editor).
New Statesman. Saturday, February 21,1914. Volume II-Number 46. Article: “Women In Industry”Special supplement with introduction by Mrs. Sidney Webb. Pp. i-xvi.
LHD/Newspapers/Summary/May 26-08
Pall Mall - 21st Year. Number 1068. Thursday, March 14,1889.
Frank Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper. December 20, 1879. Pp. 276-277. Two page section of captioned
illustrations: “Massachusetts - Woman Suffrage In the Bay State -Scenes at the Polls In Cambridge December 2nd and [in] Boston- December 9ih, During the Municipal Elections, When Women Were
Permitted to Vote for the School Boards”. Artist: H.A. Ogden.
Leslie’s: The People’s Weekly. Votes for Women. November 7, 1912. Drawing of Suffrage marchers in
automobile with pennants and megaphones.
Illinois Woman - 75 Years of the Right to Vote. Picture of Jane Adams in Suffrage Parade passing the Art
Institute of Chicago. 1910 on cover.
Equal Rights Monitor. Sacramento, California Institute for Studies in Equality. March/April, 1977. Cover is in
red with picture of children lined up boys on left with girls on right with caption: Equality: How Do Our
Schools Line Up? Addressed to University of Wisconsin - Lucy Stone Women’s Center. Dedicated to Public
Understanding of Equality. Printed the text of the ERA Amendment, Girl Scouts Endorse ERA for a New Era;
The Question of Referendum; and the “ERA Update”.
Ensign Magazine, 1980. Reprint of article: The Church and the Proposed Equal Rights Amendment: A
Moral Issue. February 1980. A Summary of questions and answers and frequently asked questions.
Rising Up: The Newsletter of Catholics Act for ERA. Autumn, 1980. Containing articles on the ERA
amendment in the Illinois State Legislature, civil disobedience For the ERA; the 1980 elections and the
Era; The ERA and the bonding of Women; The Salary Gap between Men and Women; Poverty is a
Women’s Issue, So Is Social Security, etc., etc. A Catholic periodical was formed in 1979 under the
umbrella of The Quixote Company founded by a Radical Priest Father William Callahan and Dolly
Pomerleau in 1975 to pursue a variety of radical social causes.
Life Magazine. Women Arise - The Revolution That Will Affect Everybody. Life Magazine, New York
9/14/1970. Picture on front is from the October 28,1920. Words read: “Fifty Years Ago - Women Got the
Vote!”
Equal Rights Newspaper. National Woman’s Party. Washington, D.C., Volume 27, No. 11. December
1941. Articles include:” The Star Still Shines -Bill of Rights Day”.
[Newspaper clipping]. J. Hooker. Letter to the Editor of The Courant N.P., N.D. Woman Suffrage & the
Marriage Relation. “Among the leading Advocates of woman suffrage in the country I know of not one
who is all prominent as an advocate of ‘easy divorce’ except Mrs. Cady Stanton.
11.
[499 Items] Collection of Rare and Scholarly books augmenting The Lucy Hargrett Collection for the Study of
The Rights of Women in History and Law. * Inscribed or Signed.
Abbot, Edith. Women In Industry. A Study of American Economic History the Immigrant. Republication of
the 1909 New York edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Abramson, Jill; Franklin, Barbara. Where They Are Now-The Story of the Women of Harvard Law 1974.
New York, Doubleday & Co., 1986. Dust jacket.
Ahern, Dee Dee. The Economics of Being A Women - how you can fight the system and avoid being
ripped off. New York, MacMillan Publishing Company, 1976. Dust jacket
Alexander, Shana. State-By-State Guide to Women’s Legal Rights. Los Angeles, Ca.
Wollstoncraft Incorporated, 1975. Marriage, Divorce, Children, Work, Abortion, Rape, Death and Taxes,
First Edition.
Allen, Gloria. 365 Ways to Become The Complete Woman. Be the Total for your men - Here are ways for
every single day of the year. Universal-Award House, Inc. 1975.
Annual Report of the Central Committee. Compilation of the Central Committee Of the National Society
for Women’s Suffrage 1880-1890. Bound collection Of Individual Reports: July 14, 1881; July 13, 1882;
July 19,1883; July 11, 1884;July 9,1885; July 15, 1886; July 12,1887; July 17, 1888; March 21, 1889; May
16, 1899; April 24,1890.
Annual Report of the Central Committee. Compilation of the Central Committee Of the National Society
for Women’s Suffrage 1890-1900. Bound collection Of Individual Reports: April 21,1891; 20th Annual
Report 1892; 21st Annual Report 1893; 22nd Annual Report 1894; 23rd Annual Report April 26,1895; 24th
Annual Report June 26, 1896; 25th Annual Report April 27th 1897; 26th Annual Report May 12,1898.
Annual Report June 21st 1900.
[ANON.] An Essay in Defense of the Female Sex, In Which are Inserted the Characters of a Pedant, a
Squire, a Beau, a Vertuoso, a Poetaster, a City-Critick, & C. In a Letter to a Lady Written By a Lady
Republication of the New York edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Anthony, Katharine. Feminism in Germany and Scandinavia. First edition. New York, Henry Holt &
Company, 1915. Katherine Susan Anthony (1877-1965) was both a suffragist and peace activist The author
of several biographies of Queen Elizabeth, Catherine the Great and Margaret Fuller. She also wrote:
“Mothers Who Must Earn and Labor Laws in New York”.
Anthony, Katharine. Susan B. Anthony. Her Personal History and Her Era. New York, Doubleday and Co.,
1954.
[Anthony, Susan B.] An Account of the Proceedings of the Proceedings At the Trial of Susan B.
Anthony On The charge of illegal voting, at the Presidential Election in November, 1872. Reprint
published by The Lawbook Exchange. 2002.
Anthony, Susan B. History of Woman Suffrage. 1848-1861. Edited by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B.
Anthony and Matilda Joslyn Gage. Volume I. Rochester, New York: Charles Mann, 1887.
Anthony, Susan B. History of Woman Suffrage. 1861-1876. Edited by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B.
Anthony and Matilda Joslyn Gage. Volume II. Rochester, New York: Charles Mann, 1887.
Anthony, Susan B. History of Woman Suffrage. 1876-1885. Edited by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B.
Anthony and Matilda Joslyn Gage. Volume III. Rochester, New York: Charles Mann, 1887.
Inscribed by author: “To Hon. A. W. Tomgee - these records of the work done in the Several States of the Union to
reserve women from the degradation of the Old Common and Barron...Law are presented- With respect and admiration.
Susan B. Anthony, Worcester N. Y., June 23,1893. ”
Anthony, Susan B. History of Woman Suffrage. 1883-1902. Edited by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B.
Anthony and Matilda Joslyn Gage. Volume IV. Rochester, New York: The Hollenbeck Press. 1902.
Inscribed by author: “Martha M Atkins, Jamaica Plains, Mass. I send you this huge volume IV because of your life
membership of the National Association - and because I hope you will be interested in placing it with its three
companions in the High School and public libraries of your city and vicinity where every student may have
access to them to learn the facts about women’s work as they can find them no where else - Very sincerely
yours - Susan B. Anthony. 17 Madison Avenue Rochester, N. Y. ” 1820 February 15 - 1903 - Vol IV18831900. ”
Anthony, Susan B.; Harper, Ida Husted (Editors). History of Woman Suffrage. Volume IV. Republication
of the 1889 Rochester edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970
[Mrs. Ashton Dilke] Woman Suffrage, Swan Sonnenschen & Co., 1885.
Astell, Mary. A Serious Proposal to the Ladies. For the Advancement of their True and Greatest Interest 1).
By A Lover of Her Sex - the Fourth edition. Republication of the 1701 London edition. New York, Source
Book Press, 1970.
Athlers, Lena C. Daughters Known to Fame. Albert Whitman & Co. Chicago:, 1942.
Austell, Mary. Some Reflections Upon Marriage. With Editions. Republications of the 1739 edition. New
York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Bacon, Margaret Hope. - Valiant Friend- The Life of Lucretia Mott. New York, Walker Publishing
Company. Dust jacket.
Balducci, Carolyn Felippa. Biography of Margaret Fuller-A Life of Passion and Defiance. New York, Bantam
Books, 1991.
Baker, Mark. Women - American Women in Their Own Words. New York, Simon & Schuster, 1990.
Bardwick, Judith M. In Transition-How Feminism, Sexual Liberation and the Search for Self- Fulfillment
Have Altered Our Lives. Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1979.
Barros, Carolyn A. Life-Writings By British Women, 1660-1815: An Anthology. Northwest University
Press. Ca. 2000.
Barry, Kathleen. Susan B. Anthony - Biography of A Singular Feminist. New York, New York University
Press, 1988.
Basbanes, Nicholas A. Patience and Fortitude. A Roving Chronicle Of book people, book places, and book
culture. New York, Harper & Collins, 2001.
Bayles, George; James White, Sallie Joy & Wiliam Carruth, William Herbert. The Household Library. New
York. P.F. Collier & Son, 1905. Three books in one.
Bebel, August. Women Under Socialism. Republication of the 1904 edition. New York, Source Book
Press, 1970.
Beecher, Catharine E. A Treatise on Domestic Economy - For the Use of Young Ladies at Home and at
School. Republication of the 1841 edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970
Bell Street Chapel Anniversaries. James Eddy Born May 29,1806- Died May 1888. (100 Anniversary of
birth) The chapel (25lh Anniversary of Founding: December 1-1889 -December 6, 1914. N.P., 1916.
Benjamin, Anne M. A History of the Anti-Suffrage Movement in the United States - From 1895 to 1920.
Woman Against Equality. The Edwin Mellon Press. 1991
Benner, Beverley (Editor). Contributors: Ethel J. Alpenfels, Pearl S. Buck, Agnes De Mille. Margaret
Mead, et al. Boston, Beacon Press, 1962. Dust jacket.
Bennett, Daphne. Emily Davies and the Liberation of Woman. London, Andre Deutsch, 1990. Dust jacket.
Bennett, Rev. John. Strictures on Female Education. Chiefly As It Relates to the Culture of the Heart in
Four Essays. Republication of the 1795 edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Bernard, Jessie. The Female World. A Brilliant Exploration of the Previously Uncharted Region - the
Special World of Women. The Free Press, 1981.
Bernbaum, Ernest; Haien, J. A. Editors. Anti-Suffrage - Essays by Massachusetts Women. Copyright 1916.
Cover reads: Gratefully Dedicated to The 295,939 Massachusetts who, on Election Day, 1915. Endorsed the
Anti-Suffrage Sentiments of the Women Of Massachusetts. The Forum Publications of Boston, 1916.
Billings, Victoria. The Woman's Book. Los Angeles. Wollstonecraft Inc. 1974. Front has colour drawing of,
'Don Quixote' style, woman in armour riding a war horse. Ms. Billings charts the changes facing the women
of the 1970s, and offers suggestions, observations, and answers to the very real problems they face.
Bingham, Clara. Women on the Hill-Challenging the Culture of Congress. New York, Times Books, 1997.
Bishop, George. Every Woman Her Own Lawyer. New York: Dick & Fitzgerald, [1858], 1858. Every
Woman Her Own Lawyer. A Private Guide In All Matters Of Law, Of Essential Interest To Women, And
By The Aid Of Which Every Female May, In Whatever Situation, Understand Her Legal Course And
Redress, And Be Her Own Legal Adviser.
Bjorkman, Frances M. & Addams, Jane. (Editors). Woman Suffrage-Arguments & Results. National
American Woman Suffrage Association. New York, 1913.
Bjorkman, Frances M. & Annie G. Porritt. (Editors). Woman Suffrage - History/ Arguments / Results. New
York. National Woman Suffrage Company,1917. 2 copies.
Bjorkman, Frances M. (Addams, Jane). Woman Suffrage: History, Arguments and Results. New York,
National American Woman Suffrage Association, 1911.
Blackburn, Helen. Women's Suffrage; a record of the women’s suffrage movement in the British Isles with
biographical sketches of Miss Becker. Republication of the 1902 London edition. New York, Source Book
Press, 1970.
Blackwell, Dr Elizabeth. Pioneer Work in Opening the Medical Profession to Women. Autobiographical
Sketches. Republication of the 1895 London edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Blackburn, Helen Women’s Suffrage; a record of the women’s suffrage movement in the British Isles with
biographical sketches of Miss Becker. Williams & Norgate. 1902.
Blackburn, Helen. Women’s Suffrage; a record of the women’s suffrage movement in the British Isles with
biographical sketches of Miss Becker. Republication of the 1902 London edition. New York, Source Book
Press, 1970.
Blankenburg, Lucretia L. The Blankenburgs of Philadelphia. The John C. Winston Company, 1928.
Author’s inscription: Lucretia L. Blankenburg to Anna B. Pennock. ‘This Greeting to thee is in Memory of our
old Suffrage days / Lucretia L. Blankenberg/ Dec. 20/28”.
Blease, W. Lyon. Emancipation of English Women. London, England. Constable and Company, Ltd.,
1910. An attempt to describe the long struggle that women have made for their emancipation by a supporter
of the movement. Chapters deal with women to the restoration of 1750, the beginning of reform, Mary
Wollstonecraft, and woman suffrage. With a bibliography and index.
Bluestone, Natalie Harris. Women and the Ideal Society: Plato's &;Republic& and Modern Myths of
Gender. Amherst, MA., The University of Massachusetts Press, 1987.
Bodichon, Barbara Leigh Smith. An American diary, 1857-8. Edited by Joseph R. Reed, Jr. Series of Sixty
letters. London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972.
Breton, Mary Joy. Women Pioneers for the Environment. Boston, MA. Northeastern University Press,
1998.
Brown, Dorothy M. Setting A Course-American Women in the 1920’s. Boston, Twayne Publishers, 1987.
Dust jacket.
Brown, Leando. Mr. Raford-Humanist. A Play Dealing With A Vivid Forceful Manner With A Vital
Phase of the Suffrage Question in America. A Drama in Three Acts. London, L.E. Landone, Inc., 1912.
With original dust jacket.
Brownmiller, Susan. Feminity. London, Ballantine Books, 1984.
Brownmiller, Susan. Against Our Will: Men, Woman and Rape. An Analysis and Guide for Practioner and
Student. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1975.
Bryan, Florence Horn. Susan B. Anthony-Champions of Women’s Rights. New York, Julian Messner, Inc.
1947.
Bull, Emily. Eutalie. Calmia Press Aiken, SC 1973. Dust jacket
Burton, J. Lectures on Female Education and Manners. Volume 1. Second Edition. Republication of the
1793 edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Bushnell, Horace. Woman's Suffrage: The Reform Against Nature. New York. Scribner & Co. 1869. Rev.
Bushnell's opinions on the proper realms of action for men and women are reflective of his time but he also
predicts actual changes in "politician-women" as at first they become thin and hungry looking a cream of
tartar face..."
Cadman, Eileen, Gail Chester, Agnes Pivot. Rolling Our Own. Woman as Printers, Publishers and
distributors. Minority Press Group, 1981.
Carter, Angela. The Sadeian Woman and the Ideology of Pornography. New York, Pantheon Books,
1978.
Cate, Margaret Davis. Mistakes in Fanny Kemble's Georgia Journal. Fort Frederica Association, Georgia.
March 1960. Reprinted from The Georgia Historical Quarterly. Vol. XLIV, No. 1.
Catt, Carrie Chapman and Nettie Rogers Shueler. Woman Suffrage And Politics. The Inner Story of the
Suffrage Movement. New York, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1923. Inscribed by the Leslie Woman Suffrage
Commission.
Chafe, William H. The American Woman. - Her Changing Social, Economic and Political Noise - 1920-
1970. Oxford, England, Oxford University Press, 1972.
Charvet, John. Feminism-Modern Ideologies. London, J.M. Dent & Sons, 1982.
Chester, Giraud. Embattled Maiden-The Life of Anna Dickinson. New York, Putnam/Van Rees Press, 1951.
Childs, Marjorie. Fabric The Era. Exposition Press, Pompano Beach, Florida, 1982.
Congressional intent: The Equal Rights Amendment - A Call for Equality or Immorality? Previous owner
stamp: Center for Research on Women.
Cleghorn, Sarah N. The True Ballad of Glorious Harriet Tubman. First edition. Sarah N. Cleghorn,
Manchester, 1933. Privately printed at Manchester, Vermont, is a sentimental production of a person
deeply interested in the elevation of the man far down. The work lacks literary merit, but it has historical
significance. U.S.
Clift, Elayne. The Road to Radicalism. - Further Reflections of a Frustrated Feminist OGN
Publications. 1994.
Cohen, Marcia. The Sisterhood- The True Story of the Women Who Changed the World. New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1988. Dust jacket. With previous owner's note.
Colt, Nancy F & Elizabeth H. Pleck. Heritage of Her Own - Toward a New Social History of American
Women. New York, Simon & Schuster, 1979.
Costello, Cynthia; Stone, J. Anne. The American Women-1994-1995. Where We Stand, Women & Health.
New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1994.
Cook, Blanche Wissen. Crystal Eastman on Women and Revolution. New York, Oxford
University Press, 1978. Dust jacket
Cowan, M.D., John. The Science of a New Life. Republication of the 1874 New York edition. New York,
Source Book Press, 1970.
Crothers, Samuel McChord. Mediations on Votes For Women. Boston, New York, Houghton Mifflin Co,
1914. Duplicate.
Crow, Barbara A. (Editor). Radical Feminism - A Documentary Reader. New York: New York University
Press, 2000.
Daly, Mary. Gyn-Ecology: the Met ethics of Radical Feminism. Boston, MA., Beacon Press, 1968.
Autograph notation: Writing on title page: “Radical Feminism Reading List, in categorization of feminist as radical,
liberal or moderate fit into the liberal to moderate category. Still, it is important to read all the publications in this
field/LHD". With seal of LHD.
Dargan, Elizabeth Paisley. The Civil War Diary of Martha Abernathy- Wife of Dr. Charles C. Abernathy of
Pulaski. Professional Printing Inc, 1994.
Daumier, Honore. Liberated Women (Bluestockings and Socialist Women). Preface by Francoise Parturier,
Catalogue and Notes by Jacqueline Armingeat - Translated by Howard Brabyn. New York, Vilo Inc.,
Publisher, New York, 1982. 2nd copy. New York. Leon Amiel Publisher, Inc. 1974.
Davis, Paulina W. A History of the National Woman's Rights Movement. Republication of the 1971 New
York edition. New York, Source Book Press.
De Beauvoir, Simone. The Coming of Age. New York, Warner Paperbook Library, 1973.
Deckard, Barbara. The Women’s Movement. Political, Socio-economic, and Psychological issues. New
York., Harper & Harper Publishers, 1975.
DeCrow, Karen. The Young Woman’s Guide to Liberation- Alternatives to the half-life while the choice is
still yours. Pegasus, A Division of the Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1971.
Dustjacket
DeCrow, Karen. Sexist Justice - How Legal Sexism Affect you. New York, Random House, 1974. LHD’s
signature on title page. Atlanta, Ga. Dust jacket.
Decter, Midge. The Liberated Woman and Other Amercans. New York. Coward, McCann & Geoghegan,
Inc., 1971. Dustjacket.
Delaney, Janice; Mary Jane Lupton; Emily Toth. The Curse-A Cultural History of Menstruation - Revised
expanded edition. Chicago, Illinois. University of Illinois Press, 1988.
DePizan, Christine. The Book of The Cities of the Ladies. E.J. Richards Translator). Persea Books, New
York, 1982. First Edition. First translated by Earl Jeffrey Richards. This Work was written by a French
woman, an accomplished poet, the official biographer for Charles V, published in 1405. Includes foreword,
notes, index of names, reproductions of illustrations from the original manuscript
Desanti, Dominique. A Woman In Revolt-A Biography of Flora Tristan. New York, Crown Publishers,
1972. Dust jacket.
Detre, Jean. A Most Extraordinary Pair-Mary Wollstonecraft and William Godwin.
New York, Doubleday and Company, 1975. New York, Doubleday & Co., 1975.
Devey, Louisa. Life of Rosina -Lady Lytton. London, Swan Sonneschein, Lowrey & Co., 1887. Contains
numerous extracts from original autobiography and other original Documents published in Vindication of
Her Memory. Engraved portrait frontispiece. First edition.
Dilke, Mrs. Ashton. Women’s Suffrage. Introduction by Wm. Woodall, M.P., The Imperial
Parliament edited by Sydney Buxton, M.P. Swan Sonnenschein & Co., 1885.
Doan, Laure L. (Editor). Old Maids to Radical Spinisters - Unmarried Women in the 20th Century Novel.
Chicago, Illinois. University of Illinois Press, 1991. LHD’s signature on back cover. Athens, Ga.
Doggett, Maeve E. Marriage, Wife-Beating and the Law in Victorian England. Published in Columbia,
South Carolina by the University of South Carolina Press, 1973.
Doress, Paula Brown, Siegal, Diana Laskin. Ourselves, Growing Older - The Midlife and Older Women.
Women Aging with Knowledge and Power. New York, Simon and Schuster, 1987.
Dorr, Rheta Childe. Susan B. Anthony. - The Woman Who Changed The Mind of A Nation. New York,
Frederick A. Stokes Co., 1928.
Doughan, David & Denise Sanchez. Feminist Periodicals 1855-1984. New York University Press. 1978. An
Annotated critical bibliography of British, Irish Commonwealth and International titles.
Douglas, Ann. The Feminization of American Culture. New York, Alfred A. Knopf. 1977.
How the Victorian alliance between women and the clergy; and the popular literature to which that alliance
gave birth, fostered a sentimental society and the beginnings of modern mass culture.
Drake, Emma F. Angell. M.D. Purity and Truth-Self and Sex Series. What A Woman of 45 Should Know?
New York and London, The Virgo Publishing Company, 1902. What a Man of Forty-Five Ought to Know.
DuBois, Ellen Carol. Feminism and Suffrage. The Emergence of An Independent Women’s Movement in
America 1848-1869. Ithaca, New York, Cornell University Press, 1978. Duplicate.
Duncan, Jacci & Lynn Page Whitaker. The Women's History Guide to Washington. Boston, MA., The
Charles River Press, 1998.
Duncan, Jacci. Washington for Women-A Guide to Working & Living in the Washington Metropolitan
Area. Washington, D.C. Madison Books, 1997.
Duniway, Abigail Scott. Path Breaking. An Autobiographical History of the Equal Suffrage Movement in
Pacific Coast States. Republication of the 1914 Portland edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Dusky, Lorraine. Still Unequal-The Shameful Truth About Women and Justice in America. Crown
Publishers, 1996. Dust jacket.
Dye, Nancy Schrom. As Equals and as Sisters: Feminism, Unionism, and the Women's Trade Union League
of New York. Columbia, [MO|. University Of Missouri Press, 1980.
Earhart, Amelia. 20 HRS. 40 MINS. OUR FLIGHT IN THE FRIENDSHIP. New York, Putnam &
Company, 1928. First Edition. Signed by AE. About fine in a Vg.+ dj. (A few small chips at edges of dust
jacket Some short edge tears) The famous aviator's FIRST book. Scarce in dust jacket.
East, Charles, Editor. Sarah Morgan: The Civil War Diaries of a Southern Woman. University of Georgia,
Athens, Ga., 1991.
Edmunds, S. Emma E. Nurse and Spy in the Union Army. Adventures and Experiences Of A Women in
Hospitals, Camps and Battlefields. W. W. Williams Co., 1865.
Eliot, George. The Mill on the Floss. New York, Hurst and Co., |1876.|.
Eliot, George. Adam Bede - Romolo. London, John B. Aiden, 1884. New Edition. Complete in one
volume.
Elliott, Maud Howe. The Eleventh Hour in the Life of Julia Ward Howe. Boston, Little Brown & Co.,
1911. Note from the first page from Ms. Howe to Dr. George Dock, December 13, 1929.
E.R.A. Handbook. The Complete Text of the Equal Rights Amendment Unabridged. New York, Gans and
Harris.
Evans, Sara M. Born for Liberty-A History of Women In America. New York: The Free Press, 1989. With
dust jacket.
Fawcett, Barbara. Feminist Perspective Series. Feminist Perspective on Disability. New Jersey, Prentice
Hall, 2000.
Fawcett, Millicent Garrett. Women’s Suffrage. A Short History of A Great Movement. Republication of the
1912 London edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Fawcett, Millicent Garrett. LL.D. Women’s Suffrage. A Short History of A Great Movement. London, T.C.
& E.C. Jack, 1912.
Feeley, Dianne. Why Women Need the Equal Rights Amendment. An Abridged version of an article that
was first published in the April 1973 of International Socialist Review. Pathfinder Press. May, 1973.
Ferguson, Trudi C. + Sharpies, Madeline. Blue Color Women-Trailblazing Women Take on Men - Only
Jobs. New Horizon Press, 1994.
Figes, Eva. Patriarchal Attitudes: The Cas for Women in Revolt London, Fawcett Premier Book, 1971.
Duplicate.
Findlen, Barbara. Listen Up-Voices from the Next Feminist Generation-. Seal Press, 1995.
Fineman, Martha Albertson; Thoomadsen, Nancy Sweet (Editors). At the Boundaries of Law - Feminism
and Legal Theory. London, Routledge, 1991.
Fisher, Elizabeth. Woman's Creation: Sexual Evolution and the Shaping of Society. New York, Anchor
Press/Doubleday. 1979.
Flexnor, Eleanor. Century of Struggle. The Women’s Rights Movement in the United States. Cambridge,
Ma. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1959. Dust jacket. Duplicate.
Flexnor, Eleanor. Century of Struggle. The Women’s Rights Movement in the United States. Revised
Edition. Cambridge, Ma. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1975.
Forbes, Malcolm. Women Who Make A Difference. From Queen Alexandra of England to Ann Eliza (Mrs.
Brigham) Young, - Little Known Stories of One Hundred Women Who Changed their World, and Ours.
New York, Simon & Schuster. 1990.
Forman, S.E.; Majorie Shuler. The Woman Voter’s Manual. New York, The Century Co., 1918. With the
very rare dust jacket.
Fowler, William W. Woman on the American Frontier - A Valuable and Authentic History of the heroism,
adventures, privations, captivities, trials, and noble lives and deaths of the “Pioneer Mothers of the
Republic.” Large collection of stories about the winning of the west and probably apocryphal for the most
part. Republication of the 1879 Hartford edition. New York, Source Book Press.
Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. Feminism is not the Story of My Life. - How Today’s Feminist Elite has Lost
Touch with the Real Concerns of Women. Nan A. Talese, 1996. Dust jacket
Ferress, Myra Marx, Beth B. Hess. Controversy and Coalition: The New Feminist Movement Across Three
Decades of Change (Social Movements Past and Present) Published August 1994 Twayne Publishers;
Edition: Revised Controversy and Coalition: The New Feminist Movement Across Three Decades of
Change (Social Movements Past and Present.
Freeman, Jo. The Politics of Women's Liberation A Case Study of an Emerging Social Movement and its
Relation to the Policy Process. New York, Longman Inc. 1975.
Freeman, Lucy; La Follette, Sherry; Zabriskie, George. BELLE : The Biography of Belle Case La Follette.
New York. Beaufort Books, 1966.
Froiseth, Jennie Anderson (Editor). The Women of Mormonism: Or The Story of Polygamy As Told By
The Victims Themselves. Detroit. C.G.C. Paine. 1887.
Fulenwider, Claire Knoche. Feminism in American Politics: A Study of Ideological Influence (Studies of
Influence in International Relations). Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University. 1980.
Friday, Nancy. My Mother-My Self. The Daughter’s Search for Identity. New York, Dellacorte Press Co.,
1978.
Friedan, Betty. The Fountain of Age - A Version of Chapter Nine was previously published in Ladies
Home Journal. Sept, 1984. New York, Simon and Schuster. 1993.
French, Marilyn. Beyond Power. Beyond Power of Women, Men and Morals. Summit Books.
French, Marilyn. The War Against Women. New York, Summit Books, 1992.
Fulford, Roger. Votes for Women: The Story of a Struggle. Readers Union. London, Faber and Faber.
1958.
Fuller, Paul E. Laura Clay and the Woman’s Rights Movement. The University of Kentucky, 1975.
Fulton, Rev. J.D. The True Woman. Woman As God Made Her. Boston, Lee and Shepard, 1869. The
author, in response to the movement to allow women to vote, explores the place of women in society as per
his interpretation of the Bible’s teachings.
Gallaher, Ruth A. Legal and Political Status of Women In Iowa. The State Historical Society of Iowa, 1918.
Historical Accounts of the Rights of Women in Iowa from 1838 to 1918.
Gamble, Ezra Burt. The Evolution of Woman. An Inquiry Into the Dogma Of her Inferiority to man. New
York, Putnam and Company, 1894. First Edition. Scarce. Having determined that female organization is
nowise inferior to male, Gamble set forth the principal data brought forward by naturalists bearing on the
subject of the origin and development of the two lines of sexual demarcation, and, by means of the facts
observed by explorers among peoples in the various stages of development, to trace, as far as possible, the
effect of such differentiation upon the individual, and upon the subsequent growth of human society. Previous
owners stamp and signature.
Garland, Anne Witte. Women Activists. Challenging the Abuse of Power. New York. The Feminist Press At
CUNY, 1988.
Garrette, Eve. A Political Handbook for Women. Your Ballots Worth. New York, Doubleday, Doran and Co.,
Inc. 1943,1944.
Gates, Elizabeth. Sometimes Suppressed and Sometimes Embroidered": The Life and Writing of Elizabeth
Robins, 1862-1952. Mobile, The University of Alabama. 1994.
Gates, M.A. & G. Evelyn. Editors. The Woman’s Year Book 1923-1924. Compiled by The National Union of
Societies for Equal Citizenship. Women Publishers, London. Includes 'Womans' Emancipation Historical
Survey' by Mrs. Henry Fawcett, 'The Present Position of Women Internationally' by Chrystal MacMillan, 'The
Future of the Women's Movement' by Eleanor Rathbone, with short articles on different aspect of the year as
effecting women, 'The Industrial Year', 'The Political Year', 'The Professional Year', 'The Year in Arts', 'The
Social Year’, The Literary Year', ‘Fashions', a section on National Government covers Women's Suffrage,
Women in Parliament, Influence of the Women's vote, 'Women and the Law', 'Women's sports', 'Education',
'The Occupations for Women', 'Women and the Home', 'The Co-operative Movement'.
Gatlin, Rochelle. American Woman Since 1945. New York, MacMillan Educational Ltd., 1987.
George, Margaret. One Woman’s ‘Situation’. A Study of Mary Wollstonecraft Chicago, Illinois. University of
Illinois Press, 1970. Dust jacket.
Gies, Frances & Joseph. Women In the Middle Ages. The Lives of Real Women in the Vibrant Age of
Transition. New York, Barnes & Noble. 1980.
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. The Man-Made World.-Or Our Andro-entric Culture. Republication of the 1911
New York edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. Women and Economics: A Study of the Economic Relations Between Man and
Women As A Factor in Social Revolution. Boston, G.P. Putnam & Sons, 1908. First published in 1898.
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman- An Autobiography. New York &
London, D. Appleton & Company, 1935.
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. The Living of Charlotte Perkins Gilman. New York, Arno Press, 1972.
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. Herland. A Lost Feminist Utopian Novel. New York: Pantheon Books, N.Y. 1979.
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins. The Home Its Work and Influence. Republication of the 1903 edition. New
York, Source Book Press, 1970.
[Gilman] Stetson, Charlotte Perkins. Women and Economics. A Study of Economic Relation Between Men
and Women as a Factor in Social Evolution. Republication of the 1898 Boston edition. New York, Source
Book Press, 1970.
Glasgow, Maude. The Subjection Of Women And The Traditions Of Men. New York, M. I. Glasgow, 1940.
Gleadle, Kathryn. The Early Feminists. Radical Unitarians and the Emergence of the Women's Rights
Movement, 1831-1851. Palgrave MacMillan. 1995. This volume redefines the origins of the 19th-century
women's rights campaigns in Britain, demonstrating that a vibrant feminist network existed during the
1830s and 1840s. Their pioneering work is shown to have fed directly into the women's rights movement of
the subsequent decades.
Godwin, Williams. Memoirs of Mary Wollstonecraft London, Constable & Co., 1928.
Goldmark, Josephine. Impatient Crusader- Florence Kelley's Life Story. Urbana, III., University of Illinois
Press, 1953. Dust jacket.
Gomick, Vivian. Essays in Feminism. N.Y. Harper & Row Publishers, 1970. With seal of LHD.
Goodenough, Simon. Jam and Jerusalem. A Pictorial History of Britain's Greatest Women's Movement
London, Collins. 1977. Previous owner’s notes.
Goodman, Ellen. At Large. New York, Summit Books, 1981. Dust jacket.
Goodwin, Grace Duffield. Anti-Suffrage: Ten Good Reasons. New York, Duffield and Company. 1912.
Contains chapters entitled: "The Ballot Not a Right," "Four Classes That Constitute a Menace," "Sex a
Dominant Factor," "Analysis of One of the Suffrage Platforms”.
Gordon, Elizabeth Putnam. Women Torch Bearers. The Story of The Woman's Christian Temperance
Union. Evanston, Illinois. The National Woman's Christian Temperance Union Publishing House, 1924.
Presentation copy:“Mrs. A.H. Parnell, Child Welfare Supt McLendon W.C. & U. by Mrs. Lee Reeves, State
Director, October 23,1930”. Second edition.
Gordon, Felice D. After Winning-The Legacy of the New Jersey Suffragists - 1920-1947. Rutgers, N.J.
Rutgers Univesity Press, 1986. Dust jacket.
Gornick, Vivian; Moran, Barbara K. Women In Sexist Society. Studies in Power and Powerlessness. New
American Library, 1972.
Graham, Abbie. Ladies In Revolt Woman's Press (YWCA), NY & Cincinnati, 1934. Previous owner’s
signature on front cover.
Grant, Mrs. Anne. Memoirs of An American Lady. Sketches and Manners and Scenery in America as They
Existed Previous to the Revolution. London, W. Wells, Thomas B. Wait and Co. Hastings, Etheridge and
Bliss, 1809.
Greenbie, Marjorie Barstow. My Dear Lady: The story of Anna Ella Carroll, the Great Unrecognized
Member of Lincoln's Cabinet Whittlesey House, 1940. Dust jacket
Griffith, Elizabeth. In Her Own Right. Oxford, England, Oxford University Press, 1984. Presentation
inscription from the author.
Griffin, Gabriele. (Editor). Feminist Activism in the 1990’s. Gender & Society Feminist
Perspectives. London, Taylor & Francis. 19
Grimes, Alan P. The Puritan Ethic and Woman Suffrage. London, Oxford University Press, 1967.
Investigates the Woman Suffrage Movement in the two states where it was first adopted: Utah and
Wyoming.
Sarah Grimke (1792-1873). One of famous Grimke sisters of South Carolina were two early female
abolitionists and women's rights activists, traveling throughout the North, lecturing about their first-hand
experiences with slavery on their family plantation.
Thorp, John. Letters of the Late John Thorp, of Manchester, a Minister of the Gospel in the Society of
Friends to Which is Prefixed a Memoir of the Life of the Writer. NY- 261 Pearl St/ Baltimore - 212 Market
St: Samuel Wood & Sons, 1821, NY- 261 Pearl St/ Baltimore - 212 Market St, 1821. Inscribed on title
Page: “To Caesar Morris from his friend, S.M. Grimke".
Grimke, Sarah M. Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Woman. Addressed to Mary
S. Parker, President of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society. Republication of the 1838 Boston edition.
New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Grimshaw, Patricia. Women's Suffrage in New Zealand. Auckland University Press, 1972. 2 copies - one with
dust jacket
Gurko, Miriam. The Ladies of Seneca Falls. Birth of the Women's Rights Movement New York, MacMillan
and Co. 1974.
Habedgger, Alfred. My Wars Are Laid Always In Books. The Life of Emily Dickinson. New York. Random
House, 2001.
Hale, Sarah Josepha. Woman's Record - or Sketches of all Distinguished Women, from The Creation to
A.D. 1854. New York, Source Book Press., 1970. Republication of the 1855 New York edition. New York,
Source Book Press.
Hammer, Barbara. Antifeminism and Family Terrorism - A Critical Feminist Perspective. Lanham, Md.,
Rowman and Littlefield, 2002. Review copy.
Hankins, Marie Louise. Women of New York. Published at the Office of Marie Louise Hankins & Co.,
1861.
Harper, Ida Husted (Editor). History of Women Suffrage. Volume V & Volume VI. 1900-1920. Two
Volumes. Republication of the 1904 edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Harper, Ida Husted. The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony. Includes public Addresses, Her Own Letters
and those from contemporaries during fifty years. Volume one only. With bookplate of Public Library Concord, New Hampshire. New York. Hollenbeck, 1898.
Harper, Ida Husted. The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony. Volume I. [And] Theodore Stanton & Harriet
Stanton Blatch (Editors). Elizabeth Cady Stanton, As Revealed in Her Letters Diary and Reminiscences.
Harper & Brothers Publishers, New York and London. Copyright 1969. Arno Press.
Harriman, J. Borden. From Pinafores to Politics. New York, Henry Holt & Co., 1923.
Harris, Barbara. English Aristocratic Women 1450-1550. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Marriage, Family, Property and Careers.
Harrison, Ethel B. Freedom Of Women - An argument Against the Proposed Extension of The Suffrage to
Women-Women in Political Evolution. Watts & Co., Johnson's Court, Fleet Street, London, 1908.
Hause, Steven C. Hubertine Auclert. The French Suffragette. New Haven, Yale Univ. Press. 1987.
Haviland, Laura S. A Woman’s Life Work.- Including Thirty Years Service on the Underground Railroad
and in the War. S.B. Shaw, 1881. Much on the Underground Railroad, Freedman's Aid Commission.
Hayes, George. Representation and Suffrage in Massachusetts, 1620-1691 (John Hopkins University
Studies in Historical and political Science;; Ser. 12, No. 8-9). John Hopkins Press, 1894. Presentation copy
from the author.
Hawtin, Gillian. Votes for Wimbledon Women. A New View of Wimbledon, Wimbledon During the XlXth
Century 1830-1914 Mirror of Empire. The Authoress Press., 1993.
Helmond, Marji Van. Votes for Women.-The Events of Merseyside-1870-1928. National
Henry, Sherrye. The Deep Divide - Why American Resist Equality. New York, MacMillan Publishing
Company, 1994. Dust jacket.
Herndl, Diane Price. Invalid Women. Figuring Feminine Illness in American Fiction & Culture- 1840-1940.
University of North Carolina Press, 1993.
Higgs, Mary. Glimpses Into The Abyss. N.P., P.S. King and Son., 1906.
Hill, Anita Faye; Emma Coleman Jordan. (Editors). Race, Gender, and Power in America.
The Legacy of the Hill-Thomas hearings. Oxford University Press, 1995. Dust jacket
Hill, Mary A. Charlotte Perkins Gilman. The Making of A Radical Feminist -1860-1896. Phila., PA.,
Temple University Press, 1980.
Hobbs, Lisa. Love and Liberation - Up Front with the Feminists. New York, McGraw-Hill, Inc. 1970. Dust
jacket.
Hobman, D.L. Go Spin You Jade - Studies in the Emancipation of Women. London, C.A. Watts & Co.,
1957.
Hodgins, Thomas. The Canadian Franchise Act. With Notes of Decision On the Imperial Acts Relating to
Registrations, and on The Provincial Franchise and Election Acts. Toronto. Roswell & Hutchinson, 1886.
Holm, Jeanne. Women in the Military-An Unfinished Revolution. Novato, California, Presido Press. 1982.
Holtby, Winifred. Woman and A Changing Civilization. London, John Lane/ The Bodley Head. Ca. 1936.
A scarce discussion of 'the woman problem' by the novelist and liberal feminist friend of Vera Brittain.
Holtby discusses Wollstonecraft, the right to work, the right to property, Herr Hitler finds a cure for unemployment, Mussolini and the population theory, and other topics of contemporary feminist interest. With
a bibliography and index.
Hooker, Edith Houghton. The Laws of Sex. Richard G. Badger, The Gorham Press, 1921. Booksellers
ticket
Hooker, Isabella Beecher. The Constitutional Rights of the Women of the United States. An Address
Before the International Council of Women, Washington, D.C., March 30,1888. UMI Books on
Demand.
Hopwood, C.H. and F. J. Coltman. Registration Cases. Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the
Court of Common Pleas.- From Michaelmas Term, 1868 to Trinity Term. 1872. London, Stevens and Sons,
1873.
Howe, Julia Ward. Reminiscences 1819-1899. With Portraits and Illustrations. Boston, The Riverside
Press, Houghton Mifflin & Co., 1900. Duplicates.
[Howe, Julia Ward). Mine Eyes Have Seen the Glory. A Biography of Julia Ward Howe. Boston, Little,
Brown & Co., 1979. Dust jacket
Howe, Julia Ward. Our Famous Women. An Authorized Record of the Lives and Deeds of Distinguished
American Women of Our Times. Margaret Fuller. Boston, Roberts Brothers, 1883.
Howe, Julia Ward. Reminiscences 1819-1899. Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1899.
Howe, Florence. (Editor). Woman and the Power to Change- a Volume of Essays Sponsored by The
Carnegie Commission on Higher Education. N.Y., McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1975. Dust jacket
Howe, Julia Ward. Famous Women: Margaret Fuller. Boston, Roberts Brothers, 1896. With a autograph
signed note: “I knew Margaret Fuller, and knew her to be a great mind, great hearted women. May 1900”.
An important association.
Julia Ward Howe (1819-1910) was a prominent American abolitionist, social activist, and poet who is best
remembered as the author of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic." Margaret Fuller (1810-1850) in the
history of women's rights in the United States. She was a leading thinker in the nineteenth century, a major
influence on Transcendental thought.
Howland, Courtney W. (Editor). Religious Fundamentalism and the Human Rights of Women. London,
Palgrave. 1999.
Hubbard, Alice. Life Lessons. Truths Concerning People Who Have Lived / For the Young of All Ages.
East Aurora, New York, The Roycrofters, 1911. This unique collection contains biographies of Susan B.
Anthony, David Swing, Mary Wollstonecraft, Robert Louis Stevenson, Friedrich Froebel, Henry David
Thoreau, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Another handsome production from Elbert Hubbard and the
Roycrofters, featuring typography by Charles Rosen and title page, initials, and ornaments by Dard Hunter.
Hubbard, B.V. Socialism, Feminism & Suffragism, The Terrible Targets. Chicago, American Publishing
Company, 1915.
Hubbard, Elbert. Little Journeys to Homes of Great Lovers: William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft.
Aurora, New York, 1906. Vol. XVII. February, 1906. No. 2. Roycrofter's Press.
Hudson, Kenneth. Men and Women. Feminism and Anti-Feminism Today. London, David & Charles.
1968. Previous owners bookplate and seal.
Hunt, Dr. Harriott K. Glances and Glimpses - Or Fifty Years Social, Twenty Years Professional Life.
Republication of the 1856 Boston edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970. 2 copies.
Irwin, Inez Haynes. Angels and Amazons A Hundred Years of American Women. Doubleday, Doran &
Company, Inc., Garden City, NY, 1933. 2 copies: 1). With dust jacket: 2). Second copy without dust jacket
Irwin, Inez Haynes. Up Hill With Banners Flying - The Final Triumphant Campaign in the Long Struggle
to Win the Vote for American Women, brilliantly told at the time by Inez Haynes Irwin, in her Story of the
Woman's Party. Penobscott, Maine, Traversity Press, 1964.
Irwin, Inez Haynes. The Story of Alice Paul And the National Women’s Party. Denlinger’s Publishers Ltd.
1977.
Jackson, Guida M. Women Rulers Throughout The Ages-An Illustrated Guide. ABC-Clio. 1990.
Jacobs, William Jay. Mother, Aunt Susan and Me. The First Fight for Women Rights. Coward, McCann &
Geoghegan, Inc. 1979. Previous owners name.
James, Henry; Greeley, Horace and Andrews, Stephen Pearl. Love, Marriage, and Divorce, and the
Sovereignty of the Individual. Republication of the 1860 New York edition. New York, Source Book Press.
1970.
Janeway, Elizabeth. Between Myth and Morning-Women Awakening. New York, William Morrow &
Company, Inc. 1975.
Jessup, Henry Wynans. Law for Wives and Daughters. Their Rights and Obligations. Boston, The
MacMillan Co., 1927. Jessup "gives full and clear explanation of the status, rights, duties, liabilities, and
risks of a woman under the law in respect of her age, her body, her brains, her money, her business, and her
relations to others as daughter, wife, mother, employer, employee, principal, fiduciary, beneficiary, etc.,
etc.
Jex-Blake, Dr. Sophia. Medical Women. A Thesis and a History. Republication of the 1886 Edinburgh
edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Jex-Blake, Sophia. Medical Women - Two Essays. 1- Medicine as a Profession For Women. II. Medical
Education of Women. Edinburgh: Williams Oliphant & Co., John Lindsey, Printer. 1872. Signed in front
cover: “Miss Anthony from A.M.L. Edinburgh, August, 1883.”
Johnson, George W. and Lucy A. Josephine Butler. An Autobiographical Memoir - Personal Reminiscences of
the Great Crusade. Bristol, England. J.W. Arrowsmith, 1909. The auto biographical memoir of the founder &
leader of the movement against legalized prostitution (Contagious Diseases Acts 1864,1866,1869).
Johnston, D.C. Scraps. No. 1.1849. New Series. Boston: D. C. Johnston, [1849]. Oblong folio. 4 engraved
plates, each containing about 9 individual engravings. Tissue guards. Illustrated wrappers. Wrappers soiled,
engravings a trifle soiled around the edges but very good. One of Johnston's delightful series of "Scraps,"
satirizing the life and customs of the times. The second plate is entitled "Women's Rights" and spoofs women
in several role-reversal scenes. Other plates depict various scenes including "An Old Curiosity Shop" and
spoofs of the Gold Rush, the Mexican War, an art auction, &c., &c. Hamilton 938, referring to Johnston as the
"American Cruikshank.". Illustrated by Johnston.
Kamm, Josephine. Rapiers & Battleaxes-The Women's Movement & Its Aftermath. London, George Allen &
Unwin Lts., 1966. Dust jacket. With stamp: “1918-1968 Suffrage Stamp.
Kane, Harnett, T. Spies for the Blue and Gray. Hanover House, 1954. The Famous Spies of the Civil War.
Kanowitz, Leo. Sex Roles In Law and Society - Cases and Materials. Albuquerque, University of New Mexico
Press -1973. Previous owner’s inscription.
Kearney, Belle. A Slave Holder’s Daughter. The Abbey Press, 1900.
Kelly, Audrey. Lydia Becker & the Cause. University of Lancaster, 1992.
Kemble, Frances Anne. Poems. Boston, Ticknor & Fields, 1859. An American edition. First edition published
in London, 1844.
Kemble, Frances Anne. Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation. New York, Harper & Bros., 1863.
First American edition, first issue. Written by an American actress resident in England, the author published
the book in England during the Civil War in order to counteract pro- Confederacy sentiment in England.
Kemble, Frances Ann. Records of Later Years. New York, Henry Holt & Co., 1882. American First edition.
Kennedy, Mary/ Lubelska, Cathy/ Walsh, Val (Editors). Making Connections Women's Studies, Women's
Movements, Women's Lives . London, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 1993.
Kent Anderson Leslie. Woman of Color - Daughter of Privilege. The Life Of Amanda American Dickson
1849-1894. UGA 1995. Signed copy From the author.
Kent, Susan Kingsley. Sex and Suffrage in Britain 1860-1914. Princeton, N.J. The Princeton University
Press. 1987.
Kerber, Linda. Women of the Republic. - Intellect & Ideology in Revolutionary America. Durham, University
of North Carolina Press, 1980.
Kerber, Linda K; Jane Sherron DeHart. Women’s America-Refocusing the Past. (3rd Edition) New York,
Oxford University Press, 1991.
Kerr, Andrea Moore. Lucy Stone-Speaking Out for Equality. Rutgers, New Jersey,
Rutgers University Press, 1992. Dust jacket
Key, Ellen. Love and Marriage, with a Critical and Biographical introduction by Havelock Ellis. Translated
from the Swedish by Arthur G. Chater. Republication of 1911 New York edition. New York, Source Book
Press, 1970.
Key, Ellen. The Renaissance of Motherhood. Republication of the 1914 New York edition. New York, Source
Book Press, 1970
Kombluh, Joyce L & Mary Frederickson. Sisterhood and Solidarity. Workers' Education for Women 19141984. Philadelphia, PA: Temple University Press, 1984, Dustjacket.
Kraditor, Aileen S. The Ideas of the Women Suffrage [Movement 1890-1920. New York, Columbia
University Press. Dust jacket
Kramare, Cheris and Beth Stafford (Editors). For Alma Mater theory and practice in feminist scholarship,
Contributors. 26 prominent and promising young scholars comment provocatively on the nature, objectives,
and difficulties of their commitment to feminist scholarship. University of Illinois Press, 1985.
Kuzmack, Linda Gordon. The Jewish Woman's Movement In England and the United States. 1881-1931
Columbus -Ohio State University Press, 1990.
Kurtz, Benjamin P. and Autrey, Carrie C. (Editors). Four New Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft and Helen
M. Williams. Berkeley, California, University of California Press, 1937.
Lader, Lawrence. Abortion 11-Marking the Revolution. An authoritative study by a leader of the campaign
to legalize abortion - a blueprint to secure this right of women everywhere. Boston, Beacon Press, 1973.
Dust jacket.
Lamb, Myrna. The Mod Donna & Scyklon Z-A Play of Women's Liberation. Pathfinder Press, 1970.
Larrington, Carolyne. Women and Writing in Medieval Europe. London, Routledge, 1995.
Laurence, Leslie; Weinhouse, Beth. The Alarming Truth About How Medicines Mistreats Women.
Westminister, Maryland. Ballentine Books, 1994.
Lawrence, Frederick W. Pethick. Women's Fight for the Vote. A Chronicle of the Campaign which is still in
Progress. London: The Woman’s Press. 1910.
Lawrence. Pethick, F.W. Fate Has Been Kind. Autobiography: The Remarkable Career with the Politics and
Personalities of the Present Century as its Background. London, Hutchinson & Co. N.D. [1943].
Lawrence, Margaret. We Write As Women. London, Michael Joseph Ltd. 1937. Previous owners bookplate.
Lebsock, Suzanne. The Free Women of Petersburg-Status and Culture in a Southern Town-1784- 1860.
Boston, W.W. Norton & Company, 1984.
Leighton, Margaret Shelley's Mary. A Life of Mary Godwin Shelley. New York, Farrar, Strauss and Giroux,
1973. Dust jacket.
Lenin, V.I. The Emancipation of Women. International Publishers, 1966.
Lenz, Elinor; Barbara Myerhoff. The Feminization of America. - How Women’s Values Are Changing Our
Public & Private Lives. L.A., Ca., Jeremy P. Tarcher, Inc. 1985.
Lerner, Gerda. The Majority Finds Its Past-Placing Women in History. New York, Oxford University
Press, 1979.
Leslie, Anita. Mrs. Fitzherbert. New York. Charles Scribner’s Sons., 1990.
Levine, Judith. My Enemy, My Love. Man-hating and Ambivalence in Women's Lives. New York,
Doubleday, 1992.
Levy, Marion Fennelly. Each In Her Own Way- Five Women Leaders of the Developing World. Boulder,
Colorado. Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1988.
Lewis, Jane (Editor). Before the Vote Was Won. Arguments for and Against Woman Suffrage 1864-1896.
Dust jacket. 2 copies.
Liberation Now. Writing From the Women’s Liberation Movement New York, Dell Printing. 1971.
Linford, Madeline. Mary Wollstonecraft. London, Leonard Parsons. Boston, Small Maynard & Co., 1924.
Linden-Ward, Blanche; Carol Hurd Green. Changing the Future-American Women in the 1960s. New York,
Twayne Publishers, 1993.
Linkugel, Wil A.; Solomon, Martha. Anna Howard Shaw- Suffrage Orator and Social Reformer. New York,
Greenwood Press, 1991.
Liswood, Laura A. Women World Leaders.- New York-Pandora: Harper Collins, 1995. The author talks to 15
women throughout the world who are, or have been, leaders of their country. Each has a story of her own,
revealing cultural diversities, successes and failures, dramas and tragedies.
Livermore, Mary A. What Shall We Do with Our Daughters? Boston, Lee and Shepard, 1883. Superfluous
Women and Other Lectures.
Livermore, Mary A. My Story of the War. A Woman’s Narrative of Four Years Personal Experience as a
Nurse in the Union Army. A.D. Worthington & Co., 1888. Previous owners inscription.
Lloyd, Trevor. Suffragettes International. The World-Wide Campaign for Women’s Rights. New York,
American Heritage Press, 1971.
Locke, Don. A Fantasy of Reason. London, Routledge & Kegan Paul. 1980. The Life and Thought of William
Godwin.
Loring, Rosalind K and Herbert A. Otto. New Life Options-The Working Woman's Resource Book. New
York, McGraw-Hill Inc. 1976. Autograph note under title page: “At Last, after a decade, the women's
movement is having a measurable impact - LHD". With LHD Library seal. With dust jacket.
The Lowell Offering, A Repository of Original Articles, written by "Factory Girls." April 1845. Lowell:
Misses Curtis & Farley, 1845,1845. Written and edited by the young women mill workers of Lowell. In this
issue, the editor answers a query regarding the real names of the contributors.
Lumpkin, Katharine De Pre. The Emancipation of Angelina Grimke. The University of North Carolina
Press, 1974. Dust jacket.
Lunardini, Christine A. From Equal Suffrage to Equal Rights- Alice Paul and the National Woman’s
Party, 1910-1928. New York, New York University Press, 1986.
Lundberg, Ferdinand and Marynia F. Farnham, M.D. Modern Women -The Lost Sex. New York, 1947.
Previous owner’s inscription.
Lutz, Alma. Created Equal. A Biography of Elizabeth Cady Stanton 1815-1902. New York, The John Day
Company, 1940.
Lloyd, Trevor. Suffragettes International. London, 1971, First edition. Trevor Lloyd describes the dramatic
and colourful struggle and traces the change in women's social position in the United States, Britain, and
continental Europe from the first stirrings in the early 19th century up to the Second World War.'
Lytton, Constance and Jane Warton (Spinster). Prisons and Prisoners: Some Personal Experiences. With
Portraits. London, England, William Heinemann, 1914. A militant suffragette, Lytton (1869-1923) was a
member of the Women's Social and Political Union and was frequently imprisoned for her activities. As an
upper class woman, she received preferential treatment and was released whenever she went on a hunger
strike. She therefore, disguised herself and was arrested as Jane Warton, a seamstress, being force fed so
violently, that she suffered a stroke that partially paralyzed her.
Lytton, Constance. I, Constance Lytton. Privately Printed. 1987.
MacDonald, Anne L. Feminine Ingenuity. Women & Invention in America. Ballantine Books. 1992.
MacDonald, Sharon; Pat Holden; Shirley Ardener (Editors). Images of Women in Peace and War. University
of Illinois Press, 1987.
Marcus, Jane. (Editor). Suffrage and the Pankhurst. Discusses the Life and work of Emmeline and Sylvia
Pankhurst. London. Routledge & Kegan Paul. 1987.
Marechal, G. La Femme et La Loi. Collection “Familia’’. Librarier Des Annales, 1909.
Margolis, Anne Throne; Margaret Granville Mair (Editor). The Isabella Beecher Hooper Project A Microfiche
edition of her paper and suffrage related correspondence owned by the Stowe- Day Foundation. 1979.
Marshall, Mrs. Julian. The Life and Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley. Two volumes. London, Richard
Bentley and Son. Publishers in Ordinary to Her Majesty Queen. 1899.
Mason, Mary Ann. Why Working Women Shouldn’t Be Treated Like A Man. New York, Simon & Schuster.
1988.
Matthews, Shailer (Editor). The Woman Citizen’s Library. Volume VUI-Women and the Law. Systematic
Course of Reading in Preparation for the Larger Citizenship. N.Y. The Civics Society, 1913.
Morgan, Elaine. The Descent of Woman. (The Man-Made Myth; Escape Route; Apre Remolded; Aggression;
Orgasm; Love; Speech; U-Turn; Man the Hunter; Primate Politics; What Women Want; Present & Future].
New York, Stein and Co., 1972.
McAllister Anna. Ellen Ewing. Wife of General Sherman. New York, Benziger Brothers, 1936.
McCabe, Joseph. The Story of the World's Oldest Profession. Prostitution in the Ancient, Medieval and
Modern Worlds. Girard, Kansas, Haldeman-Julius Publications, 1932.
McCann, Michael W. Rights at Work - Pay equity reform and the police of legal mobilization.
The University of Chicago Press. Ca. 1994.
McCorduck, Pamela, Nancy Ramsey. The Futures of Women-Scenarios for the 21st Century. AddisonWelsey Publishing Company, 1996. Dustjacket.
McCorvey, Norman; Andy Meisler. I Am Roe. My Life-Row vs. Wade - And Freedom of Choice. New
York, Harper Collins Publishers, 1994. Dust jacket.
McDonald, Ian. Vindication. A Postcard History of the Woman's Movement Bellow Publishing Company,
1989.
McElhaney, Jacqueline Masur. Pauline Periwinkle and Progressive Reform in Dallas. Texas A & M
University Press, 1998. Signed by the author. Dust jacket.
McFeely, William S. Frederick Douglass. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., Inc., 1991. Dust jacket Previous
owners signature.
McGregor, O.R. Divorce In England. A Centenary Study. London, Heinemann, 1957. First published in
1957. Contains: History of Divorce in England; Statistics of Divorce, Victorian Family, Christian marriage,
the Morton Commission; To Evidence And Report, etc.
McIntosh, Maria J. Woman In America- her Work and Her Reward. Boston, D. Appleton & Co., 1850.
Mackenzie, Midge. Shoulder to Shoulder - A Stirring History of the Militant Suffragettes. New York,
Alfred A. Knopf. 1975. 2 copies.
Mendel, Adele. Indoor Merrymaking and Table Decorations. Boston, W.A. Wilde Company, 1915.
Previous owner’s notes.
Merckx, Fernand, J.J. The Bolshevism of Sex: Femininity and Feminism. New York, The Higher Thought
Publishing Co., 1921. Signed by the author.
Mill, John Stuart. The Political Writings. The Franklin Library, 1982.
Mill, John Stuart. The Subjection of Women. Republication of the 1869 London edition. New York, Source
Book Press, 1970.
[Mill, John Stuart]. The National American Woman Suffrage Association, September 1895. Political
Science Studies Series. Volume I, No. 2.Page 894. John Mill Stuart: The Subjection of Women.
Mitchell, David. Queen Christabel. Biography of Christabel Pankhurst. London, MacDonald and Jane's.
1977.
Mitchell, David. The Fighting Pankhursts. A Study in Tenacity. The Trinity Press, Jonathan Cape, London,
1967. Cover has a picture of Mrs. Adela Pankhurst standing in front of a car.
Mitchell, Juliet, Oakley, Ann (Editors). What is Feminism. A Re-Examination. Blackwell Publishers/
Pantheon Books, 1986.
Mitchell, Mitchell. Monstrous Regiment: The Story of the Women of the First World War. New York, The
MacMillan Co., 1965.
Moers, Ellen. Literary Women. The Great Writers. New York, Doubleday & Co., 1976. Presentation copy
from N.O.W. members to LHD - With LHD bookplate and seal.
Moghissi, Haideh. Feminism and Islamic Fundamentalism. The Limits of postmodern analysis. Zed Books,
1999.
Momsen, Janet Henshall. Women and Development in the Third World. London, Routledge, 1991.
Moore, Frank. Women of the War. Heroism and Self-Sacrifice. S. S. Scranton & Co., 1866. Duplicate
Morewedge, Rosmaire Thee (Editor). The Role of Woman In Middle Ages. Collection of Essays. State
University of New York Press, 1975.
Morgan, David. Suffragists and Liberals-The Politics of Woman Suffrage In Britain. London, Basil Blackwell,
1975.
Morgan, Elaine. The Descent of Woman. |The Man-Made Myth; Escape Route; Angry Remolded; Aggression;
Orgasm; Love; Speech; U-Turn; Man the Hunter; Primate Politics; What Women Want; Present & Future].
New York, Stein and Co., 1972.
Morgan, Marabel. The Total Woman. Old Tappan, New Jersey, Fleming H. Revell Co. Ca. 1973.
Morgan, Robin. Sisterhood is Powerful - An Anthology of Writings from the Women's Liberation Movement.
New York, Random House, 1970. Dust jacket.
Morgan, Robin. (Editor). The Demon Lover. On the Sexuality of Terrorism. New York. W.W. Norton &
Company. 1989.
Morris, Celia. Bearing Witness: Sexual Harassment and Beyond - Everywoman's Story. Boston, Little
Brown & Co., 1994.
Moynihan, Ruth Barnes. Rebel For Rights. Abigail Scott Duniway. New Haven, Ct., 1983. Presentation copy
from author.
Murphy, Emily. Crusader (‘Janey Canuck'). Toronto, Canada. The McMillan Company of Canada Ltd. 1945.
National American Woman Suffrage Association. Victory - How Women Won It 1840-1940. A Centennial
Symposium. H. W. Wilson, New York, 1940.
National League of Women Voters. Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Convention. Richmond, Virginia.
April 16th to 22nd 1925. Washington, D.C. National League of Women Voters. 106 Pp.
Nelson, Mariah Burton. The Stronger Women Get, the More Men Love Football. Sexism & the American
Culture of Sports. New York, Harcourt Brace & Co., 1994. Signed by the author.
Newhouse, Nancy R. (Editor). Her, Through Women’s Eyes. Essays from the “Hers” column of The New
York Times. New York, Villard Books, 1985. Dust jacket.
Nickles, Elizabeth; Laura Ashcraft. The Coming Matriarchy- How Women Wil Gain the Balance of Power.
Berkley Books, 1981.
Norton, Caroline Sheridan. A Plain Letter to the Lord Chancellor. New York, 1922. Insert: Frank Alschul.
Noun, Louise R. Strong Minded Women. The Emergence of the Women Suffrage Movement in Iowa.
Ames, Iowa. The Iowa State University Press, 1969.
Oakley, Ann. Woman's work: The housewife, Past and Present. New York, Vintage Publ. Co.
O’Brien, Patricia. The Women Alone. Quadrangle/New York Times, 1973. Presentation copy from LHD to
“Cherry”. September, 1974.
Oldfield, Audrey. Woman Suffrage in Australia- A Gift of A Struggle. Cambridge University Press, 1992. 2
copies.
Ossoli, Margaret Fuller. Woman In the Nineteenth Century and Kindred Papers Relating to the Sphere.
Conditions and Duties of Woman. Edited by Ms. Ossoli’s brother, Arthur B. Fuller. Originally published in
1874, by Roberts Brothers. Greenwood Press, 1968.
Ossoli, Margaret Fuller. Women in the Nineteenth Century and the Kindred Paper relating to the Sphere.
Condition and Duties of Women. Edited by her brother, Arthur B. Fuller. Reprinted from a copy in the
collection of Harvard College Library. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Ostrogorski, Moisei. The Rights of Women: A Comparative Study in History and Legislation. Elibron
Classics. Reprint of the complete text published in 1893 by Swan Sonnenschein &
Company.
Pankhurst, Dame Christabel. Unshackled-The Story of How We Won the Vote. Edited by Lord PethickLawrence. Hutchinson of London, 1959. Dust jacket.
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. Poems of Mihail Eminescu. Translated from the Rumanian - With preface of George
Bernard Shaw and Introduction by N. lorga. London, Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., 1930.
Pankhurst, Emmeline. My Own Story. Republication of the 1914 London edition. New York, Source Book
Press. 1970.
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. The Suffragette. The History of the Women’s Militant Suffrage Movement 19051910. Republication of the 1911 London edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. Save Mothers- A Plea for Measures to Prevent the Annual Loss Of About 3000 Child
Bearing Mothers and 20,000 Lives In England Wales. N.Y. Alfred Knopf, 1903.
Pankhurst, Emmeline. My Own Story. London, Eveleigh Nash, 1914.
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. The Suffragette Movement. An Intimate Account Of Persons And ideals. London,
Longman, Green & Co., 1931.
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. The Home Front. Hutchinson And Co Ltd 1st Edition, 1932. An Account Of The
Efforts Of Sylvia Pankhurst And Others In East London To Combat The Misery Of The Wives And
Children Of The Fighting Men In The War”
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. The Home Front. A Mirror to Life In England during the World War. London,
Hutchinson & Co., Ltd. 1932.
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. The Suffragette. The History of the Women’s Militant Suffrage Movement 19051910. New York, Sturgis & Walton Co., May 1911.
Pankhurst, Sylvia E. The Suffragette, The History of the Women’s Militant Suffrage Movement 19051910. London, England, Gay and Hancock Ltd., June 1911. Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst (1882- 1960) was the
youngest daughter of Emmeline Pankhurst, who with her daughters Estelle and Christabel surged the
British suffrage movement forward from the shadows with a more militant response to the indignities
foisted upon women in England. This book, published in America later the same year, sparked a more
militant approach there as well.
Pankhurst, Richard. Sylvia Pankhurst - Artist and Crusader. London, Paddington Press, 1979.
Park, Maud Wood. Front Door Lobby-A Vivid Account of Hoe the 19th Amendment (19th Century) became a
reality. Boston, Beacon Press, 1960. An eyewitness account of the woman suffrage campaign in Washington
From 1917 to 1920.
Parks,Rosa. A Life. A Lipper/Penquin Books, 2000.
Peabody, Josephine Preston. Portrait of Mrs. W. A Play in Three Acts With An Epilogue. Boston:
Houghton Mifflin Co. 1922. Previous owners signature.
Peck, Mary Gray. Carrie Chapman Catt - A Biography. N.Y. The H.W. Wilson Company. 1944.
Perkins, A.J.G and Theresa Wolfson. Frances Wright - Free Enquirer. The Study of A Temperament New
York, Harper & Brothers, 1939.
Perry, Ruth. The Celebrated Mary Astell-An Early English Feminist. Chicago, Illinois. University of
Chicago Press, 1986.
Petrie, Glen. A Singular Iniquity. The Campaigns of Josephine Butler. New York, Viking Press, Dust jacket.
Pepper, William F. and Florence R. Kennedy. Sex Discrimination In Employment. Charlottesville,
Virginia. The Michie Company, 1981.
Pollak, Ruth. One Woman, One Vote Produced and Written by Ruth Poliak. Co-Produced Co- Written by
Felicia Widmann. Narrated by Susan Sarandon. NP Educational Film Center ND but ca.1998. Video
cassette of 106-minute documentary film original produced as part of "The American Experience"
documenting the 70-year struggle for woman suffrage. Starting with Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s demand for
woman suffrage at the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848 and culminating with the passage of the
Nineteenth Amendment, this film details the history of the movement Using text from letters of the major
activists - Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, et al. - vintage photographs, posters, and
contemporary film clips, the video shows how American history was made.
Pogrenbin, Letty Cottin. Getting Yours-How to Make The System Work for the Working Women. New
York. David McKay Co., Inc. 1975. LHD’s note: “Without this and other feminist publications Life at the U.S.
Military Academy would be unbearable/LHD 76”. With dust jacket
Priestley, Harold. Voice of Protest. A History of Civil Unrest in Great Britain. London, Leslie Frewin
Publishers, 1986.
Proffatt, John LL.B. Woman Before The Law. New York, G.P. Putnam & Sons. 1874.
Raeburn, Antonia. The Suffragette View. London, David & Charles, 1967. Preface by Malcolm Muggeridge.
Dust jacket.
Ramelson, Marian. Petticoat Rebellion. London, Lawrence and Wishart, 1976.
Rappaport, Doreen. American Women - Their Lives In Their Words. A Documentary history. New York,
Harper Collins Publishers, 1990.
Rambaugh, Bertha. The Political Status of Women in the United States. Introduction by Harriot Stanton
Blatch. - A Digest of the Various Laws Concerning Women in the Various states and Territories. New
York. G.P. Putnam Sons, 1911.
Rayne, Mrs. M.L. What Can a Woman Do In The Business and Literary World. Petersburg, New Hampshire.
Eagle Publishing Co., [1893].
Reid, Marion. A Pleas For Woman. Edinburgh, Polygon Press, 1988. First published in 1845 an early
important early feminist text.
Rensselaer, Mrs. Schuyler. Should We Ask for the Suffrage. American News Company. Preface note from
author explaining that this book was hastily written for publication in the New York- World. N.P., N.D.
Reeve, Tapping, et al. - The Law of Baron and Femme. Of Parent and Child, Guardian and Ward, Master
and Servant and of the Powers of the Courts of Chancery; with an Essay on the Terms Heir, Heirs, Heirs of
the Body. 3rd edition. Republication of the 1862 Albany edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Reid, Mrs. Hugo. Woman, Her Education and Influence. Boston, Fowler & Wells, 1854. Early reprint of
the first edition 1848.
Robbins, Elizabeth . Way Stations. Collection of British Authors. Leipzig, Bernhard Tacuchnitz, 1913.
Copyright edition.
Roberts, Charles. The Radical Countess. Carlisle, England, Steel Brothers Ltd. 1962. The History of the
Life of Rosalind Countess of Carlisle. With collateral material
Roberts, Diane. Myth of Aunt Jemima: Representations of Race and Religion. London, Routledge, 1994.
Roberts, Willa. We’re Voting Now. November 1920. Oversized. Frail enfranchised at home. Illustrated by
George Wright.
Robinson, Victor. Lives of the Great Altrurians: William Godwin and Mary Wollstonecraft. New York,
Folcroft Library Editions. 1978.
Roe, Clifford, G. The Great War on White Slavery. Fighting For the Protection of Our Girls/ Forewarned is
Forearmed / Ignorance is No Longer Innocence. Privately printed by Roe and Steadwell. London, England,
1911.
Roe, Clifford, G. The Great War on White Slavery. Fighting For the Protection of Our Girls/ Forewarned is
Forearmed / Ignorance is No Longer Innocence. Privately printed by Roe and Steadwell. London, England,
1911. Salesman's Dummy with signatures of subscribers in back. Enclosed with two signed typed testimonials
from the clergy.
Rogan, Helen. Mixed Company - Women in the Modern Army. New York, G. P. Putnam's & Sons. 1981. A
comprehensive study of the history and role of women in the army. Dust jacket.
Romero, Patricia W. E. Sylvia Pankhurst-Portrait of A Radical. New Haven, Ct, Yale University Press.
1990.
Rophie, Katie. The Morning After. Sex, Fear & Feminism on Campus. Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1993.
Dust jacket.
Rosen, Andrew. Rise Up Women! The Militant Campaign of the Women's Social and Political Union.
1903-1914. The Cat and Mouse Act Passed by the Liberal Government. London, RoutIedge& Kegan Paul,
1974. Dust jacket. 2 copies.
Rosenberg, Rosalind. Beyond Separate Spheres: Intellectual Roots of Modern Feminism. New Haven, Ct
Yale University Press. 1982.
[Rosine Association]. Report and Realties from the Sketch-Book of a Manager of the Rosine Association.
Phila, John Duross - Printer, 1855. In January 1847, a company of Ladies met to prepare A Petition to the
Legislature of Pennsylvania for the Abolition of Capitol Punishment and to arrange a calling for a public
meeting of women to consider the Propriety of Circulating the Petition. Previous owners stamp: Women's
Rescue Organization.
Ross, Isable. Son of Adam, Daughters of Eve. The Role of Women in American History. New York,
Harper & Row, 1969.
Rossi, Alice S. (Editor). The Feminist Papers from Adams to De Beauvoir-New York, Columbia University
Press,. 1973. Dust jacket.
Rowley, Frances A. Poems for The Times. Devoted to Woman’s Rights, Temperance, etc., etc. Miami
Printing and Publishing Co., 1871.
Rury, John L. Education and Women's Work. Female Schooling and the Division of Labor in Urban America.
State University of New York Press, 1991.
Russell, Diana, E.H. Rape In Marriage. New York, Collier Books, 1982.
Rutter, Peter. M.D. Sex Power & Boundaries - Understanding and Preventing Sexual Harassment New York.
Bantam Books, 1996.
Sachs, Karen. Sisters and Wives. The Past & Future of Sexual Equality. Greenwood Press, 1979.
Sanday, Peggy Reeves. A Woman Scorned-Acquaintance Rape on Trial. New York, Doubleday & Co., 1996.
Saunders, Kay, Raymond Evans. Gender Relations in Australia - Domination and Negotiation. Australia,
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1992.
Schnedier, Elizabeth M. Battered Women & Feminist Lawmaking- University Casework Series. New Haven,
R.I. Yale University Press, 2000.
Scott, Anne Firor. The Southern Lady. From Pedestal to Politics-1830-1930. Chicago, III., The University of
Chicago Press, 1970.
Scott, Joan Wallach. Gender and the Politics of History. New York. Columbia University Press, 1988.
Schenken, Suzanne O’Dea. FROM SUFFRAGE TO THE SENATE An Encyclopedia of American Women in
Politics. ABC-Clio Ltd, Oxford, United Kingdom, 1999. 2 vol. set An encyclopedia of American women in
politics. Forward by Ann W. Richards. The in-depth coverage also traces the political heritage of the abolition,
labor, suffrage, temperance, civil rights, feminist, and reproductive rights movement. Every women from
across the political spectrum who has served in the US House and Senate is included, along with women in the
judiciary and the US Cabinet Political progress over 150 years. Volume One only: Signed by Ruth Bader
Ginsburg.
Schlafly, Phyllis. The Power of the Positive Woman. New York, Arlington House, 1977. Dust jacket
Schlesinger, Arthur and Elizabeth. History of Women in America. 3 volumes. Boston, G.K. Hall & Co., 1973
Volumes 1-Book - A-L; Book II - M-Z: Etiquette, Periodicals. Volume III: Manuscript Catalogue, Manuscript
inventories, Picture Catalog. Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Ma.
Schwartz, Felice N. Breaking with Tradition - Women & Work, the New Facts of Life. Boston, Warner Bros.,
1992.
Scott, Bonnie Kime. Joyce and Feminism. Bloomington, Indiana, Indiana University Press, 1984. Dust jacket
Seifer, Nancy. Nobody Speaks For Me. Selt Portraits of American Working Class Women. New York, Simon
& Schuester, 1976. Dust jacket
Shanley, Mary Lyndon. Feminism, Marriage, and the Law in Victorian England- 1850-1895. l.B. Tauris &
Co., Ltd, 1989. Dust jacket.
Shepherd, Simon. (Editor). The Woman’s Sharp Revenge. Five Women’s Pamphlets from the Renaissance.
New York, Palgrave Macmillan. 1985.
Sheppard, Alice. Cartooning for Suffrage. University of New Mexico Press, 1994. Dust jacket
Sherr, Lynn. Failure Is Impossible. New York. Times Books-Random House,1995.
Shuler, Marjorie. For Rent - One Pedestal. Diary of Ms. Schuler. New York, National Woman Suffrage
Publishing Co., Inc. 1917.
Slaughter, Jane; Robert Kern. (Editors). European Women on the Left: Socialism, Feminism and the
Problems Faced by Political Women, 1880 to the Present. Westport, Ct., Greenwood Press, 1981.
Smith, Mrs. E. Oakes. Woman and Her Needs. Boston, Fowler and Wells, 1851. Previous owners signature.
Condition poor.
Smith, Bonnie G. (Editor). Global Feminisms Since 1945-A Survey of Issues and Controversies London,
Routledge, 2000.
Soloman, Martha M. (Editor). A Voice of Their Own-The Woman Suffrage Press, 1840-1910.
The University of Alabama Press, 1991. Dust jacket.
Soloway, Richard Allen. BIRTH CONTROL AND THE POPULATION QUESTION IN ENGLAND
1877-1930. The University of North Carolina Press. Ca. 1982. Newspaper page in back of book with
headline: 1252: TLC November 12, 1982 - Social Studies- The Gospel of Prevention- article mentions this
book. With dust jacket.
Soloway, Richard Allen. Women’s Self Defense Cases-Theory and Practice. The Michie Company, 1981.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. The Original Feminist Attack on the Bible. New York, Arno Press,
1974.
Stanton, Theodore & Harriet Standon Blatch. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Letters, Diary and Reminiscences. 2
volumes. New York, Harper & Brothers, 1922.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Eighty Years and More 1815-1897. Reminiscences. New York, Europeans
Publishing Co., 1898.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Eighty Years and More. Reminiscences of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Republication
of the 1898 London edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady Eighty Years and More, 1815-1897 -Reminiscences. Author’s presentation copy to
Helen Pierce Gallagher. European Publishing Co., 1898.
[Stanton, Elizabeth Cady & Susan B. Anthony] Ann Gordon, D. Editor. The Selected Papers of Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. 3 volumes. National Protection for National Citizens-1873-1880.
Rutgers University Press, Rutgers, N.J., 2003.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. History of Woman Suffrage. Volume I. Republication of the 1889 Rochester
edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Stanton, Anthony, Gage. (Editors). History of Woman Suffrage. Volume.II. Charles Mann & Co. New
York, 1881. \ Covers detached. Poor condition.
Stanton, Anthony, Gage. (Editors). History of Woman Suffrage. Volume. III. Charles Mann & Co., New
York:, 1881. Covers detached. Poor condition.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony, Susan B.; Gage, Matilda Joslyn (Editors). History of Woman Suffrage Volume II & Volume III. Republication of the 1889 Rochester edition. New York, Source Book Press,
1970.
Stanton, Theodore (Editor). The Woman Question in Europe. A Series of Original Essays. Introduction by
Frances Power Cobre. Republication of the 1884 New York edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970. 3
copies.
Stefan Zweig. Mary Queen of Scots. Hebert Reichner - Verlag, Vienne, 1935.
Stetson, Dorothy McBride. Women's Rights In France. Contributions in Women's Studies. Greenwood
Press, 1987.
Stern, Madeline. We, the Women. Career Firsts of 19th Century-America. University of Nebraska Press,
1994.
Stevens, Isaac N. An American Suffragette. New York, William Rickey & Co., 1911. The author dedicates
the novel thusly: "To those noble and courageous women of England and America who are trying to
demonstrate to the world that Civilization cannot reach the supreme heights of progress without giving will
always lack a vital element in its functions, so long as women are deprived of equal participation in its
operations.".
Stevens, Doris. Jailed for Freedom-American Women Win the Vote. N. Y. News Sage Press, 1995.
Stopes, Charlotte Carmichael. British Freewomen. Their Historical Privilege. Swan Sonnenschein & Co.,
1894.
Strachey, Ray. The Cause. A Short History of the Women's Movement In Great Britain. London, Cedrick
Chivers Ltd. 1974. Dust jacket.
Strang, Jessica. Working Women-An Appealing Look at the Appalling Uses and Abuses of the Feminine
Form. New York, Henry N. Abrams, Inc, 1984.
Strauss, Sylvia. Traitors to the Masculine Cause: The Men's Campaigns for Women's Rights, Volume. 35
Greenwood Press, 1982.
Suhi, Yuri. Ernestine Rose and the Battle for Human Rights. London, Reynal and Company. Ca. 1959.
With dust jacket. Duplicates.
Sullivan, George. The Day The Women Got the Vote. A Photo history of the Women’s Rights Movement.
Scholastic, Inc, 1994.
Sumner, Helen, Ph.D. Equal Suffrage, The Results of an Investigation in Colorado make for the Collegiate
Equal Suffrage League of New York State. New York, Harper and Brothers, 1909.
Swisshelm, Jane Grey. A Half A Century. This autobiography is a bird's eye view of the struggle of women
and African Americans._ Republication of the 1880 Chicago edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Symons, Geraldine. Miss Rivers & Miss Bridges. London, MacMillan Ltd., 1971.
Dust jacket.
Taylor, Elizabeth A. The Woman Suffrage Movement in Tennessee. New York, Bookman Associates,
1967. Dust jacket.
Tickner, Lisa. The Spectacle of Women-Imagery of the Suffrage Campaign- 1907-14. Chicago, Illinois,
The University of Chicago Press, 1988.
Tiffany, Walter C. Handbook on the Law of Persons & Domestic Relations. St. Paul, Minn. West
Publishing Co., 1896. Homebook series. Previous owners signature.
Thom, Mary (Editor). Letters to Ms. 1972-1987. With An Introduction by Gloria Steinem. New York,
Henry Holt & Company, 1987. Dust jacket.
Thompson, William. Appeal of One Half The Human Race. Against the Pretensions of The Other Half.
Virgo Press, 1983. First published in London, 1825. With the same title - Against The
Pretensions of the other half, Men, to retain then in political, and thence in civil and domestic slavery in
reply to a paragraph of Mr Mill's celebrated Article on Government.
Thompson, William. Appeal of One Half The Human Race, Against the Pretensions of the Other Half-Men.
Republication of the 1825 London edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Tomalin, Claire. The Life and Death of Mary Wollstonecraft. London: Weidenfeld And Nicolson, 1974.
Previous owners seal.
Todd, James M. (Editor). Wollstonecraft Anthology. Indiana University Press, 1977.
Dust jacket
Tong, Rosemarie. Women, Sex and The Law. Rowman & Littlefield, 1984.
Truman, Carole; Donna M. Merton; Beth Humphries. Research and Equality. U.C.L. Press Ltd, 1999.
Tuana, Nancy. Feminism & Science And Other Lasting Lessons I Learned in Catholic Schools. Indiana
University Press, 1989.
*Tucker, Henry St. George. Woman Suffrage by Constitutional Amendment. Contains the five lectures
delivered by the author in the Storrs Lecture Course in the Law School of Yale University, in February,
1916. New Haven, Ct., Yale University Press, 1916. First published in September 1916. Inscription: “C.P.
Shaw, A brave defender of the rights of the people - A true and loyal friend from H.G. Tucker - by the Author, July 1918”.
Tucker, Henry St. George. Woman Suffrage by Constitutional Amendment. Contains the five lectures
delivered by the author in the Storrs Lecture Course in the Law School of Yale University, in February,
1916. New Haven, Ct., Yale University Press, 1916. First published in September 1916. 2nd copy unsigned.
*Tucker, Henry St. George. Women’s Suffrage by Constitutional Amendment New Haven, Ct, Yale
University Press, 1916. Presentation from author: “Harvey T. Hall from his friend H.S. Tucker/ April 1917”.
Previous owners signature.
Van Voris, Jacqueline. Constance De Markievicz in the Cause of Ireland. New York, The Feminist Press,
1972.
Von Hippel Theodor Gottlieb von. Translated and edited with an introduction by Timothy F. Sellner. On
Improving the Status of Women. Detroit, Michigan-Wayne State University Press. 1979. Dust jacket.
Walker, Rebecca (Editor). To Be Real- Telling the Truth & Changing the Face of Feminism. New York,
Anchor Books, 1995. Dust jacket.
Walsh, Elsa. Divided Lives - The Public and Private Struggles of Three Accomplished Women. New York,
Simon & Schuster, 1995.
Wardie, Ralph M. (Editor). Collected Letters of Mary Wollstonecraft- Collection of 346 letters from 17591797. Ithaca, New York. Cornell University Press, 1979.
Wascher-James, Sande. How Long? For the Vote. Renton, WA 1993. One of 125 copies all hand-made by
the artist/author, laminated card stock photocopying original hand-made quilt blocks with a stamp on each
block, mounted on lavender blue Canson paper. Bound: museum board covered in hand- sewn - Liberty
Lawn one-off fabric with three different "quilt blocks" on each of the covers, accordion-fold, opening flat
reading right to left but pulling out to a quilt of images (text not visible) by pulling the covers out flat.
Printed with a Gocco using gold metallic ink, the text was inspired by an article on women's suffrage by
Minna Morse in The Smithsonian, 1993. The photographs (five) are printed with a Gocco as well in gold
gilt. Signed by the artist /author in gilt on the title page. The book/sculpture has been exhibited in several
shows including "Out of Bounds" Books as Art/Art as Books, Creative Arts Workshop, CT, 1994 and
"Small Works ’94," award winner, Hurleyville, NY. A wonderful book designed as a tribute to those who
worked for women's right to vote.
Weatherford, Doris. American Women's History-An A to Z of People, Organizations, Issues and Events.
New Jersey, Prentice Hall- General Reference, 1994.
Webb, Susan L. Step Forward - Sexual Harassment in the Workplace - What You Need to Know. Master
Media Publishing Corporation, Sandy, Oregon, 1991.
Weitzman, Lenore J. The Marriage Contract - Spouses, Lovers, and the Law - expert advice on writing a
living-together contract. New York, The Free Press. 1981.
Wells, J.C. A Treatise on the Separate Property of Married Women. Robert Clarke & Co., 1879. 2nd edition
revised. Previous owners signature.
Wheeler, Marjorie Spruill. (Editor). One Women, One Vote-Rediscovering the Woman Suffrage Movement
New York, New Sage Press, 1995.
White, Carlos. Ecce Femina: An Attempt to Solve the Woman Question. An Examination Of arguments In
Favor of Woman Suffrage by John Stuart Mill And Others. Published by the Author. Boston, Lee and
Shepard., 1870. Previous owners bookplate.
White Jr., Lynn. Educating Our Daughters. A Challenge to the Colleges. New York, Harper & Brothers, 1950.
Dust jacket.
Willard, Frances. The Bright Years. Woman’s Temperance Publication Assoc. Chicago, 1889. Quotations
from the Writing of Frances E. Willard. Illustrated. Previous owners signature.
Willard, Frances E. Glimpses of Fifty Years - The Autobiography of An American Woman- Written by
order of the National Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. Republication of the 1889 Chicago edition.
New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Willard, Francis. Address: President of the Woman’s National Council of the United States at its First
Triennial Meeting, Albaugh’s Opera House. Washington D.C., February 22-25,1891. Rufus Darby Printer.
1891.
Willard, Frances E. How to Win. New York, Funk & Wagnalls, 1888. American temperance leader and
reformer, well-known lecturer, writer, and educator, born in Churchville, New York, graduate of
Northwestern Female College, Evanston, Illinois, 1859. She was president of Evanston College for Ladies
and dean of women at Northwestern University. After leaving the university, she helped organize the
Chicago Woman's Christian Temperance Union in 1874, and became president of the National Woman’s
Christian Temperance Union in 1879. In 1891 she was elected president of the World's Woman's Christian
Temperance Union.
Williams, Alice L. Brilliants From Frances Willard. Writings of Frances Willard. Norwood, Ma., Norwood
Press, 1893.
Winegarten, Ruthe. Governor Ann Richards & Other Texas Women. Eakin Press, Austin, Texas, 1994.
Winner of the "Best Ethnic/ Minority/ Women's Study Publication" in 1986 from the Texas Historical
Commission. A multi-ethnic approach to the history of Texas Women, beginning with the Native Americans
who have lived here for 10,000 years. Limited Collector's Edition 1993-94.
Winship, Amy Davis. My Life Story. Tells the life story of Amy Davis Winship. Boston, The Gorham
Press, 1920. Reminiscences of an abolitionist, religious liberal, prohibitionist and suffragist, who, at the age
of 79, in 1910, enrolled as a regular student at the University of Ohio. She was present at the LincolnDouglas debate at Jonesboro in 1858.
Winslow, Rev. Hubbard. Woman As She Should Be. New York. Otis Broaders & Co., 1846. Previous
owners signature.
Wolf, Naomi. Fire Is Fire - The New Female Power & How It Will Change the 21st Century. Toronto,
Canada, Random House, 1993. Dust jacket.
Wolff, Francie. Give the Ballot to the Mothers-Sons of the Suffragists. A History of Song with a forward by
Sheila Tobias. Denlingers Publishers Ltd, 1988.
Wolgast, Elizabeth H. Equality and The Rights of Women. Ithaca, New York, Cornell University Press,
1980. Dust jacket.
Wollstonecroft, Mary. A Vindication of the Rights of Women. With Strictures on Political and Moral
Subjects. New York, Humboldt Publishing Company. N.D., Ca. 1890’s. Reprint of 1792 edition.
Wollstonecraft, Mary . A Vindication of the Rights of Woman-With Strictures on Political and Moral
Subjects. Republication of the 1792 London edition. New York, Source Book Press, 1970.
Wollstonecraft, Mary. A Vindication of the Rights of Women. New York, Norton Library, 1967.
Wollstonecraft, Mary. Mary, A Fiction. Introduction by Janet Todd. Schocken Books, 1977.
[Wollstonecraft, Mary]. Letters to Imlay. Kegan Paul & Co., 1902.
[Woman Citizen]. Index to the Woman Citizen. 1923-1924. Chicago, III. Volume 8, June 2,1923 to May 31,
1924.
[Woman Citizen]. Index to the Woman Citizen. 1924-1925.. Chicago, III. Volume 9, June 14,1924 to May
16,1925.
[Woman Citizen]. Index to the Woman Citizen. 1925. Chicago, III. Volume 10 Containing information for
May 30,1925.
The Woman’s World. Republication of the 1890 London Edition. New York, Source Books. 1970. The
1890 edition contained articles from the 1890 issues of this short-lived British Woman's magazine.
Women’s Rights Convention - Seneca Falls & Rochester. Arno & The New York Times. 1969.
Woodward, C. Vann & Elizabeth Muhlenfeld. Editors. The Private Mary Chestnut. The Unpublished Diaries.
England, Oxford University Press. 1984.
World’s Columbian Exposition - Art & Architecture. 4 volume set. Philadelphia, George Barrie, 1893. One
of 100 copies of this special edition. Elephant folio. 24” x 16” Finely bound with gilt paneling with gilt
stamped lettering. A magnificent illustrated commemoration of the 1893’s World’s Fair.
Yates, Keith L. An Enduring Heritage. - The First 100 Years of North American Benefit Association.
(Formerly Women’s Benefit Association) Port Huron, Michigan, North American Benefit Assoc., 1992.
Dust jacket.
The Lucy Hargrett Draper Center & Archives For the Study of The Rights of Women in
History and Law.
Collection of Rare and Scholarly books,
Postcards #113-123. Numerology is consistent with original documentation.
1.
Klein, Viola. The Feminine Character: History of an Ideology. New York: International University
Press. 1949. First American Edition.
2.
Bulough, Vern. L. The Subordinate Sex. First Edition. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois
Press, 1973. Previous owner’s bookplate.
3.
Brown, Nathaniel. Sexuality and Feminism in Shelley. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1979.
First edition.
4.
O’Neill, William L. Everyone Was Brave. The Rise and Fall of Feminism in America. Chicago:
Quadrangle Books, 1969. Previous owner’s inscription with personal annotations.
5.
Dykeman, Wilma. Too Many People, Too Little Love. Edna Rankin McKinon: Pioneer for Birth
Control. New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston, 1974. In dust jacket On-loan.
6.
Staves, Susan. Married Women’s Separate Property in England, 1660-1833. Cambridge and London:
Harvard University Press, 1990. In dust Jacket.
7.
Blatch, Harriot Stanton & Lutz, Alma. Challenging Years. The Memoirs of Harriet Stanton Blatch.
New York: G.P. Putman’s Sons, 1949.
8.
Report of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women In Canada. Ottawa, Canada: Crown
Copyright Reserved. 1970.
9.
Stassinopoulos, Arianna. The Female Woman: An Argument Against Women’s Liberation for
Female Emancipation. New York: Random House, 1973.
10.
Millett, Kate. Sexual Politics. A Surprising Examination of Society’s Most Arbitrary Folly. Garden
City, New York: Doubleday & Company, 1970. First American edition.
11.
Sapinsley, Barbara. The Private War of Mrs. Packard. The Dramatic Story of a 19th century women
wrongly imprisoned. First edition. In dust jacket
12.
Murray, J. Middleton Editor. Journal of Katherine Mansfield. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1927.
13.
Strachey, Ray. The Cause: A Short History of the Women’s Movement In Great Britain. London: G.
Bell and Sons Ltd. 1928.
14.
McClung, Nellie. The Stream Runs Fast. Toronto, Canada: Thomas Allen Ltd., 1945. Previous
owner’s signature.
15.
Garrow, David, J. Liberty and Sexuality. The Right to Privacy And the Making of Roe vs. Wade.
New York: MacMillan Publishing Co., 1994.In dust jacket Duplicate.
16.
Underhill, Lois Beachy. The Woman Who Ran for President The Many Lives of Victoria Woodhull.
Bridgehampton, N. Y.: Bridge Works Publ. Co., 1995.
17.
DuBois, Ellen Carol. Feminism and Suffrage. The Emergence of an Independent Women’s
Movements in America 1848-1869. Ithaca, N.Y.And London: Cornell University Press. Duplicate.
In dust jacket.
18.
Grimke, Angelina Emily. Letters to Catherine E. Beecher. Reprint From the Original Copy in the
Fisk University Library Negro Collection. Freeport, N.Y., Books for Libraries Press, 1971.
19.
Dubois, Ellen Carol. Feminism and Suffrage. The Emergence Of an Independent Women’s
Movement in America 1848-1869. Ithaca, N.Y., And London: Cornell University Press. Duplicate.
In dust jacket
20.
Cleverdon, Catherine Lyle. The Women Suffrage Movement in Canada. Toronto, Canada:
University of Toronto Press, 1950.
21.
Pankhurst, E. Sylvia. The Suffragette Movement. An Intimate Account of Persons and Ideals. New
York: Kraus Reprint Co., 1971. Reprint from Longman’s Green & Company.
22.
Lemons, J. Stanley. The Woman Citizen. Social Feminism in the 1920’s. Urbana, Chicago &
London: University of Illinois Press, 1973.
23.
Ludovici, Anthony M. The Future of Woman. London, Kegan Paul, Trench Trubner & Co., Ltd.
1936. Duplicate.
24.
Shaw, Anna Howard. The Story of A Pioneer. New York & London: Harper & Brothers, 1915.
Previous owners presentation inscription.
25.
Ploscowe, Morris. Sex and the Law. New York: Prentice-Hall, Inc. 1951. Author’s presentation
inscription. In dust jacket.
26.
Kanowitz, Leo. Sex Roles in Law and Society. Albuquerque, N.M.: University Of New Mexico
Press. 1974. Previous owner’s signature. In dust jacket.
27.
Fulbrooke, Kate & Edward. The Remaking of A Twentieth Century Legend: Simone de Beauvoir &
Jean Paul. New York: Basic Books, 1994. In dust jacket.
28.
Friedan, Betty. It Changed My Life. New York: Random House, 1976. First edition. Writing on the
Women’s Movement. Inscribed: “Lucy H. Draper. US Military Academy, West Point N.O.W. Invited Betty
Friedan To visit the US Military Academy and speak on the topic of equal rights For women. [And] to our
astonishment she came, she saw, she spoke, She conquered. Afterwards, she entertained her in the lobby of
the historic Thayer Hotel. We all laughed at the irony of army wives consorting with A 'known radical’ as she
was called.” With LHD bookplate & note card.
On loan. Belongs with LHD Papers. Individual Collections.
29.
Luke, Mary M. A Crown for Elizabeth. New York: Coward-McCann, Inc. 1970. With marginal
annotations.
30.
Duster, Alfreda M. [Editor]. Crusade for Justice: The Autobiography Of Ida B. Wells. Chicago and
London: University of Chicago Pres, 1970. Presentation inscription from editor, dated: September 17,1970.
With LHD’s note card. In dust jacket.
31. Suhi Yuri. Ernestine Rose and the Battle of Human Rights. New York: Reynal & Co., 1959. Author’s
signature. With LHD’s note card. On loan.
32.
Sommers, Christina Hoff. Who Stole Feminism - How Women Betrayed Women. New York:
Simon & Schuster, 1994. Previous owner’s signature.
33.
card.
Hannam, June. & Isabella Ford. Oxford, England: Basil Blackwell Ltd., 1989. With LHD’s note
34.
Sunstein, Emily. A Different Face: The Life of Mary Wollstonecraft New York: Harper & Row,
1975. With LHD’s note card.
35.
Clarke, Mary Stetson. Bloomers & Ballots: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Women’s Rights. New
York: Viking Press, 1972. With LHD’s note card.
36.
Morgan, Robin. The Word of a Woman. New York & London: W.W. Norton & Co., 1992. With
LHD’s bookplate and note card.
37.
Jeffreys, Shelia. Editor. The Sexuality Debates. New York & London: Rutledge & Kegan Paul.
1987. On Loan.
38.
Kellan, Konrad. The Coming Age of Woman Power. New York: Peter H. Wyden, Inc. 1972.
39.
Gattey, Charles Neilson. The Bloomer Girls. New York: Coward-McCann, Inc. 1968. With LHD’s
note card. First American edition.
40.
Sheehy, Gail. The Silent Passages: Passages Predictable Crises of Adult Life. New York: E.P.
Dutton & Co., Inc. 1968. First American edition. With LHD’s note card.
41.
Earnest, Ernest. The American Eve in Fact & Fiction: 1775-1914. Urbana, Chicago & London:
University of Illinois Press, 1974. With Miscellaneous pages with name Stan Ransom. With LHD’s note card.
First edition. In dust jacket.
42.
Fox-Genovese, Elizabeth. Feminism in not the Story of My Life. New York: Doubleday,
1996. First edition. In dust jacket.
43.
Dusky, Lorraine. Still Unequal. The Shameful Truth About Women And Justice in America. New
York: Crown Publishers Inc., 1996. First edition. In dust jacket.
44.
Williamson, Chilton. American Suffrage from Property to Democracy 1760-1860. Princeton, New
Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1960. Previous owners signature. First edition. In dust jacket.
45.
Sochen, June. The New Woman in Greenwich Village 1910-1920. New York:: Quadrangle Books,
1972. With LHD’s note card. First edition. In dust jacket.
46.
Anthony, Katherine. Susan B. Anthony - Her Personal History and Her Era. Garden City, New
York: Doubleday Co., 1954. With LHD‘s note card. First edition. In dust jacket
47.
Aldrich, Darragh. Lady in Law: A Biography of Mabeth Hurd Paige. Chicago: Ralph Fletcher
Seymour, 1950. With previous owner’s post card at the Battersea Fun Festival, July 1951. On loan.
48.
Vicker, Jill Rankin, Pauline, Appelle Christine. Politics As If Women Mattered. A Political Analysis
of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women. Toronto, Buffalo, London: University of Toronto
Press, 1993.
49.
Moynihan, Ruth Barnes. Rebel for Rights: Abigail Scott Duniway. New Haven, Ct, London: Yale
University Press, 1983.
50.
Griffith, Helen. Dauntless in Mississippi: The Life of Sarah A. Dickey 1838-1904. South Hadley,
Ma.: Dinosaur, 1966. With LHD’s note card. On loan.
51.
Erler, Mary, & Kowaleski, Maryanne. Women & Power in the Middle Ages. Athens, Ga.:
University of Georgia Press, 1988. With LHD’s seal.
52.
Bell, Linda A. Visions of Women. Clifton, New York: Humana Press,1983. With LHD’s bookplate
and seal. First edition.
53.
Stegeman, John F. & Janet A. Caty: A Biography of Catherine Littlefield Greene. Athens, Ga.:
University of Georgia Press, 1977. With LHD’s bookplate and note card.
54.
Spruill, Julia Cherry. Women’s Life & Work in Southern Colonies. New York: Norton & Co., 1972.
With Lhd’s bookplate.
55.
Okin, Susan Moller. Justice, Gender and the Family. New York: Basic Books, 1989. With LHD’s
bookplate.
56.
Crawford, Vicki L., Rouse, Jacqueline, et al. Women in the Civil Rights Movement: Trailblazers &
Torchbearers: 1941-1965. Bloomington & Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1993. With signature of
Jacqueline A. Rouse, Feb. 1,1995. ” - One of the Editors. With LHD’s Bookplate.
57.
Miles, Rosalind. The Women’s History of the World. New York:Harper & Row, 1990.
58.
Flexner, Eleanor. Century of Struggle. Cambridge, M A., London. The Belknap Press of Harvard
University Press, 1959,1975. Signature:“Lucy H. Draper, Atlanta, Ga.” With LHD's note card.
59.
Kraditor, Aileen S. Editor. Up From the Pedestal. Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1968. With LHD’s
bookplate and seal.
60.
Schneir, Miriam. Feminism In Our Time. New York: Vintage Books, 1994. Signature: Lucy H.
Draper. First edition. With LHD’s bookplate and note card.
61.
Sherr, Lynn & Kazickas, Jurate. Susan B. Anthony Slept Here. A Guidebook to American Women’s
Landmarks. New York: Time Books-Random House, 1994.
62.
Oakley, Mary Ann B. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. New York: Feminist Press, 1972.
63.
Cleverdon, Catherine. The Woman Suffrage Movement in Canada. Toronto, Canada: University of
Toronto Press, 1978. Copyright 1950, Second edition 1974 - Reprinted, 1975-1978.
64.
Austin, Gayle. Feminist Theories For Dramatic Criticism. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press,
1990. Signed by Author. With LHD’s bookplate.
65.
Wertheimer, Barbara Mayer. We Were There - The Story of Working Women in America. New
York: Pantheon Books, 1977.
66.
Klein, Ethel. Gender Politics. Cambridge, MA. & London: Harvard University Press, 1984.
67.
Fausto-Sterling, Anne. Myths of Gender Biological Theories About Women and Men. New York:
Basic Books, 1992.
68.
Williams, Marty & Echols, Anne. Between Pit and Pedestal Women In the Middle Ages. Princeton,
N.J.: Markus Wiener Publishers, 1994.
69.
Bell, Linda A. Rethinking Ethics in the Midst of Violence. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, 1993. Signed by Author. With LHD’s bookplate and seal.
70.
Stinson, Alvah L. Woman Under the Law. Boston: Hudson Printing Co., 1914. Duplicate. On Loan.
71.
Porter, Kirk H. A History of Suffrage in the United States. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago
Press, 1918. Previous owner’s signature.
72.
Josephson, Hannah. Jeanette Rankin: First Lady in Congress. A Biography of Jeannette Rankin.
Indianapolis and New York: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1974.
73.
Roberts, Cokie. We Are Our Mothers Daughters. New York: William Morrow & Co., 1998.
Presentation copy to LHD.
74.
Kitchen, S.B. A History of Divorce. Union, N.J.: The Lawbook Exchange Ltd., 2002.
Reprint of the Chapman & Hall Ltd. 1912. In dust jacket.
75.
Bacon, Margaret Hope. Valiant Friend. The Life of Lucretia Mott. New York: Walker & Co., 1980.
76.
Friedman, Jane M. America’s First Woman Lawyer. The Biography Of Myra Bradwell. Buffalo,
N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 1983.
77.
Number omitted in original documentation.
78A. Pankhurst, Emmeline. My Own Story. New York: Hearst’s International Library Company, 1914.
78.
Lumpkin, Katharine DuPre. The Emancipation of Angeline Grimke. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University
of North Carolina Press, 1974. With LHD’s note card.
79.
Stowe, Charles Edward. The Life of Harriet Beecher Stowe. Boston & New York:
Houghton Mifflin and Co., 1891. Inscribed: “Mrs. T.T. Snow, May 27,1891.” On Loan.
80.
House, Steven C. Hubertine Auclert - The French Suffragette. New Haven, Ct, & London: Yale
University Press, 1987. In dust jacket. Duplicate.
81.
Lerner, Gerda. The Grimke Sisters from South Caroline. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1967. With
LHD’s bookplate plus miscellaneous clippings relating to the Grimke sisters.
82.
Wortman, Marlene Stein. Women in American Law. New York, London: Holmes & Meier
Publishing, 1985. Volume one from Colonial Times to the New Deal. In dust jacket.
83. Anthony, Katharine. Susan B. Anthony: Her Personal History & Her Era. Garden City, N.Y. Doubleday
& Co., 1954. Previous owners signature. In dust jacket.
84.
Boynick, David. Women Who Led the Way. Eight Pioneers for Equal Rights. New York: Thomas J.
Crowell Co., 1959. In dust jacket.
85.
Ultz, Erika. Women in the Medieval Town. London: Barrie & Jenkins, 1990. With LHD’s note card.
First edition.
86.
Garrison, Dee. Mary Heaton Vorse. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1989. Previous owners
inscription.
87.
Wilson, Forrest. Crusader In Crinoline. Philadelphia, London, N.Y.:J. B. Lippincott Co., 1941. First
edition. In dust jacket.
88.
Roth, Darlene Rebecca. Matronage. Patterns in Women's Organizations. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Carlson
Publishing Series, 1994. First edition. In dust jacket. With LHD's bookplate and note card.
89.
Flowlkes, Diane. White Political Women. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1992. Author
Signature. With LHD’s bookplate.
90.
DuBois, Ellen Carol. Feminism and Suffrage. The Emergence of An Independent Women's
Movement in America 1848-1869. Ithaca, N.Y.& London: Cornell University Press, 1978. In dust jacket
91.
Williamson, Chilton. American Suffrage from Property to Democracy 1760-1860.
Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1960.
92.
Petrie, Glen. A Singular Iniquity. The Campaigns of Josephine Butler. New York: Viking Press,
1971. First edition. In dust jacket.
93.
Dorr, Rheta Childe. What Eight Million Women Want. Boston: Small Maynard & Co., 1910.
94.
Burnett, Constance Buel. Five For Freedom. The Crusade For Woman’s Rights. New York: Abelard
Press, 1953. First edition. In dust jacket
95.
Lader, Lawrence. Abortion II: Making the Revolution. Boston: Beacon Press, 1973. First edition. In
dust jacket
96.
Singleton, Ester. Editor. Famous Women: Famous Women as Described by Famous Writers. New
York: Dodd, Mead & Co., 1904.
97.
Mitchell, Juliet. Women's Estate. New York: Pantheon Books, 1971.First edition. In dust jacket
98.
Ross, Nancy Wilson. Westward The Women. New York: Random House, 1944. In dust jacket
99.
jacket
Burton, Margaret E. Mable Cratty. New York: The Woman’s Press, 1929. First edition. In dust
100.
Stone, Merlin. When God Was A Woman. New York: Dial Press, 1976. With a newspaper book
review: A Poet’s Feminist Prose on Lies, Secrets and Silence by Adrienne Rich - By Ellen Moers. First
American edition. In dust jacket.
101.
Rooke, Patrick, Women’s Rights. London: Wayland Publishers, 1977. In dust jacket
102.
Golden, Kristen & Findlen, Barbara. Remarkable Women of the Twentieth Century. 100 Portraits of
Achievement. New York: Friedman-Fairfax Publishers, 1998. In dust jacket
103.
Barkalow, Cpt. Carol. In the Men’s House: An Inside Account of life In the Army by One of West
Points first female graduates. New York:Poseidon Press, 1990.First edition. In dust jacket.
104.
Oates, Stephen B. A Woman of Valor. Clara Barton And the Civil War. New York: Free Press,
1994. First edition. In dust jacket
105.
Morgan, Elaine. The Descent of Woman. New York: Stein and Day, 1972.
106.
Rowbotham, Sheila. Women, Resistance & Revolution. A History Of Women and Revolution in the
Modern World. New York: Pantheon Books, 1972. First American edition. In dust jacket.
107.
Rix, Sara E. Editor. The American Woman 1987-1988. New York & London: W.W. Norton &
Co.,1987. With LHD’s note card.
108.
1914.
Horton, Edith. A Group of Famous Women. Boston, New York & Chicago: D.C. Heath & Co.,
109.
Bosch, Mineke and Annemarie Kloosterman. Editors. Politics And Friendship. Letters from the
International Woman Suffrage Alliance, 1902-1942. Columbus, Ohio: Ohio State University. 1990. In dust
jacket.
110.
Miller, Jane Eldridge. Rebel Women: Feminism, Modernism and The Edwardian Novel. London:
Virago Press, 1994.
111.
George, Carol V. R. Editor. Remember the Ladies-New Perspectives On Women in American
History. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 1975. With bookplate, seal, and note card of LHD. In
dust jacket.
112.
Wheeler, Marjorie Spruill. Votes for Women. The Woman Suffrage Movement in Tennessee, the
South and the Nation. Knoxville, TN.: University of Tennessee Press, 1995.
113.
[POSTCARD]. “If It Were A Lady, It would get its bottom pinched.” London, Acme Cards. Printed
by Jackson Wilson. Postcard with Flat Billboard - black and white.
114.
[POSTCARD]. “Family Values”. Washington, D.C.: Dan Kaufman Graphics, 1995. Postcard with
spaceman holding gun at town. Yellow with red paint.
115.
[POSTCARD]. Feminism: “I myself have never been able to find out Precisely what feminism is: I
only know that people call me a feminist whenever I express sentiments that differentiate me from a
doormat... ’-Rebecca West. London, Cath Tate Cards.
116.
[POSTCARD]. “We Can Do It. ” Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse Cultural Workers. Postcard showing
Rosie the Riveter.
[117. POSTCARD]. “If Eleanor Roosevelt could answer thousand of letters a Month, I should at least be
able to send you this postcard. ” Olympia, WA. Stella Marrs. Postcard with picture of Eleanor Roosevelt. Tan
background with teal color dots.
118.
[POSTCARD]. “In the early days of the Roosevelt Administration, a reporter Berated Eleanor
Roosevelt for appearing without a hat and wearing a Sleeveless dress." “If only she knew," commented the
president's wife, I had no stockings on either. ” Olympia, WA: Stella Marrs.
Postcard with Black/white picture of Eleanor Roosevelt - white background with pink dots.
119.
[POSTCARD]. "We Solemnly Vow That there Should Never Be Another Season of Silence Until We
Have The Same Rights Everywhere On This Green Earth. ” Syracuse, N. Y.: The Green Earth: 75th
Anniversary of Women Suffrage. Postcard with multi-colors cartoon women.
120.
[POSTCARD]. “It is Useless to Resent Anything in this World. ” Olympia, WA.: Stella Marrs.
Postcard with picture of Eleanor Roosevelt - purple background.
121.
(POSTCARD). “In Germany they first came for the Communists and I didn't Speak up because I
wasn't a Communist Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they
came for the Trade Unionist Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was
Protestant. Then they came for me and by that time no one was left speak Up - Pastor Martin Miemoller."
Syracuse N.Y.: Syracuse Cultural Workers. Postcard; “And I Said Nothing...” White background with color
symbols and black lettering.
122.
(POSTCARD). “Pro-Child-Pro-Family-Pro-Choice” Bayside, CA.: PCRP. Sticker with blue
background white lettering.
123.
(POSTCARD). “Show Your Support With Checks". St. Paul, MN.: Message Products. Printed form
to complete to order checks.
124.
[Periodical Newsletter). Women’s Equality Day - Living the Legacy. Windsor, CA.: N.D. National
Women’s History Project Newsletter addressed to LHD. Color 4 sided.
125.
Schneider, Joyce Anna. Flora Tristan: Feminist, Socialist and Free Spirit. New York: William
Morrow & Company, 1980. With LHD’S bookplate and note card.
126.
Planned Parenthood of New York City. Abortion: A Woman’s Guide. New York & London:
Aberlard-Schuman Press, Ltd. 1973. In dust jacket On loan.
127.
Lacey, Candida Ann. Editor. Barbara Leigh Smith Bodichon and the Langham Place Group.
Women’s Source Library. New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul 1987. With LHD’S note card. In dust jacket.
128.
Marcus, Jane. Compiler. [Selection & Introduction]. The Young Rebecca. Writings of Rebecca
West. New York: The Viking Press, 1982. With LHD’s note card. In dust jacket
129.
Steinem, Gloria. Revolution From Within. A Book of Self-Esteem. Boston, Toronto & New York:
Little, Brown & Co., 1992. First edition. In dust jacket. With Gloria Steinem’s signature laid in. With LHD’s
note card.
130.
Whitney, Catherine. Written with Nine Counting - The Women of The Senate: Barbara Mikulski,
Kay Bailey Hutchison, Dianne Feinstein, Barbara Boxer, Patty Murray, Olympia Snowe, Susan Collins, Mary
Landrieu, Blanche L. Lincoln. New York: Williams Morrow, 2000. First edition. In dust jacket.
131.
Hause, Stephen. Hubertine Auclert - The French Suffragette. New Haven, CT. and London: Yale
University Press, 1987. In dust jacket. Duplicate.
132.
Tascher, Harold. Maggie and Montana. The Story of Maggie Hathaway - One of Montana’s first
two women legislators. New York, Exposition Press, Lochinvar, 1954. With obituary notice glued to back
cover. First edition. In dust jacket.
133.
Raeburn, Antonia. The Militant Suffragettes. Introduction by J.B. Priestley. 1973-1974 edition was
printed for sale to its members only by the proprietors. Readers Union Limited. With LHD’s note card.
In dust jacket.
134.
Banks, Olive. Becoming A Feminist. The Social Origins of the “First Wave” Feminism. Athens,
GA.:The University of Georgia Press, 1987. With LHD‘s bookplate.
135.
Kendrigan, Mary Lou. Political Equality in a Democratic Society. Women in the United States.
Westport, CN & London: Greenwood Press, 1984. First edition.
136.
Wilson, Dorothy Clarke. Stranger and Traveler. The Story of Dorothea Dix, American Reformer.
Boston & Toronto: Little, Brown and Company, 1975. First edition. In dust jacket
137.
Janeway, Elizabeth. Man’s World Woman’s Place. A Study of Social Mythology. New York:
William Morrow & Co., 1971. Presentation copy. On loan.
138.
Stuard, Susan Mosher, Editor. Women in Medieval Society. Philadelphia, PA.,
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1976. In dust jacket.
139.
Brough, James. The Vixens: A Biography of Victoria & Tennessee Claflin. New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1980. With LHD’s bookplate and note card. In dust jacket.
140.
Wheeler, Marjorie Spruill. Editor. Votes for Women: The Suffrage Movement in Tennessee, the
South, and the Nation. Knoxville: The University of Tennessee Press, 1995. First edition. In dust jacket.
141.
Bosch, Mineke. Annemarie Kloosterman. Editors. Politics and Friendship. Letter from the
International Woman Suffrage Alliance 1902-1942. Columbus, Ohio. Ohio State University Press. 1990.
142.
Howe, Julia Ward. Reminiscences 1819-1899.Boston and New York:Hougton Mifflin &
Co., 1899. First edition. Duplicate.
143.
Blain, Virginia, Grundy, Isobel, Clements, Patricia. The Feminist Companion to Literature in
English. Women Writers from the Middle Ages to the Present. New Haven, CL and London: Yale University
Press. 1990.
144.
Felder, Deborah G. The 100 Most Influential Women of All Times -A Ranking Past and Present
New York: The Citadel Press Book, 1996.
145.
Braude, Ann. Radical Spirits. Spiritualism andWomen’s Rights in Nineteenth Century
America. Boston: Beacon Press, 1989.
146.
Graves, Pamela M. Labour Women: Womenin British Working Class Politics 19181939. Cambridge, MA.: Cambridge University Press, 1994.
147.
Bergman, Barbara R. The Economic Emergence of Women. New York: Basic Books Inc, 1986.
Presentation copy to LHD from Elizabeth Boyer. With LHD’s note card, bookplate and seal. First edition. In
dust jacket. On loan.
148.
Kay, Ellen. The Woman Movement: Translated by Mamah Bouton Borthwick, M.A. New York and
London: G.P. Putnam & Sons, 1912. First edition was published in Sweden. On loan.
149 & 150. Barnes, Gilbert, Dumond, Dwight. Editors. Letters of Theodore Dwight Weld, Angelina Grimke
Weld, and Sarah Grimke. 1822-1844. Two volumes. Gloucester, MA.: Peter Smith, 1965.
151.
Welsh, Lilian. Reminiscences of Thirty Years in Baltimore. Baltimore, MD. The Norman
Remington Co., 1925. Inscribed by author. Also, the signature of Jean M. Barr. With photograph, believed to
be Lilian Welsh, contained in envelope. On loan.
152.
Stevens, Doris. Jailed for Freedom. New York. Boni Liveright Publishing Corp., 1920. Previous
owners bookplate.
153.
Adams, Mildred. Editor. Rebel in A Crinoline. Memoirs of Malwilda Von Meysenbug. Translated
by Elsa Von Meysenbug Lyons. London: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd. 1937. Previous owners bookplate. In
dust jacket.
154.
Atherton, Gertrude. Can Women Be Gentlemen? Boston: Houghton, Mifflin Co., 1938. Signed by
the author. In dust jacket.
155.
Paul, Nanette. The Great Woman Statesman. Prepared for use in the Susan B. Anthony Wheels of
the Susan B. Anthony Foundation. New York: Hogan Paulus Corp, 1925.
156.
Hale, Annie Riley. The Eden Sphinx. New York: Annie Riley Hale, 1926. Previous owner’s
signature. With LHD’s note card.
157.
Stephens, Kate. American Thumb-Prints. Mettle of Our Men and Women. Philadelphia and London:
J.B. Lippincott Co., 1905.
158.
Mason, O.T. Woman’s Share in Primitive Culture. New York: D. Appleton And Co.,
1894. With LHD’s note card.
159.
Moody, Helen Watterson. The Unquiet Sex. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1898. Presentation
copy from Author in 1920. With previous owner signature.
160.
Shattuck, Harriette R. The Woman’s Manual of Parliamentary Law. Revised and Enlarged - with
practical illustrations especially adapted to Women’s organizations. Boston: Lee and Shepard Publishers,
1895. Previous Owner’s signature. With LHD’s note card. On loan.
161.
card.
Leon, Vicki. Uppity Women of Ancient Times. New York: MJF Books,1995. With LHD’s note
162.
Searle, Richard & James Charles Smith. Monthly Reports of Cases Decided in the Court of Probate.
Volume One; Part One. With cases in the Court For Divorce and Matrimonial Causes Commencing
Michaelmas Term, 1859. London: Stevens & Norton, 1860. Lacking title page.
163.
Hooker, John. Some Reminiscences of a Long Life. With Articles On moral and social subjects of
present interest. Hartford, Ct.: Belknap & Warfield, 1899. With LHD’s note card.
164 Smith, Paul Jordan. The Soul of Woman. An Interpretation of the Philosophy of Feminism. San
Francisco. Paul Elder & Co., 1916. With LHD’s note card.
165.
Lloyd, Trevor. Suffragettes International. The World Wide Campaign For Women’s Rights. New
York: American Heritage Press, 1971.
166.
Milkman, Ruth. Gender at Wok. The Dynamics of Job Segregation by Sex During World War II.
Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1987. In dust jacket
167.
+ 168. Taylor, Robert Lewis. Vessel of Wrath: The Life & Times of Carry Nation. New York. The
New American Library, 1966. First edition. In dust jacket. With LHD’s note card in each. One on loan.
169.
Strauss, Helen M. A Talent for Luck. An Autobiography. New York. Random House, 1979. First
edition. In dust jacket.
170.
Gordon, Eelicia. The Integral Feminist. Madeleine Pelietier: 1874-1939. Minneapolis. University of
Minnesota Press, 1990. In dust jacket.
171.
Eckhardt, Celia Morris. Fanny Wright Rebel in America. Cambridge, MA. & London. Harvard
University Press. 1984. With LHD’s note card. In dust jacket.
172.
Basu, Monmayee. Hindu Women and Marriage Law. From Sacrament To Contract New Delhi, India:
Oxford University Press, 2001. In dust jacket
173.
Newton, Judith Lowder. Women, Power and Subversion. Social Strategies in British Fiction, 17781860. Athens, GA.: The University Of Georgia Press, 1981.
174.
Garrow, David J. Liberty & Sexuality. The Right to Privacy and the Making of Roe vs. Wade. New
York: MacMillan Publishing Co., 1994. In dust jacket
175.
Algeo, Sara M. The Story of A Sub-Pioneer. Providence, R.I.: Snow & Farrington Co., 1925. Signed
by the Author at Barrington. Rhode Island. 1942. Other duplicate unsigned.
176.
Oakley, Ann. Woman’s Work. The first published British edition was printed under the title: The
Housewife, Past and Present. New York: Pantheon Books, 1974. First edition. In dust jacket
177.
Chen, Constance M. The Sex Side of Life. Mary Ware Dennett’s Pioneering Battle for Birth Control
and Sex Education. New York: The New Press, 1996.
178.
Mitchell, Juliet. Woman’s Estate. New York: Pantheon Books, 1971. First edition.
179.
Flexner, Eleanor. Century of Struggle. Cambridge, M A: The Belknap Press of Harvard University
Press, 1959. Signed by the Author. First edition. Other duplicate unsigned.
180.
[Alice Meynell]. Alice Meynell: A Memoir. The Life & Letters Series No. 47. London & Toronto.
Jonathon Cape, 1933. With LHD’s note card. In dust jacket.
181.
Peck, Mary Gray. Carrie Chapman Catt. New York: H.W. Wilson Co., 1944.
182.
Lerner, Gerda. The Female Experience. An American Documentary. Indianapolis:
Bobbs-Merrill Education Publishings 1977. In dust jacket.
183.
Tucker, Cynthia Grant. Prophetic Sisterhood. Boston: Beacon Press, 1990. Previous owners
presentation. With LHD’s note card. In dust jacket
184.
Gornick, Vivian, Barbara Moran. Editors. Women in Sexist Society. Studies in Power and
Powerlessness. New York and London: Basic Books, Inc. 1971.
185.
Stimpson, Catherine. Editor. Discrimination Against Women. Congressional Hearings on Equal
Rights in Education & Employment. New York & London: R.R. Bowker Co., 1973.
On loan
186.
Hunt, Harriott K. Glances and Glimpses. Fifty Years, Including Twenty Years Professional Life.
New York: Source Book Press, 1970. With LHD’s note.
187.
George, W.L. The Story of Woman. London: Chapman and Hall, 1925.
188.
Noun, Louise R. Strong Minded Women - The Emergence of the Woman Suffrage Movement in
Iowa. Ames, I A. The Iowa State University Press, 1969. Signature of Elizabeth B. Schlesinger inside blank.
In dust jacket.
189.
Rogers, Agnes. Women are Here to Stay. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1949. In dust jacket
190.
Melich, Tanya. The Republican War Against Women. An insiders Report from Behind the Lines.
New York: Bantam Books, 1996. In dust jacket.
191.
Bacon, Margaret Hope. Mothers of Feminism. The Story of Quaker Women in America.
San Francisco, Ca.: Harper & Row, 1986. In dust jacket.
192.
Kroeger, Brooke. Nellie Bly. Daredevil-Reporter-Feminist. New York: Times Books, 1994.
Previous owners signature.In dust jacket.
193.
Talmadge, John. Rebecca Latimer Felton: Nine Stormy Decades. Presentation copy by the author.
Athens, GA.: University of Georgia Press, 1960. With LHD’s note card. In dust jacket
194.
Levin, Michael. Feminism & Freedom. New Brunswick. N.J.:Transaction Books, 1988.
In dust jacket.
195.
Howard, Jane. A Different Woman. New York: E.P. Dutton & Co.,1973. Previous owners name tag.
In dust jacket.
196.
Levine, Judith. My Enemy, My Love. Man Hating &Ambivalence In Women’s Lives.
New York: Doubleday, 1992. First edition. In dust jacket.
197.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. The Original Feminist Attack on the Bible. New York: Arno Press, 1974.
In dust jacket
198.
Millett, Kate. Sexual Politics. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday & Co., 1970. Previous owners
presentation copy. First edition. In dust jacket.
199.
Lerner, Gerda. The Female Experience. An American Documentary. Indianapolis: Bobbs, Merrill
Education Publishing, 1977. In dust jacket.
200.
Lerner, Gerda. Black Women in White America. A Documentation History. New York: Pantheon
Books, 1972. First edition.
201.
Backer, Dorothy, Anne Liot. Precious Women. A Feminist Phenomenon In the Age of Louis XIV.
New York: Basic Books, Inc. 1974. In dust jacket.
202.
Mackenzie, Midge. Shoulder to Shoulder. A History of the Militant Suffragettes. New York: Alfred
A. Knopf, 1975. Duplicate.
203.
Howett, Thomas, et al. The Salem Story 1806-1956. Sesqui Centennial Souvenir Hand- book.
Salem, Ohio: Budget press: The Salem Sesquicentennial Commission of The Salem Historical Society. 1956.
204.
Lerner, Gerda. The Woman in American History. Menlo Park, Ca.: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co.,
1971. With LHD’s bookplate & seal.
205.
Drinnon, Richard. Rebels in Paradise. A Biography of Emma Goldman. Boston: Beacon Press,
1970. With LHD’s bookplate & seal.
206.
Stone, Mary & Cohen, Marlene & Matthew Freeman. The Women’s Vote: Beyond the Nineteenth
Amendment. Washington, D.C.: League of Women Voters Education Fund, 1983.
207.
1971.
Showalter, Elaine. Women’s Liberation and Literature. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovick, Inc.,
208.
Spencer, Dale & Hayman, Carole. How the Vote Was Won and Other Suffragettes plays. Notes for
performance by Carole Hayman. London & New York: Methuen Publishing Ltd. 1985.
209.
Tremain, Rose. The Fight for Freedom for Women. Ballantine’s Illustrated History of the Violent
Century Politics in Action. #9. New York: Ballantine Books, 1973.
210.
Rouse, Jacqueline Anne. Lugenia Burns Hope- Black Southern Reformer. Athens, Ga., University
of Georgia Press, 1989. Signed by the Author. With LHD’s Bookplate and seal.
211.
O'Neill, William L. Everyone was Brave. A History of Feminism in America. Chicago, Illinois:
Quadrangle Books, 1971.
212.
1980.
Lane, Ann J. Editor. Charlotte Perkins Gilman. The Yellow Wallpaper. New York: Pantheon Books,
213.
Bentley, Phyllis. The Brontes. London: Thomas and Hudson, 1997.
214.
Boxer, Annette & Constance Jacobs. To Be A Woman in America. 1850-1930. A Kaleidoscopic
History. New York: Times Books, 1978.
215.
Duffy, Maureen. The Passionate Shepherdess. Aphra Behn 1640-89.A Biography. New York. A
Discuss Book, Avon Books, 1979. With LHD’S bookplate and seal.
216.
Davis, Elizabeth Gould. The First Sex. Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1972.
217.
Brody, Miriam. Editor. Mary Wollstonecraft-A Vindication of the Rights Of Woman. London, New
York & Canada: Penguin Books, 1992.
218.
Liddington, Jill. The Life & Times of A Respectable Rebel. London: Virago Press, 1984.
219.
Morley, Ann & Liz Stanley. The Life and Death of Emily Wilding Davison. London:
The Woman’s Press. 1988. On loan.
220.
Holmes, Richard. Editor. Wollstonecraft, Mary & William Goodwin. A Short Residence in Sweden
and Memoirs of the The Rights of Woman. London: 1987.
221.
Rowbotham, Sheila. Women & Revolution. A History of Women and Revolution World. New
York: Vintage Books, 1974. Previous owners signature.
222.
Milletts, Kate. Sexual Politics. New York: Ballantine Books, 1988.
223.
Hymowitz, Carol and Weismman, Michaele. A History of Women in America-From
Founding Mothers to Feminists-How Women Shaped The Life and Culture of America. New York: Bantam
Books, 1978.
224.
Peck, Ellen. The Body Trap. New York: Pinnacle Books, 1972.
225.
Beard, Mary R. Woman As Force in History. New York: Collier Books, 1971. With
LHD’s bookplate and seal.
226.
1971.
227.
Merriam, Eve. Editor. Growing Up Female in America Ten Lives. New York: Dell Publishing Co.,
Bird, Caroline. Born Female. New York: Pocket Books, 1972.
228.
Hailey, Elizabeth Forsythe. A Woman of Independent Means. New York: Avon Books,
1972.
229.
Seaman, Barbara & Gideon. Woman and the Crisis in Sex Hormones. New York:
Bantam Books, 1978.
230.
Farrells, Warren. The Liberated Man. New York: Bantam Books, 1973. With inscription from
N.O.W. members at West Point. 1976. With LHD’s note card. On loan.
231.
Kraditor, Aileens. The Ideas of the Woman Suffrage Movement 1890-1920. Garden City, N.Y.:
Doubleday & Co., Anchor Books, 1971.
232.
Hite, Shere. The Hite Report. A Nationwide Study of Female Sexuality. New York: Dell Publishing
Co., 1977.
233.
Niles, Judith. Seven Women. Portraits from the American Radical Tradition. New York: Penguin
Books, 1981.
234.
1993.
[Postcards]. Women Who Dared. Book of Postcards. San Francisco, Ca.: Pomegranate Art Books,
235.
Baermeister, Erica, Larsen, Jesse and Holly Smith. 500 Great Books By Women. A Readers Guide.
New York: Penquin Books, 1994.
236.
Weddington, Sarah. A Question of Choice. New York: Penquin Books, 1973. A Revised edition.
Presentation & Inscription from Author. On loan.
237.
Rossi, Alice S. Editor. Essays on Sex Equality. The Story of John Stuart Mill & Harriet Taylor Mill.
Chicago & London: The University of Chicago Press. 1970.
238.
Smith, Helen Krebs. The Presumptuous Dreamers. A Sociological History Of the Life and Times of
Abigail Scott Duniway 1834-1915. Volume 1. Oswego Or.: Smith, Smith & Smith,
1974.
239.
Lerner, Gerda. The Grimke Sisters of South Carolina. Pioneers for Woman’s Rights and Abolition.
New York: Schocken Books, 1971. Duplicate.
Lucy Hargrett Draper Center and Archives for the Study of the Rights of Women in
History and Law
Addendum
1. Cambio-Avery woman's rights movement collection
2. Endowment Purchases
Cambio-Avery woman's rights movement collection
Let Mother Vote - 7/8" Circular pin-back, blue and white map of Ohio. Whitehead & Hoag
Votes for Women - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with red lettering and four blue stars on a white ground
outlined in blue. National Equipment Co
Votes for Women - 3/4" Circular pin-back button with blue flag with ten stars and lettering on orange ground.
Cruver Mfg
Vote Yes on Woman Suffrage - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with green ground with a white dot in center.
Lettering in black. Women's Political Union, Whitehead & Hoag
Votes for Women, Patriotism - 3/4" Small circular button with brown lettering on yellow ground with eagle
and U.S. shield and two U.S. flags with 12 stars. No publisher
Votes for Women - 1" Circular pin-back button with black lettering on crème ground with purple and green
accents at top and bottom, outlined in gold. Lucke Badge
Why - 3/4" Small circular pin-back button with black lettering on gold ground. Whitehead & Hoag
Votes for Women, Indiana - 5/8" Small circular pin-back button with gold lettering on crème ground. Word
"Women" is underlined. Bastian Bros.
National Junior Suffrage Corps, Youth Today Tomorrow Power - 1" Circular pin-back button with green
lettering on white ground with image of a pine tree in green on yellow. Lucke Badge
Votes for Women, 1915 - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with blue lettering on white ground with image of a
sunrise over a mountain in gold. Whitehead & Hoag
Vote for Women, June 5th - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with black lettering on a gold ground. Chicago
Union Bug
Votes for Women - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with crème lettering on dark green ground. A.R. Lopez
Votes for Women - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with black lettering on gold ground. National Equipment Co.
Ohio Next - 3/4" Circular pin-back button with blue lettering and six stars on gold ground. R.A. Koch
My First Vote Is For Harding - 5/8" Small circular button with white and blue lettering on red, white, and blue
striped ground. No publisher
Ballots for Both - 3/4" Small circular button with blue lettering on gold ground. No publisher
Votes for Women - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with gold lettering and nine stars on blue ground. No
publisher
Votes for Women - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with blue lettering and ten stars on gold ground. Lucke
Badge
Votes for Women - 7/8" Circular button with black lettering on gold ground. No publisher
Votes for Women - 3/4" Small circular pin-back button with small, black lettering on gold ground. Whitehead
& Hoag
Votes for Women - 3/4" Small circular pin-back button with black lettering on gold ground. Lucke Badge
Votes for Women - 3/4" Small circular button with thin black lettering on gold ground. Union Bug
Votes for Women - 3/4" Circular pin-back button with blue lettering on gold ground. Massachusetts Woman
Suffrage Association
Votes for Women - 3/4" Circular button with blue lettering on a gold ground. Bastian Bros., no date
Votes for Women - 3/4" Small circular button with blue lettering on gold ground. "For" is curved. No
publisher
Votes for Women, Vote "Yes" November 2 - 3/4" Small circular pin-back button with black lettering on gold
ground attached to two ribbon streamers with "Vote 'Yes'" on one and "November 2" on the other. Whitehead
& Hoag
Votes for Women, Political Equality Association - 1 1/4" Large circular pin-back button with white lettering
and image of a herald on blue ground. The herald is blowing a trumpet and holding a flag with six stars
National Equipment Co.
Vote No On Woman Suffrage - 7/8" Pin-back button with black lettering, "Vote No On Woman Suffrage" on
pink ground with a small white center dot. "N" in no has serifs. Phila. Badge Co.
Vote No On Woman Suffrage - 7/8" Pin-back button with black lettering, "Vote No On Woman suffrage" on a
red ground with a white dot in center. Whitehead & Hoag
Vote No On Woman Suffrage - 5/8" Small circular pin-back button with black lettering on pink ground with
white center. Ehrman Mfg. Co.
Opposed To Woman Suffrage - 5/8" Small circular pin-back button with black lettering on white ground with a
red dot in center. Bastian Bros.
Anti-Suffrage - 3/4" Pin-back button with black lettering, "Anti Suffrage" on white ground with a red center
dot. Whitehead & Hoag
Bloomers Inflated Here - 7/8" Pin-back button with blue lettering on white ground, "Bloomers inflate here,
High Admiral Cigarettes". High Admiral Cigarette, Whitehead & Hoag
I'm Your Running Mate - 7/8" Pin-back button with full color cartoon image of a small man running from his
much larger, rolling pin-wielding wife. Tokio Cigarette No date.
Women's Rights! - 7/8" Pin-back button with black and white drawing of the right legs of two women with
skirts raised to show ankles. Hassan Cigarettes
Don't Let It Suffer - 7/8" Color cartoon image of a suffragist singing. Only her open mouth, up-turned nose,
and dark hair bun are visible. Hassan Cigarettes
Yes, I'm Holding My Own - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with white lettering on black ground with full color
image of a man holding his crying infant. Hassan Cigarettes
Yes, I'm Holding My Own - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with white lettering on black ground with black and
white image of a man holding his crying infant. Hassan Cigarettes
Votes for Women - 1/2" Small circular pin-back button with purple, creme, and green striped ground with gold
lettering. Women's Political Union, N.Y. City, no date
Men's Equal Suffrage League - 1/2" Very small circular pin-back button with gold lettering on blue ground.
Whitehead & Hoag
Vote for Woman Suffrage Nov. 6th - 1 1/4" Large circular button with black lettering on a gold ground.
Bastian Bros., no date
I March For Full Suffrage June 7th Will You? - 1 1/2" Large circular button with black lettering on gold
ground. No publisher
Trigate, images of three suffrage leaders - 1 1/4" Large circular button with black and white photographs of
three woman suffrage leaders with decorative black and gold background. Possibly Anna Howard Shaw,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Carrie Chapman Catt as younger women. Torsch & Minke
Votes for Women, New York 1915 - 1 1/4" Circular pin-back button with purple border and green center dot
with white lettering. No publisher
Votes for Women, CWSA - 1 1/4 in. Large pin-back button with purple lettering, "Votes for Women," on a
white ground with a green border. In center white lettering, "CWSA," on a purple ground within a green Celtic
knot design. Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association, Torsch & Franz
Anna Howard Shaw - 3/4" Circular button with sepia photograph of Dr. Anna Howard Shaw. No text. No
publisher
Vote, Citizenship, Suffrage Amendment - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with black lettering on creme ground
with red and black borders and red highlights. Red "E" in center of ground. National Woman Suffrage Pub.
Vote of Woman Suffrage, November 1916 - 1 x 5/8" Oval-shaped button with black lettering on a yellow
ground with gold border and white horizontal stripe across center. Bastian Bros., no date.
Woman Suffrage Party - 1 x 5/8" Oval-shaped pin-back button with black lettering on stripes of yellow, white,
and blue. Ehrman Mfg. Co., no date.
Votes for Women - 1 3/8" x 3/8" Rectangular pin-back button with gold lettering across purple, white, and
yellow enamel, outlined in gold. S.M. Meyer
Votes for Women - 3/4" Circular pin-back button with gold lettering and nine stars on blue ground. Cruver
Mfg., no date.
Votes for Women - 3/4" Brass pin, circular pin-back button with raised image of woman at the bow of boat
looking with outstretched arms to the sunrise over the Capitol. S.M. Meyer
Votes for Women, Victory 1915 - 7/8" Brass pin with scalloped edges. Raised image of the Great Seal of New
York surrounded by lettering in gold on purple enamel. Whitehead & Hoag
Votes for Women - 5/8" Small brass pin with scalloped edges. Raised figure of woman holding scales of
justice with sunrise in the background, blue enamel on gold metal. Bastian Bros., no date.
Votes for Women - 1 5/16 x 1/4" Small rectangular brass pin. Gold metal with gold lettering on white enamel
ground. Bastian Bros., no date.
Votes for Women - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with gold lettering and four stars on a creme ground outlined
in gold. National Equipment Co., no date
Votes for Women, Women's Political Union - 1 1/4" Large circular pin-back button with image of woman
herald holding a flag with eleven stars and blowing a trumpet in purple, green, crème.
Women's Political Union, NYC
Women's Rights silver plated badge - 1 1/2" x 3" Silver-plated badge with "Women's Rights" at top, gold cloth
ribbon hold laurel leaf fob. "Votes for Women" with WSA in center. Schwaab S&S Co., Milwaukee
Under The 19th Amendment I Cast My First Vote Nov. 2nd, 1920 - 1 3/4" gold cloth badge with 5" gold cloth
ribbon, "Harding Coolidge the straight Republican ticket, Lancaster, PA". J.H. Shaw, Philadelphia
N.Y.W.S.A. 26th Annual Provention, Ithaca, 1894 Souvenir of the 600,000 petition - 2 3/4" x 6" gold silk
ribbon with black lettering. No publisher
Votes for Women rosette and ribbon - 7/8" black/crème on 2 1/2" red/gold/purple "Votes for Women" rosette
with 5 1/2" purple and gold ribbon hanging. Wm. H. Hoegee, Los Angeles, Ca.
"Votes for Women, Coming Eventually - Why Not Now? Keep Up To Date, Vote For Woman Suffrage" - 3
1/2" gold/crème/blue celluloid perpetual calendar and mirror, "Votes for Women, Coming Eventually - Why
Not Now? Keep Up To Date, Vote For Woman Suffrage". National Woman Suffrage Pub.
Oh! You Suffragettes - 5 p. sheet music. B.A. Koellhoffer, Irvington, N.J.
She's Good Enough To Be Your Baby's Mother - 5 p. sheet music. Jerome H. Remick & Co.
Woman Forever March - 6 p. sheet music. E.T. Paull Music Co.
Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes Votes for Women - Advertisement from back of magazine or journal. Shows
girls marching with boxes of corn flakes, No publisher
Inez Milholland Boissevain - 36"x28"; Color; Framed idealized portrait of Inez Milholland as she appeared at
the head of the parade on March 3, 1913. Dressed in white, she rides a white horse and carries a banner with
"Forward into light." Poster has gold background with large purple/blue circular center and white lettering No
publisher
Votes for Women canvas pennant on stick - Unframed pennant with stenciled "Votes for Women" in black on
yellow ground. No publisher
Votes for Women pennant [on stick] - Purple/green/white "Votes for Women" felt pennant. No publisher
Votes for Women - Black/gold felt "Votes for Women" pennant. No publisher
Forward Into Light - Inez Milholland Boissevain on horseback. No publisher
March 28, 1914 issue of The Suffragist - 8 p. Features cover of a suffragist luring a donkey with food dish
marked "Our Votes". Washington, D.C.: National Woman's Party. 1914.
February 21, 1914 issue of The Suffragist - 8 p. Features cover of a suffragist walking rather than taking a
donkey cart. Washington, D.C.: National Woman's Party. 1914.
Votes for Women ceramic kitten - Grey and blue kitten on "Votes for Women" pedestal. Very rare. British
women's suffrage symbol. No publisher
Woman holding dog glass bottle "Suffragette" - Glass bottle of a woman holding a dog with text "Suffragette"
at bottom. No publisher
Votes for Women saucer - White china saucer with blue lettering "Votes for Women". No publisher
"Women voters! Your hopes for a bigger, broader citizenship for women lie in the election of Cox and
Roosevelt" - Excerpt from November 1920 issue of Delineator.
"Susan B. Anthony, The Grand Old Lady Of Suffrage" - Excerpt from a 1915 issue of The Metropolitan pp.
33-34, 54-58
Votes for Women pencil - Yellow/black; "Votes for Women" pencil. No publisher
Votes for Women hat band - Yellow/black "Votes for Women" hat band. No publisher
Votes for Women bird shade pull - Blue and gold window shade pull in the shape of a bird. Text in black
letters, "Votes for Women, Nov. 2.". Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Association
Votes for Women large canvas banner - Yellow with black stenciled lettering "Votes for Women" large canvas
banner. No publisher
Votes for Women - 7/8" Circular pin-back button with gold lettering and six stars on crème ground. Lucke
Badge
Votes for Women - 1 1/4" x 7/16" Oval button with black lettering on yellow ground under glass mounted on
brass. No publisher
Votes for Women - 1 1/4" Large circular pin-back button with black lettering on gold ground. Rudolph Bros.,
no date
Votes for Women, Women's Political Union - 1 1/4" Circular pin-back button with image of woman herald
holding a six-star flag and blowing a trumpet in light purple, green, and white. Sommer Badge Mfg.
"V" Logo. Votes for Women pennant - 11" x 36" Black/yellow felt. No publisher
"Keep cool! There Will Be Nothing To Worry About Once We Get Votes For Women" paper fan - 7" x 7"
Paper fan with wooden stick. Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Association.
Votes for Women suffragette statuette (Sojourner Truth?) - 7 1/4" Bisque statuette of African American
woman (possibly Sojourner Truth?), full color. This statuette demeans women and African-Americans, but it is
important to document this fact. No publisher
Sterling silver Susan B. Anthony demitasse spoon - 4 1/2" Sterling silver spoon with likeness of Susan B.
Anthony and her name and slogan, "Political equality". No publisher
Endowment Purchases
Blackwell, Dr. Elizabeth. Pioneer Work for Women. J.M. Dent & Sons, Ltd. pgs 236 - Elizabeth Blackwell
autobiographical of how she became a doctor - Signatures in front: A. I. MacDonald and Agnes I Starr Leather cover in fair condition
Memories of Charlotte Marsh. Suffragette Fellowship, 1961. A tribute to Charlotte Marsh - Published
Suffragette Fellowship by Marian Lawson- some marks on cover - softcover
Elizabeth Brownrigg Engravings. Two engravings of Elizabeth Brownrigg executed for Cruelty and Murder;
original engravings by R. Cooper
Scott-Holland, Canon Henry. The Coming of Women. The National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies,
Oct. 1908. pgs 4 - reprinted from "The Commonwealth" of July, 1908, by kind permission of the Editor - 13cm
w x 19.3cm
Scottish University Women's Suffrage Union. List of Books and Pamphlets on the Emancipation of Women,
1911. pgs 4 - with 3 printed - Listing of reading material with information on list including price - top of page
list the executive committee - pages are bound at top and has been taken out of a book - 18.5 cm w x 25 cm
Smith, Kevin. The Militant Suffragettes as a Police Problem: London 1906-1914. Police Journal, The Police
Journal, vol 51, no 3. July - September 1978. Article page 274 contained in the Journal - Softcover
Smith, Valarie. Not Just Race, Not Just Gender. Routledge, 1998. pgs 166 - Black Feminist Readings Softcover
Taylor, Clare. British & American Abolitionists. Edinburgh Univ. Press, 1974. pgs 586 - Collection of Letters
showing the connections between British and US activists - Hardback with jacket
Thompson, William. Appeal of one Half of the Human Race, Women, Against the Pretensions of the Other
Half Men. Eagle Printing, pgs 221 - No date of printing - first published in 1825 - Shows Limited Edition of
500 copies but not numbered - Includes a new Critical Introduction by Joseph Lee - Hardback with jacket
Vyas, Anju and Singh, Sunita. Women's Studies in India. Sage Publications, 1993. pgs 257 - First published Information Sources, Services and Programs in India - Hardback w/ jacket
Ward, Austin and Maria N. The Husband in Utah, James Blackwood, Paternoster Row. London, 1857 pgs. 212
- or Sights and Sounds among the Mormons, with remarks on their moral and social economy - spine has been
repaired with new material and covers part of a signature on the front cover - Name of Hazelton signed on title
page - Hardback with color illustration on cover
Women's Freedom League. Women's Suffrage and the Social Evil Women's Freedom League, ? pgs 6 - 14cm
w x 21.5 cm h - article detached out of pamplett - pg 3, 4, 5, 6 and a page showing branches of the league
(England, Ireland, Scotland and London) and other publications - paper in poor shape
Organ of the Women's Protective and Provident League
The Women's Union Journal. Feb 1876. pgs 88 - Bound volume covering the first year of the journal's
existence Feb. 1876 to Jan 1877, no. 1 - no. 12 of journal - Front of cover has London Library information Writing on first article: 1877 The women have already saved about L& have found the benefits very useful Prelooker, Jaakoff. The Women's Demonstrations: The Woman Citizen Publishing Society, June 1908. 1 page
2 sided - 13 3/4cm w x 21cm h - A Russian's Point of View - First published in the Anglo-Russian,1908
Stokes, Marie Carmichael. Equipping a Birth Control Clinic. Mothers' Clinic for Constructive Birth Control,
1952. pgs 15 - Second edition C.B.C. Bulleting No. 3 - pamphlet
WSPU Wafer. Circular Paper Wafer used to stick on an envelope or notepaper - the design is Sylvia
Pankhurst's woman sower (SP's monogram is printed on the paper) Colors: purple, white and green with 'Votes
for Women' and 'Women's Social and Political Union' written - 1 in in diameter
Postcard - Children's Fancy Dress Party. 1935. Photo b/w of St. Olave's Prep School?? Writing states fancy
xmas party 1935 - no posted but has writing on back: Love them??? For xmas?? Year
Postcard - Suffragette Headquarters Bristol. B/W Photo of wrecked shop Park Street that students from the
University trashed in ostensible revenge for supposed suffragette arson on their sports pavilion at Combe
Dingle. Not posted - writing on back is in pencil note from Aunt to Niece
Postcard - We Demand the Vote - Cat with hat and scarf in Purple, Green White with Votes for Women Pen. A
& G Taylor, 1892. "Orthochrome" Series of Copyright pictorial post cards 70 & 78 Queen Victoria St London
E.C. - Postmarked on back Hassocks 4am Ap 7 1910 - Addressed to Miss T I L Ellis Sussex - I thought you
would like this n.c. With love looking forward to seeing you from Sylvia
Postcard - Flat bed wagon. B/W photo of horse and flatbed wagon. On wagon two young men are dressed as
suffragettes hold Vote for Women signs/flag - three young boys 2 in aprons and one holding a baby - not
postmarked
Postcard - parade with horse drawn wagons. B/W photo of parade with horses and wagons. Street is lined with
onlookers - Second wagon has woman in black standing with woman sitting - Sign says Votes for Women not postmarked
Postcard - The Suffragette Proudly goes to - Glory Ralph Tuck & Sons. Cartoon colored postcard - "Oilette"
"The Suffragette" Postcard 9498 - Faces in back of patty wagon one hold flag Votes for Women flag is upside
down. One officer driving and one looking back - Postmarked on back to Miss Gye 7-1-09 France
Postcard - The Suffragette Addresses a meeting of Citizens Ralph Tuck & Sons. Color picture of a suffragette
wearing a bow tie talking to children - one boy holding a votes for women flag - Series: The Suffragette 9498 Postmarked: Southamton 2:30pm Aug 10 09 to Miss Kate Robinson Smithwick B. hams
Postcard - We only want what the men have got!!! color picture of women in red skirts with white shirt - on
table next to her is sign Votes for Women Miss Ortobee Spankdfirst - Not postmarked - Printed in Germany
Postcard - "Why won't they let the Women help me?" Artists' Suffrage League b/w picture of man (Poor John
Bull) holding baby stirring a pot and holding a sign: Poor law reform unemploy - Boy standing by chair
blowing horn with words Educate Me - Girl reading paper that says Welsh Disestablishment Budget - Not
postmarked
Postcard - Women Writers' Suffrage League b/w showing woman being dragged from the feet of blind 'Justice'
by the figure of prejudice - Written at the top is 1909 and on back La Scala Theatre 1909 - Not postmarked
Taylor, Ann. Autobiography and Other Materials of Mrs. Gilbert, (Formerly Ann Taylor). Volume I. London:
Henry S. King & Co., 1874. pgs. 325. With Portraits and Illustrations. Edited by Josiah Gilbert.
Taylor, Ann. Autobiography and Other Materials of Mrs. Gilbert, (Formerly Ann Taylor). Volume II. London:
Henry S. King & Co., 1874. pgs. 342.With Portraits and Illustrations. Edited by Josiah Gilbert.
Dreiser, Theodore. A Gallery of Women. Volume I. New York: Horace Liveright, 1929. pgs. 428. In two
volumes. Volume. I. This edition of A Gallery of Women is limited to five hundred and sixty numbered and
signed copies 535 of which are for sale. This copy is number 133. Author's signature written over copy
number.
Dreiser, Theodore. A Gallery of Women. Volume II. New York: Horace Liveright, 1929. pgs. 394. This is
volume 2 of 2.
Stetson, Charlotte Perkins. In This Our World. Oakland, CA: McCombs & Vaughn, 1893. pgs. 120. Small
brown soft cover book. Cover shows picture of sun setting with camels in black print. Poems by Charlotte
Perkins Stetson
Suffrage Tug, Jersey City (#3362-9). Black and white reproduction photo; c.1900 Very unique women's
suffrage suffragette photograph; Tug vessel contains men and women; Women wearing sashes that say "Votes
for Women"; Banners on tug show words "Votes for Women - Women's Political Union - New Jersey".
Suffragettes, London (#21-11). Black and white reproduction photo; c.1900 Six women carrying suffragette
broadsides printed with either "Votes for Women" or "Votes for Women: Meeting to demand the
Enfranchisement of Women and to protest against the exclusion of Women from a share in Law-Making
Essex Hall, Essex St. Strand on Monday, Nov. 25 Mrs. Despard, Miss Irene Miller, Mrs. Edith How Martyn,
Miss Neilans
Handicapped! Color reproduction poster; c. 1900 Image of a man in a sailboat with the word "Votes" printed
on sail with woman in a smaller vessel rowing; "Handicapped!" printed in large type at the bottom of poster;
Published by the Artists' Suffrage League at Carl Hentschel Ltd. 182, 183, 184 Fleet St. E.C.
Woman Suffrage 50th Anniversary first day of issue 1970 Commemorative envelope; Postmarked First Day of
Issue Adams, MA Aug 26, 1970 01220; "Woman Suffrage 50th Anniversary first day of issue" printed across
envelope; Profile drawing of Susan B. Anthony printed on envelope; Drawing of three women in voting booths
with dresses showing below curtain printed on envelope; Woman Suffrage 1920-1970 50th Anniversary 6¢
Stamp affixed to envelope; Stamp contains image of antique car with women holding banners printed with
"Votes for Women"
Women's Vote 1893-1993. 1993. Four Commemorative Stamps from New Zealand of varying values ($1.50,
$1.00, 80¢, and 45¢); Images on stamps depict the lives of women throughout the ages, moving back in time as
the value of stamp decreases; $1.50 stamp depicts two contemporary female business executives; $1.00 stamp
depicts c. 1950s housewife with three children, oldest child receiving help with homework; 80¢ stamp depicts
World War II era woman working in an airplane factory; 45¢ stamp depicts women registering their votes at
the polls in late 19th century
Vrouwenkiesrecht c. 1910. Antique thimble; Rare piece of original antique Women's Suffrage memorabilia;
Text "Vrouwenkiesrecht" (with translates to "Votes for Women" in Dutch) printed on the outer rim of thimble;
No markings or maker's marks; Slight wear from use and age; Made from brass/brass-like alloy
2 Newspapers/Abe Lincoln/100th Birthday/Woman Suffrage - The San Francisco Sunday Call, Part One
February 7, 1909; Cover is picture of Abe Lincoln in color by Barough 1909; 6 pages; talks about his life with
pictures. Second paper; Printed at the Exposition - Editorial and City Life Section of the San Francisco
Examiner, October 31, 1915; Article about Lincoln ended salvery and not keeping women as slaves. Printed
letter from Lincoln to Ms. Bixby of Boston on the loss of her five sons.
Loyal Temperance Legion (LTL) Pin. Navy blue and white LTL pin; Made by St. Louis Button Co.; LTL is a
subsidiary of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) from Fredonia, NY; WCTU is the oldest
continuing non-sectarian women's organization worldwide and is known for their promotion of prohibition;
Many members of the WCTU also focused on suffrage; The WCTU was instrumental in organizing women's
suffrage leaders and in helping more women become involved in American politics.
Wilkinson, Emily, The Town That Was Murdered: The Life-Story of Jarrow 1939. Hardcover; 1st edition; 287
pp.; Left Book Club Edition Not for Sale to the Public; Book written by Ellen Wilkinson and published by
Victor Gollancz Ltd. In London; Red covered book with sun fading on spine; Stamp inside front cover
("International Book Shop Pty. Ltd. 182 Exhibition St. Melbourne"); Inscription inside front page ("R.F.
Monfool 1939") appears to be original owner of book; Wilkinson became a member of the National Union of
Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS) in 1912; She was the first woman organizer of the AUCE and was also
active in local politics; In 1923 Wilkinson was elected to serve on the Manchester City Council. Hard Cover;
red.
Susan B. Anthony Letter Opener Pewter Letter Opener; Sculpted by Suzanne Benton; Front side has embossed
profile image of Susan B. Anthony; Reverse side is inscribed "Susan B. Anthony Failure is Impossible ♀
1820-1906"; Suzanne Benton is a transculturalist whose work studying masking, ritual, and mythology has
extended from New York City to India, Nepal, Ireland, East Africa, Bulgaria, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Bosnia,
and Spain.
Susan B. Anthony Death Mask Pendant Pewter Death Mask Pendant; Sculpted by Suzanne Benton; Front side
has the front image of Susan B. Anthony; Reverse side is inscribed "Susan B. Anthony Educate All Women to
Rebel 1820-1906"; Suzanne Benton is a transculturalist whose work studying masking, ritual, and mythology
has extended from New York City to India, Nepal, Ireland, East Africa, Bulgaria, Bangladesh, Pakistan,
Bosnia, and Spain.
Johnson, Joan Marie Southern Women and the Seven Sister Colleges: Feminist Values and Social Activism,
1875-1915. 2008. Hardback; 1st Edition; 229 pp.; From inside cover of jacket--"From the end of
Reconstruction and into the New South era, more than one thousand white southern women attended one of the
Seven Sister colleges: Vassar, Wellesley, Smith, Mount Holyoke, Bryn Mawr, Radcliffe, and Barnard. John
Marie Johnson looks at how much education--in the North, at some of the country's best schools--influenced
southern women to challenge their traditional gender roles and become active in woman suffrage and other
social reforms of the Progressive Era South."
Johnson, Joan Marie. Southern Women and the Seven Sister Colleges: Feminist Values and Social Activism,
1875-1915. 2008. Hardback; 1st Edition; 229 pp.; From inside cover of jacket--"From the end of
Reconstruction and into the New South era, more than one thousand white southern women attended one of the
Seven Sister colleges: Vassar, Wellesley, Smith, Mount Holyoke, Bryn Mawr, Radcliffe, and Barnard. John
Marie Johnson looks at how much education--in the North, at some of the country's best schools--influenced
southern women to challenge their traditional gender roles and become active in woman suffrage and other
social reforms of the Progressive Era South."
Sterling, Andrew B and Keiser, Robert A Be Good to California, Mr. Wilson Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., New
York, MCMXVI 10.5 w x 13.5 h - Black and White music sheet. Cover shows the title: Be Good to California,
Mr. Wilson (California Was Good To You) Has the chorus printed on the front. Picture of Mr. Wilson in oval
with two eagles on either side. Inside has music to song. Back side has advertisement of other music you can
purchase.
Cameo Girls Head Vase Martina 1920 Suffragette MIB. July 17, 2008. Cameo Vase from the 1920's
Ian Christopher Fletcher, Laura E. Nym, Mayhall, and Philippa Levine Women's Suffrage in the British
Empire: Citizenship, nation and race
Routledge Taylor and Francis group: c. 2000. Woman's Suffrage in the British Empire explores politics of
women's Suffrage from the age of empire to the eve of decolonization. Scholars analyze suffrage movements
in Palestine under the British mandate in S. Africa, New Zealand, and Australia, India, Iran, Canada and the
US, as well as the UK. Hardback copy, c. 2000.
Frank Kennedy. Victor 16294-Frank Kennedy/ADA Jones- Woman's Suffrage. Victor Talking Machine Co.,
Camden, NJ. Victor Schultz on Woman's Suffrage Record by Frank Kennedy on front side; back side is Si
Perkins Barn Dance; Ada Jones - Len Spencer
Shealy, Daniel edited by Little Women Abroad. The University of Georgia Press, 2008. pgs 291, The Alcott
Sisters' Letter from Europe, 1870 - 1871. Several illustrations by May Alcott in the book. Hardback with
cover
Shealy, Daniel edited by Little Women Abroad. The University of Georgia Press, 2008. pgs 291, The Alcott
Sisters' Letter from Europe, 1870 - 1871. Several illustrations by May Alcott in the book. Hardback with
cover
Life Magazine "Women Arise" Time, Inc. September 4, 1970. pg 2a - article in editor's note "Some of our
reporters who covered Women's Lib" - pg 16B "Women Arise - Across the land they march to protest their
unequal existence in a man's world. Article also has interviews with eight women: Catherin Drinkler Bowen,
Jane Trahey, Poppy Northcutt, Sarah Hughes, Muriel Siebert, Florynce Kennedy, Alice Paul. By: Author: Kate
Mullett, by Marie-Claude Wrenn.
The Wife's Commandments. The Husband's Commandments. c 1880?, J. W. Wilson, Ogdensburg, NY. 11.7
cm width x 7 cm height - This is a 2 sided cream card stock. On one side list the Wife's Commandments and
on the other list The Men's Commandments.
Women Suffragette Leaders on Hike to Washington-they hike from New York to Washington. Article is
titled: Bedraggled Army of Suffragettes reach Washington, Unfriendly Crowds Jostle Tanned and Blistered
Bunch of Hikers. Only Ten of Original Sixteen Finish March. The ten marchers were met by Miss Alice Paul.
The marchers were: Rosaile Jones, Ida Craft, Martha Klatscken, Elizabeth Aldrich, Minerva Crowell, Miss
Bowen, Elizabeth Deutsch, Constance Leep, Mrs. John Boldt and mrs. George Wendt. The appearance of the
walkers led to a disagreement with Ms. Paul on presenting the letter to Wilson that the group had brought with
them. Two additional clippings with the paper: Women of Alaska given Franchise. Juneau, Alaska March 22
(pencil date 3-29-1913). The second clipping was King Georgia Becoming Active. Pencil date 3-21-13.
London, March 21 mentioning police looking for suffragettes who set fire to Lady Whites country home and a
bill that will give powers to dealing with suffragette offenders.
Print copy of black and white photo of Susan B. Anthony. Page has been cut out of a magazine. She was a
speaker for women's rights in the 1800's. She worked with congress to secure women's right to vote. She
lectured more than a hundred times a year in all of the Northern and Southern states. Susan wrote the book
"the history of woman suffrage" in two separate volumes.
Stereoview by Keystone View Co., copyrighted Underwood and Underwood, #V 26151 of Dr. Anna Howard
Shaw. 7 x 3 1/2. Two photos black and white (same photo). Dr. Shaw is sitting at a desk reading a sheet of
paper in her hand. The photo is taken from behind the desk. Photos are on cardstock material. Keystone View
Company, Manufacturers, Made in the U.S.A., Publishers. Meadville, PA., New York, NY., Chicago, ILL.,
London, England.
Susan Anthony, Rev. Anna Howard Shaw, Alice Stone Blackwell, Rachel Foster Avery, Harriott Taylor Upton
all fight for women's right to vote. Also present at the convention were: Mrs. Holbrook, a brilliant southern
women who was a successful lawyer in Ohio, and Miss Augusta Howard who spoke during the convention.
Black and white reproduction photo - 1908- Trixie Friganza a suffrage feminist. Writing at top: Trixie
Friganza 499-10. Ms. Friganza is wearing a oversized hat, white scarf around her neck, and a suffrage sash.
She is standing on the steps in front of a building. The building to the rights shows: Bakery & Luncheon on
the window and to the right has a sign that reads: Portraits & Miniatures, from life and photograph. Instruction
- Painting. Otto Merkel 122 East 23rd.
Black print. National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies: PUBLIC Meeting for Men and Women at the
Nottingham Trade Hall. National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies. Law-abiding, Non-Party. Public
Meeting for men and women at the Nottingham Trade Hall, Wed, 16th 8.00pm. Enfranchisement of Women.
4 Women Speakers, Chair: Mrs. Henry Thomas, LLD. Speakers: Miss A. Maude Royden, Miss Margaret
Robertson, B.A., Mr. W.C. Anderson, Ma. Robert Mathews, B.A. Tickets to be obtained by members of the
Union for themselves and their friends. Doors open 7.15, Admission Free, Suffrage Songs. All
Communication to be addressed to: Miss P. Starchey, Nottingham Society for Women's Suffrage, 58 Victoria
Street. Printed by William Clark & Sons, 4 Queens Rd., Nottingham
Postcard (front)- "just take it from me- Don't ever try to tell a heavy weight suffragette the reason she shouldn't
be allowed to vote" Color drawing of boy in blue suit with black right eye, hat on the ground. Girl in oversized
green hat standing in the back ground. Drawing by E.B. Kemble. Postcard (back) "Dear Mother, How are you
all by this time? I am feeling very good again. Hope the sick foks are better up there. Annie didn't go u on the
creek still with me yet." Your D, Muriel. Addressed to: Mrs. Stettie Evaus? 87 Brusselle, Clifton Forge, VA.
Postmarked: Aug. ?? Eagle Rock ??, one cent stamp
Esther Hobart Morris set out to achieve equality for Wyoming's women and brought about a suffrage bill
before Wyoming's territorial legislature. This legislative act came about in 1869 which gave distinction to the
territory of Wyoming as the 1st government of the world to grant women equal rights. William H. Bright of
South Pass first introduced this suffrage bill in the 1869 territorial legislature. pgs. 62-66, 97 (poster on back of
book of " American Women and her Political Peers").
Cloth sewing kit consisting of: five needles, 2 small cardboards with white and black thread and a silver
thimble (these are enclosed at the bottom with three pockets to hold them). This is folded and tied with a gold
ribbon. On the outside the word in black are: Votes for Women. Vote Yes Nov. 6. Very good condition.
4 white reproduction china tea pots with blue lettering "Votes for Women".
Blackwell, Alice Stone. Falsehoods about Wyoming. May 1897, The Woman's Journal, Boston, Mass Single
page, yellowing paper with black ink, some tearing, double sided print, Woman Suffrage Leaflet. This leaflet
was a response to a pamphlet entitled "Tested by its Fruits" published by Massachusetts Assoc. Opposed to the
Extension of Suffrage to Women. Talks about gambling, liquor, dangerous weapons and homicides. Ms.
Blackwell wrote to Justice Groesbeck, of Wyoming, requesting information on the items listed above. Justice
Blackwell, recently retired, provides a response which Ms. Blackwell prints in this leaflet.
Mansfield, Edward D. The Legal Rights, Liabilities and Duties of Women. John P. Jewett & Co., Cincinnati,
William H. Moore & Co., 1845. 369 pages, first edition, some water staining on pages, green hardback cover.
Title; with an introductory history of their legal condition in the Hebrew, Roman and Feudal civil system.
Includes the law of marriage and divorce, the social relations of husband and wife, parent and child, or
guardian and ward, and of employer and employed. Signature in front: Sarah L. Wallace, Young Lady's
Institute, Pittsburgh, Mass (sic).
Truth, Sojourner Narrative of Sojourner Truth. Printed for the author, Boston,1875. 324 pages, brown hardback
cover. First enlarged edition, comprised of a later printing from stereotyped plates of the 1850 Narrative and
the first edition of the Book of Life. Preface written by Wm. Lloyd Garrison. Pencil signature of previous
owner: J. W. McCurdy and also has his name stamped on a page.
Mott, Lucretia. Discourse on Woman. Philadelphia: T.B. Peterson, No. 98 Chestnut Street, 1850. Delivered at
the Assembly Buildings, December 17, 1849. Being a Full Phonographic Report, Revised by the Author. First
Edition. 8vo, pp. 20 Bound in original printed buff paper wrappers, sewn. Publisher advert to rear wrapper.
Some general edgewear & soiling, but not excessively so. Usual spotting to paper, with faint half-circle
stain/tideline to right portion of text-block throughout. Krichmar 1858; Sabin 51114; Franklin, page 18.
Reprinted in 1869, this first edition quite scarce, with OCLC showing just 2 cc, of which only one resides in
the US [Juniata]. The NUC adds one additional [LoC], and a Tripod search shows copies at Haverford &
Swarthmore. Rare in the trade, ABPC & AmEx show none have come to auction in the last 30+ years. In
nearly 40 years in dealing with books by and about women, we have never had a copy of this first edition.