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The Suffragette was a newspaper associated with the women's suffrage movement in the United Kingdom, as "the Official Organ of the Women’s Social and Political Union" (WSPU). It replaced the previous journal of the organization, Vote for Women, in 1912, and its name changed to Britannia after the outbreak of World War I. [1]
Rice was born in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania in 1877 and grew up in Pottstown.She studied at the School of Industrial Art of the Pennsylvania Museum and studied there for three years from 1894 before going on to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts [2] where she studied sculpture and life drawing with Charles Grafly, William Merritt Chase and Thomas Anshutz.
Timeline of women's suffrage in Arizona Metadata This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
In 1928, Time magazine wrote of her paintings, "when Georgia O'Keeffe paints flowers, she does not paint fifty flowers stuffed into a dish. On most of her canvases there appeared one gigantic bloom, its huge feathery petals furled into some astonishing pattern of color and shade and line."
A month later in June 1912 Rose Schneiderman of the Women's Trade Union League of New York discussed the phrase in a speech she gave in Cleveland in support of the Ohio women's campaign for equal suffrage. [28] In her speech, which was partially published in the Women's Trade Union League journal Life and Labor, she stated:
Ellen Pitfield (c. 1857 – August 1912) was a British midwife, nurse, suffragette and member of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). Life Pitfield joined the suffragette movement in 1908 and became involved with militant action for women’s enfranchisement. This caused her to get arrested twice throughout that same year. Pitfield went on hunger strike whilst in prison. After being ...
April 14, 1912, just a mere 104 years ago today! "Titanic" is certainly one of those movies you can't help but love. Check out more amazing pics from "Titanic" below!
Katie Gliddon was the model for In an Alcove (1902) by her relative and fellow-suffragette Helen Margaret Spanton. Gliddon was born in Twickenham in Middlesex in 1883, the daughter of Margaret Martha née Lelean (1860–1941) and Aurelius James Louis Gliddon (1857–1929), a minister for the United Reformed Church (1882–84) and a homeopathist. [1]