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Edna Buckman Kearns (1882–1934) – National Woman's Party campaigner, known for her horse-drawn suffrage campaign wagon (now in the collection of New York State Museum). [30] Harriette A. Keyser (1841–1936) – industrial reformer, social worker, author; co-organizer, New York Woman Suffrage Association. [31] Harriette A. Keyser
The History of Woman Suffrage. New York: J.J. Little & Ives Company. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Leslie Woman Suffrage Commission (1919). The Woman Citizen. Vol. 4 (Public domain ed.). New York City: Leslie Woman Suffrage Commission. Petrash, Antonia (2013). Long Island and the Woman Suffrage ...
Susan B. Anthony (center) with Laura Clay, Anna Howard Shaw, Alice Stone Blackwell, Annie Kennedy Bidwell, Carrie Chapman Catt, Ida Husted Harper, and Rachel Foster Avery in 1896.
Territories on the frontier, eager to attract new settlers, also helped expand suffrage. [7] 1821. In 1821, the state of New York held a constitutional convention which removed property requirements for white male voters, but required that "persons of colour" own $250 worth of property, "over and above all debts," in order to vote. White male ...
The New York State Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage (NYSAOWS) used grass roots mobilization techniques they had learned from watching the suffragists to defeat the 1915 referendum. They were very similar to the suffragists themselves, but used a counter-crusading style warning of the evils that suffrage would bring to women.
American Woman Suffrage Association. [3] Colored Women's Equal Suffrage Club . [4] Colored Women's Independent Political League . [5] Colored Women's Suffrage Club of New York. [6] Colored Women's Suffrage Club . [7] Colored Women's Voting Club in Roanoke . [8] Des Moines League of Colored Women Voters, formed in 1912 .
The listings were drawn from a database of women arrested at a White House protest, African-American women who had published writing on the topic of suffrage, names unearthed through original research during the course of the first biographical investigations, and 2,700 names drawn from volume six of The History of Woman Suffrage (1922). [5]
Grace Duffield Goodwin (October 2, 1869 – January 8, 1926) was an American anti-suffrage activist, writer, and poet. Served as president of the District of Columbia Anti-Suffrage Association and holding a position on the executive committee of the National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage. Her contributions to the movement included ...