Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Men's Equal Suffrage League, established in Cleveland in 1911. [8] Newbury Women's Suffrage Political Club. [9] Ohio Men's League for Equal Suffrage, created in February 1912. [10] Ohio Woman Suffrage Association (OWSA), founded in 1885 in Painesville. [11] Ohio Women's Rights Association (OWRA), first met in Ravenna on May 25, 1853. [12]
October: Suffragists in Cleveland held a parade that drew more than 10,000 women and 400 men marching and riding on horseback. [10] November 3: The 2nd Ohio women's suffrage amendment is rejected. [7] 1915. The Ohio Woman Suffrage Association (OWSA) invites NAWSA and the Congressional Union (CU) to set up offices in Ohio. [15] 1916
Let Ohio Women Vote postcard. Women's rights issues in Ohio were put into the public eye in the early 1850s. Women inspired by the Declaration of Rights and Sentiments at the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention created newspapers and then set up their own conventions, including the 1850 Ohio Women's Rights Convention which was the first women's right's convention outside of New York and the first ...
Ohio women Jenny Holzer and Lauren Blauvelt have joined TIME's 100 most influential people. Read more about their work. ... 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to ...
The Ohio National Organization for Women (Ohio NOW) was formed in April 1972 in order to more easily connect the Ohio chapters to the National Organization. [1] Ohio NOW has 9 total chapters located in Akron, Ashtabula, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton, Oberlin, Port Clinton, and Toledo.
The Columbus chapter of 100 Black Men of America has a mission to improve the quality of life and economic opportunities for African Americans. ... 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800 ...
Braedyn West, (left) a counseling intern; and Abby Smarkel, a school-based clinician with The Buckeye Ranch, are working with students at Finland Middle School in the South-Western City Schools.
The Ohio Women's Convention at Salem in 1850 met on April 19–20, 1850 in Salem, Ohio, a center for reform activity. It was the third in a series of women's rights conventions that began with the Seneca Falls Convention of 1848. It was the first of these conventions to be organized on a statewide basis. About five hundred people attended.