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Lilla Day Monroe (November 11, 1858 – March 2, 1929) was a lawyer, pioneer, and suffragette who spent the majority of her life in Topeka, Kansas. She contributed significantly to the women's suffrage movement in Kansas.
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He served as member of the Kansas State Senate from 1892 to 1896, and according to the 1903 Congressional Directory, "at different times has been president of the State Editorial Association, president of the Kansas League of Republican Clubs, and president of the Kansas Day Club, an organization of the young Republicans of the State". [1]
She taught world affairs at a girls' camp in Elmdale, Kansas for three summers. [20] Eleanor Roosevelt wrote one of her "My Day" newspaper columns about Richardson's pamphlet, Your Community United Nations, in 1957. [21] In 1958, she was named one of fifty prominent Kansas women by the Women's Kansas Day Club. [22]
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It’s an opportunity to put Kansas Day on the map when all people are thinking about is cold,” Radil said. Olathe resident Abby Gregory, 9, dances with Leavenworth resident Fiona Baxter, 11, at ...
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She became the President of the Kansas Federation of Women's Clubs in 1911, her second run for the position. [4] He survived his wife when she died in their home in Parsons November 10, 1916. [5] She was the president of the Women's Kansas Day club when she died, and had been the secretary of the National Federation of Women's clubs. [5]