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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.
The reclusive phase of Lytton's life started to change in 1905 when she was left £1,000 in the estate of her great-aunt/godmother, Lady Bloomfield. [3] [20] She donated this to the revival of Morris dancing [3] and her family records state that "Her brother Neville suggested that she gave it to the Esperance Club, a small singing and dancing group for working class girls", [6] where part of ...
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:
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In May 1912, Rogers helped lead a parade to fight for woman suffrage in the state of New York. "The wonderful procession clearly showed that women will win the vote in New York, and very soon, too" she wrote in the New-York Tribune. "The majority of the women of New York were not marching, but that fifteen thousand women of all kinds were ...
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 ...
Mary Ashton Rice was born in Boston, Massachusetts on December 19, 1820, to Timothy Rice and Zebiah Vose (Ashton) Rice. [3] [4]A direct descendant of Edmund Rice, an early Puritan immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony.
O'Keeffe experimented with depicting flowers in her high school art class. Her teacher explained how important it was to examine the flower before drawing it. So, O'Keeffe held it in different ways, capturing different perspectives of the flowers, and also created studies of only a portion of the flower.