Browse Items (31 total)
- Collection: The Library of Congress
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Suffrage Procession
Image of men marching in parade with Socialist Party banners, central banner reads: "Democracy Industrial Political."
Postcard from Charles Zueblin to Elizabeth Smith Miller
New Year's Greeting: Quotation from Mark Twain's Connecticut Yankee on responsibility of citizens to agitate; illustration of Mark Twains last home "Stormfield" in Redding, Connecticut.
Text on back of card reads:
"The citizen who thinks he…
Text on back of card reads:
"The citizen who thinks he…
Elizabeth Smith Miller and Anne Fitzhugh Miller
Photograph of Anne Fitzhugh Miller and Elizabeth Smith Miller on their piazza at Lochland, Geneva, New York.
Justice
Scene from a tableau held on the Treasury steps in Washington, D.C., in conjunction with the Woman's suffrage procession
Crowd breaking parade up at 9th St., Mch [i.e. March] 3, 1913 / Taylor, Wash., D.C.
Woman's suffrage procession in Washington, D.C. being stopped by a crowd.
Bryan's My Man -- Who's Yours?
[Image: A sketch of a fashionable woman with the phrase "Bryan's my man -- Who's yours?" underneath. Printed on a cream-colored card. Likely produced in support of William Jennings Bryan who used suffrage as a platform during his third bid for…
Tags: American, Appealing, APPEARANCE, Assertive, CLASS, Drawing, Dress, Election, FASHION, Fashionable, Hat, Legislation, Male politician, Man, Politician, Politics, President, PRO-SUFFRAGE, PUBLIC, Upper middle class, Woman
Miss Rhoda Palmer
[Image: A photograph of Rhoda Palmer seated in a rocking chair. The text below the image reads: "Miss Rhoda Palmer, Born 1815. One of the five living signers of the Declaration of Sentiments at the first Woman Suffrage Convention, Seneca Falls,…
Votes for Women
[Image: A yellow postcard featuring a fashionable woman sporting a banner with the words "Votes for Women."] Color; Print
A transcript of the message, written by Mrs. Mary T. Lewis Garnett to Anne Fitzhugh Miller, follows: "It's fine -- admirably…
A transcript of the message, written by Mrs. Mary T. Lewis Garnett to Anne Fitzhugh Miller, follows: "It's fine -- admirably…
I Do Not Have All the Rights I Want
[Image: A block of text listing many of the rights sought by the Suffrage Movement. The first word, "I," is an ornately decorated dropcap. The postcard reads: "I do not have all the rights I want. I want the right to close the mines and mills against…