"Is your baby fond of you?"
"IS YOUR BABY FOND OF YOU?"
"FOND? FATHER! WHY HE GOES TO
SLEEP ALL DAY ON PURPOSE TO
KEEP ME COMPANY ALL NIGHT!"
HOME
SWEET
HOME
MAY YOUR
TROUBLES
ALL BE
LITTLE ONES
<span>Palczewski Suffrage Postcard Archive, </span><a href="https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/">https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/</a>
Holmfirth, England: Bamforth & Company
1911
Matrimonial Bliss
MATRIMONIAL BLISS
Palczewski Suffrage Postcard Archive, <a href="https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/">https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/</a><a class="external text" href="https://scholarworks.uni.edu/suffrage_images/567/"></a>
Holmfirth, England: Bamforth & Company
ca. 1910
PAST TIMES IN UTAH
PAST TIMES IN UTAH
1832
[Image: Color illustration of a group of Mormon wives, most who look like men, fighting in the bedroom. C.R. Miller may have drawn other postcards with a similar theme.]
<span>Ann Lewis Women's Suffrage Collection (Postcards and Stamps), </span><a href="https://lewissuffragecollection.omeka.net/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://lewissuffragecollection.omeka.net/</a>
1907
Tariff Reform
''Why won't they let the Women help me?"
TARIFF REFORM
FREE TRADE
POOR LAW REFORM
UNEMPLOYMENT
WELSH DISESTABLISHMENT
BUDGET
FREE FEEDING
EDUCATE ME
[Image: Postcard, printed, cardboard, black text and image, white ground, Artists' Suffrage League cartoon illustrating a man trying to look after, feed and educate his children, man depicted seated on a chair holding a baby in one hand and stirring a cooking pot with the other, two other children to his left, slogans on papers and speech bubbles surrounding scene.]
<span>LSE Library (Flickr), </span><a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/lselibrary/">https://www.flickr.com/photos/lselibrary/</a>
Chelsea, London: Artisits' Suffrage League
VOTES FOR MOTHER
VOTES FOR MOTHER
"SHE WORKS FOR US NOW FATHER'S DEAD."
Mary Lowndes Album, <span>LSE Library (Flickr), </span><a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/lselibrary/">https://www.flickr.com/photos/lselibrary/</a>
A SUFFRAGIST ORATOR
A SUFFRAGIST ORATOR
THE HAND THAT
ROCKS THE CRADLE
RULES THE WORLD
AND IT IS WE
WHO ROCK
THE
CRADLE
VOTES FOR WOMEN
DOES MOTHER KNOW YOU'RE OUT!
THE OLD MAN WANTS YOU HOME
GO HOME & MIND THE BABY
<span>Suffrage Postcard Collection, Special Collections & Archives, University of Waterloo, </span><a href="https://uwaterloo.ca/library/special-collections-archives/collections/suffragette-postcard-collection">https://uwaterloo.ca/library/special-collections-archives/collections/suffragette-postcard-collection</a>
SUFFRAGETTES AT HOME – Mrs Joseph McCabe Bathing her Baby
Women's Freedom League
I, Robert Street, Adelphi
Museum of London, <a href="https://collections.museumoflondon.org.uk/online/object/452387.html">https://collections.museumoflondon.org.uk/online/object/452387.html</a>
Adelphi: Women's Freedom League
1910
Oh! Where is my Wandering Wife To-Night?
There is a man in a night gown carrying two babies in both hands. There is a small reality bubble where a woman is in front of a group of other women. There is text beside the woman talking to the others that says, "Why not Run the" on the left, and "Should Women Government" on the right.
OH! WHERE IS MY WANDERING WIFE
TO-NIGHT?
[Image: Part of a series of cards, this card contains an illustration of a man wearing a bathrobe and holding two babies in his arms. Inset to the upper right is a woman addressing a crowd of people, with the words "Why should not women run the government?"]
<span>Ann Lewis Women's Suffrage Collection (Postcards and Stamps), </span><a href="https://lewissuffragecollection.omeka.net/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">https://lewissuffragecollection.omeka.net/</a><br /><br /><span>Florey, Kenneth. American Women Suffrage Postcards: A Study and Catalog. McFarland & Company, Inc., 2015.</span>
Holmfirth, England, and New York: Bamforth
1916
This Ain't No Man's Job
[Image: A young boy is angrily pushing a pram with a crying baby. The boy is dressed in an orange and black checkered cap, a red and black striped, long-sleeved shirt that almost resembles a prison uniform, brown knicker-boxers, black socks and grey/black boots. The baby is dressed in a pink dress with a matching bonnet. There are ruffles on her bonnet. She also has white tights and black shoes. Beneath the two children is the caption "This ain't no man's job." Above the "T" in the caption is "031-2" in small, fine text.] Public. Print. Color on cream cardstock. 9x14 cm.
Palczewski, Catherine H. Postcard Archive. University of Northern Iowa. Cedar Falls, IA.
To the Girls' Christmas Tree
PRESENTS FOR BOYS
We have let you see this nice tree,
So go home quietly the boys may
Want all the presents but perhaps
There may be something left for you.
Museum of London, <a href="http://collections.museumoflondon.org.uk/online/object/289104.html">http://collections.museumoflondon.org.uk/online/object/289104.html</a>
Suffrage Atelier
ca. 1909