19th at 100: Commemorating the Suffrage Struggle and Its Legacies in Northeast Ohio Main MenuIntroductionThe Road to SuffrageThe Struggle at CWRUNotable FiguresAfter SuffrageEinav Rabinovitch-Fox2e56e3d6b4b5f137a53bf7f9d80912f3b70a7958Lauren Dostal628641db4e19e9efe2242726f29ce1860e9c6baeIsabel Fedewa20dc403a88a0fde6c4856bc25beccbae49174777Jewel Yoder Kuhns34ffc591dd6b165c1079a95ab2c0ba1ad4aecf01Kellyn Toombsef2469033dbca72962b50fe7dea33c71c0a45069Abbey Wellsef2cda5c08d1ad75ae8532e3f202032ddc31cee0
Protest and the National Woman's Party
12020-04-21T17:53:27+00:00Isabel Fedewa20dc403a88a0fde6c4856bc25beccbae4917477781plain2020-04-21T17:53:27+00:00Isabel Fedewa20dc403a88a0fde6c4856bc25beccbae49174777A step beyond processions and parades, suffragists also protested in more controversial ways. The National Woman's Party stands out as the group that picketed the White House, even during World War I, and led hunger strikes when jailed. --unfinished--
This page has paths:
12020-04-21T17:09:42+00:00Isabel Fedewa20dc403a88a0fde6c4856bc25beccbae49174777The 20th Century: Age of AdvertisingIsabel Fedewa5image_header2020-05-03T23:11:09+00:00Isabel Fedewa20dc403a88a0fde6c4856bc25beccbae49174777
This page references:
12020-03-05T00:06:27+00:00Picketing in all sorts of weather1N.Y. Day Picket. Jan. 26, 1917plain2020-03-05T00:06:27+00:00Library of Congress Records of the National Woman's Party