Descendants of Suffragists Mirror on the Combat for Girls’s Proper to Vote

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Descendants of Suffragists Mirror on the Combat for Girls’s Proper to Vote

1. Harriot Stanton Blatch, 1911. Library of Congress2. Maggie Lena Walker, circa 1920s. Courtesy of Nationwide Park Service, Maggie L. Walker Natio


1. Harriot Stanton Blatch, 1911. Library of Congress

2. Maggie Lena Walker, circa 1920s. Courtesy of Nationwide Park Service, Maggie L. Walker Nationwide Historic Web site

3. Ida B. Wells-Barnett together with her household, 1917. Particular Collections Analysis Heart, College of Chicago Library

4. Ida B. Wells-Barnett together with her kids, 1909. Particular Collections Analysis Heart, College of Chicago Library

5. Mary Godat Bellamy, circa 1910. through William Bellamy

6. Adella Hunt Logan together with her household, 1913. Arthur P. Bedou, replica by Mark Gulezian

7. Blanche Ames Ames together with her daughter Pauline Ames Plimpton, mom of Sarah Plimpton, and her husband, Oakes Ames. Undated. Ames Household Papers, Sophia Smith Assortment, Smith Faculty

8. Mary Ann Shadd Cary, circa 1850. Library and Archives Canada/Mary Ann Shadd Cary assortment/c029977

9. Isabella Ewing, 1916. through David Steele Ewing

10. Blanche Ames Ames, 1899. Ames Household Papers, Sophia Smith Assortment, Smith Faculty

11. Maggie Lena Walker together with her household, circa 1920. Courtesy of Nationwide Park Service, Maggie L. Walker Nationwide Historic Web site

12. Nora Stanton Blatch de Forest Barney, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Harriot Stanton Blatch, left to proper, 1892. through Coline Jenkins

13. Frank Tafe and Delia Lefavor Tafe, circa 1918. through Pamela Michael



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