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Suffragette City 100
01. Remember the Ladies
02. Did You Know?
03. Equality Starts With Education
04. Doing the Right Thing, Even When It Costs You
05. The World Anti-Slavery Convention
06. Women Organize and Unite
07. Another Tea Party That Started a Revolution
08. Seneca Falls
09. The “Discourse on Women” Speech
10. The Underground Railroad
11. Women's Rights Goes National
12. Bloomer Boom
13. The Truth About Sojourner Truth
14. Better Off Single?
15. Find Your Tribe
16. The Power of the Press
17. The Civil War
18. United Front
19. Divisions Among Women
20. Principle, Not Policy; Justice, Not Favors.
21. Different Approaches
22. Civil Disobedience
23. First of Many
24. All The Way To The Supreme Court
25. Granted, Revoked, Then Granted Again
26. When Heroes Are Human
27. Women’s Anti-Suffrage Groups
28. Nevertheless, She Persisted
29. Independent Ladies
30. The Woman Who Dared
31. The Temperance Movement
32. Writing Herstory (But Not the Whole Story)
33. The Susan B. Anthony Amendment
34. Fasten Your Seatbelts
35. The Lockwood/Stow Presidential Run
36. The Remarkable Suffragist Jane Addams & Hull House
37. History Doesn’t Happen in a Vacuum
38. Reunited But Not Everyone is Equal
39. The Fierce Ida B. Wells
40. Solitude of Self
41. Colorado Gets the Vote
42. Our Suffrage Sisters Abroad
43. Jewish Women Unite for Women’s Rights
44. The Woman’s Bible
45. The National Association of Colored Women
46. Idaho Gets the Vote
47. More Women-Led Anti-Suffrage Groups
48. Resolution for Equality
49. Women’s Trade Union League
50. Rest in Peace Sister Susan
51. Woman Suffrage Party
52. California Gets the Vote
53. First Suffrage Parade in New York City
54. National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage
55. Jovita Idar and Liga Femenil Mexicanista
56. Arizona Gets the Vote
57. The Two 1912 New York Suffrage Parades
58. Kansas Gets the Vote
59. The Bull Moose Party Splits the Ticket
60. Oregon Gets the Vote
61. Suffrage: The Next Generation
62. The 1913 Suffrage Parade in Washington D.C. (SHORT)
62. The 1913 Suffrage Parade in Washington D.C. (FULL)
63. Emmeline Pankhurst Visits America
64. Illinois Grants Partial Suffrage
65. Progressives vs. Moderates
66. The West Leads the Way
67. The East Falls Short
68. Women on the Move
69. The “Winning Plan"
70. The First Woman Elected to Congress
71. The Silent Sentinels
72. World War I
73. The Night of Terror
74. The Public Outcry
75. New York Gets the Vote
76. The 1918 Pandemic
77. Watchfires of Freedom
78. Prohibition
79. From Prison to the People
80. Finishing the Fight
81. On To Ratification
82. The Race for Ratification
83. Craftivism
84. Women’s Work
85. Founding of the League of Women Voters
86. It All Comes Down to Tennessee
87. Making It Official
88. Who Could Actually Vote
89. The Equal Rights Amendment
90. Women’s Suffrage Around the World
91. Suffering for Suffrage
#WCW
01. Deborah Sampson
02. Oney Judge
03. Emma Willard
04. The Hart Sisters
05. African-American Women in Slave Revolts
06. Luisa Moreno
07. Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Women
08. Mary Katharine Goddard
09. Two Spirits
10. Delia Webster
11. Women Mountaineers
12. Gertrude Bustill Mossell
13. Maritcha Remond Lyons
14. Harriet Ann Jacobs
15. Karen Horney and Leta Hollingsworth
16. Edmonson Sisters
17. Elizabeth Keckley
18. Anna Dickenson
19. Adella Hunt Logan
20. Ida Craddock
21. Women Boxers
22. Little Egypt
23. Helen May Butler
24. Mary Tape
25. Martha Hughes Cannon
26. Julia Brace, Laura Bridgman, and Helen Keller
27. Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin
28. Annie Turnbo Pope Malone
29. Kittie Knox
30. Dr. Mary E. Walker
31. Matilda Bradley Carse
32. Sarah Winnemucca
33. Maria Mitchell
34. Eunice Foote
35. Charley Parkhurst
36. Louise de Koven Bowen
37. Helen Hunt Jackson
38. Suffrage Leaders in the Territory of Hawaii
39. Mary Eliza Mahoney
40. William Cathay/Cathay Williams
41. Meredith Ellis
42. Zonia Baber
43. Maud Nathan and Annie Nathan Meyer
44. Voltairine de Cleyre
45. Sarah J. Smith Tompkins Garnet
46. Alice Brown Davis
47. Rosika Schwimmer
48. Tye Leung Schultze
49. Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
50. Lucy Read Anthony
51. Rose Bower
52. Senda Berenson
53. Maud Malone
54. Edith Maragret Garrud
55. Sara Estela Ramirez
56. Nampeyo
57. Komaku Kimura
58. Circus Suffragettes
59. Anandi Gopal Joshi and Rukhmabai
60. Elizabeth Kent
61. Nina Evans Allender
62. Nellie Quander
63. Rosa May Billinghurst
64. Fannie Hagen Emanuel
65. Edna Buckman Kearns
66. Elizabeth Peratrovich
67. Sofía Reyes de Veyra
68. Margaret Chung
69. Nina Otero-Warren
70. Belle Case LaFollette
71. Elizabeth Freeman/Elisabeth Freeman
72. Moina Belle Michael
73. Annie Arniel
74. Mary “Agnes” Chase
75. Marian de Forest
76. Dr. Kate Waller Barrett
77. Black Nurses of WWI
78. Sophie Tucker and Gladys Bentley
79. Mamie Phipps Clark
80. Women’s Clubs
81. Women Sculptors
82. Alice Stebbins Wells
83. Annie Jump Cannon
84. Jessie Haver Butler
85. Dr Alice Hamilton
86. Dorothy Day
87. Soledad “Lala” Chávez Chacón
88. Helen Hamilton Gardener
89. Francis Power Cobbe
90. Indian Suffragettes
91. Elizabeth Willing Powel
Silent Majority Uninformed Voter
TL;DR PAGE 01
TL;DR PAGE 02
Etsy
About Us
Suffragette City 100
Home
Suffragette City 100
01. Remember the Ladies
02. Did You Know?
03. Equality Starts With Education
04. Doing the Right Thing, Even When It Costs You
05. The World Anti-Slavery Convention
06. Women Organize and Unite
07. Another Tea Party That Started a Revolution
08. Seneca Falls
09. The “Discourse on Women” Speech
10. The Underground Railroad
11. Women's Rights Goes National
12. Bloomer Boom
13. The Truth About Sojourner Truth
14. Better Off Single?
15. Find Your Tribe
16. The Power of the Press
17. The Civil War
18. United Front
19. Divisions Among Women
20. Principle, Not Policy; Justice, Not Favors.
21. Different Approaches
22. Civil Disobedience
23. First of Many
24. All The Way To The Supreme Court
25. Granted, Revoked, Then Granted Again
26. When Heroes Are Human
27. Women’s Anti-Suffrage Groups
28. Nevertheless, She Persisted
29. Independent Ladies
30. The Woman Who Dared
31. The Temperance Movement
32. Writing Herstory (But Not the Whole Story)
33. The Susan B. Anthony Amendment
34. Fasten Your Seatbelts
35. The Lockwood/Stow Presidential Run
36. The Remarkable Suffragist Jane Addams & Hull House
37. History Doesn’t Happen in a Vacuum
38. Reunited But Not Everyone is Equal
39. The Fierce Ida B. Wells
40. Solitude of Self
41. Colorado Gets the Vote
42. Our Suffrage Sisters Abroad
43. Jewish Women Unite for Women’s Rights
44. The Woman’s Bible
45. The National Association of Colored Women
46. Idaho Gets the Vote
47. More Women-Led Anti-Suffrage Groups
48. Resolution for Equality
49. Women’s Trade Union League
50. Rest in Peace Sister Susan
51. Woman Suffrage Party
52. California Gets the Vote
53. First Suffrage Parade in New York City
54. National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage
55. Jovita Idar and Liga Femenil Mexicanista
56. Arizona Gets the Vote
57. The Two 1912 New York Suffrage Parades
58. Kansas Gets the Vote
59. The Bull Moose Party Splits the Ticket
60. Oregon Gets the Vote
61. Suffrage: The Next Generation
62. The 1913 Suffrage Parade in Washington D.C. (SHORT)
62. The 1913 Suffrage Parade in Washington D.C. (FULL)
63. Emmeline Pankhurst Visits America
64. Illinois Grants Partial Suffrage
65. Progressives vs. Moderates
66. The West Leads the Way
67. The East Falls Short
68. Women on the Move
69. The “Winning Plan"
70. The First Woman Elected to Congress
71. The Silent Sentinels
72. World War I
73. The Night of Terror
74. The Public Outcry
75. New York Gets the Vote
76. The 1918 Pandemic
77. Watchfires of Freedom
78. Prohibition
79. From Prison to the People
80. Finishing the Fight
81. On To Ratification
82. The Race for Ratification
83. Craftivism
84. Women’s Work
85. Founding of the League of Women Voters
86. It All Comes Down to Tennessee
87. Making It Official
88. Who Could Actually Vote
89. The Equal Rights Amendment
90. Women’s Suffrage Around the World
91. Suffering for Suffrage
#WCW
01. Deborah Sampson
02. Oney Judge
03. Emma Willard
04. The Hart Sisters
05. African-American Women in Slave Revolts
06. Luisa Moreno
07. Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Women
08. Mary Katharine Goddard
09. Two Spirits
10. Delia Webster
11. Women Mountaineers
12. Gertrude Bustill Mossell
13. Maritcha Remond Lyons
14. Harriet Ann Jacobs
15. Karen Horney and Leta Hollingsworth
16. Edmonson Sisters
17. Elizabeth Keckley
18. Anna Dickenson
19. Adella Hunt Logan
20. Ida Craddock
21. Women Boxers
22. Little Egypt
23. Helen May Butler
24. Mary Tape
25. Martha Hughes Cannon
26. Julia Brace, Laura Bridgman, and Helen Keller
27. Marie Louise Bottineau Baldwin
28. Annie Turnbo Pope Malone
29. Kittie Knox
30. Dr. Mary E. Walker
31. Matilda Bradley Carse
32. Sarah Winnemucca
33. Maria Mitchell
34. Eunice Foote
35. Charley Parkhurst
36. Louise de Koven Bowen
37. Helen Hunt Jackson
38. Suffrage Leaders in the Territory of Hawaii
39. Mary Eliza Mahoney
40. William Cathay/Cathay Williams
41. Meredith Ellis
42. Zonia Baber
43. Maud Nathan and Annie Nathan Meyer
44. Voltairine de Cleyre
45. Sarah J. Smith Tompkins Garnet
46. Alice Brown Davis
47. Rosika Schwimmer
48. Tye Leung Schultze
49. Elizabeth Gurley Flynn
50. Lucy Read Anthony
51. Rose Bower
52. Senda Berenson
53. Maud Malone
54. Edith Maragret Garrud
55. Sara Estela Ramirez
56. Nampeyo
57. Komaku Kimura
58. Circus Suffragettes
59. Anandi Gopal Joshi and Rukhmabai
60. Elizabeth Kent
61. Nina Evans Allender
62. Nellie Quander
63. Rosa May Billinghurst
64. Fannie Hagen Emanuel
65. Edna Buckman Kearns
66. Elizabeth Peratrovich
67. Sofía Reyes de Veyra
68. Margaret Chung
69. Nina Otero-Warren
70. Belle Case LaFollette
71. Elizabeth Freeman/Elisabeth Freeman
72. Moina Belle Michael
73. Annie Arniel
74. Mary “Agnes” Chase
75. Marian de Forest
76. Dr. Kate Waller Barrett
77. Black Nurses of WWI
78. Sophie Tucker and Gladys Bentley
79. Mamie Phipps Clark
80. Women’s Clubs
81. Women Sculptors
82. Alice Stebbins Wells
83. Annie Jump Cannon
84. Jessie Haver Butler
85. Dr Alice Hamilton
86. Dorothy Day
87. Soledad “Lala” Chávez Chacón
88. Helen Hamilton Gardener
89. Francis Power Cobbe
90. Indian Suffragettes
91. Elizabeth Willing Powel
Silent Majority Uninformed Voter
TL;DR PAGE 01
TL;DR PAGE 02
Etsy
About Us
30. Dr. Mary E. Walker
#WCW Dr. Mary E. Walker, Civil War
Only woman awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor!
“We live in deeds, not years.” – Dr. Mary E. Walker
https://strangeago.com/2018/06/02/dr-mary-e-walker-the-woman-who-dared-to-wear-pants/
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