Wikipedia:Meetup/DC/Women's Suffrage Centennial Wikipedia Editing Workshop
@WikimediaDC
Women's Suffrage Centennial Wikipedia Editing Workshop
Did you know that Wikipedia is an openly editable resource, meaning that anyone can improve the quality and accuracy of Wikipedia entries? Data has shown that less than 18% of biographies on English-language Wikipedia are about women. Help to change that by joining us on January 14 for the Women's Suffrage Centennial Wikipedia Editing Workshop. Attendees will learn how to edit Wikipedia and work together to improve and create Wikipedia articles related women's suffrage in the United States.
Training will be provided, and no prior knowledge of suffrage history or Wikipedia editing is required.
Please bring your own laptop. Wikimedia DC has two laptops to loan. Reserve one by emailing info@wikimediadc.org.
When
- Tuesday, January 14, 2020 6:00PM-9:00PM
Where
- Arlington Public Library, Shirlington Branch
- 4200 Campbell Ave
- Arlington, VA 22206
Register
Safe Space Policy
[edit]Coordination
[edit]- Please use the Etherpad link below to share what you are currently editing. Remember to type 'Done' or 'Finished' when you are through making changes. REMEMBER TO PUBLISH (SAVE) OFTEN.
Please sign in
[edit]- This is for use on the day of the event.
- 1) Select 'Sign in'
- 2) Scroll down on the page that follows and click 'Publish changes' or 'Save changes'.
- Your username will automatically be added to the list of attendees.
Presentation
[edit]Slides will be added after the edit-a-thon.
Wikimedia
[edit]- Wikimedia movement
- Wikipedia, a web-based encyclopedia
- Wikimedia Commons, a data repository of media (images, videos and sounds). (See * Wikiproject Wikimedia Commons:GLAM Wikiproject)
- Wikidata, a common source of data, also accessible by the other projects
- Wiktionary, a dictionary
- Wikibooks, educational textbooks
- Wikinews, news articles
- Wikiquote, a collection of quotations
- Wikisource, a library of source texts and documents
- Wikiversity, educational material
- Wikivoyage, a travel guide
- Wikispecies, a taxonomic catalogue of species
Wikipedia Policies
[edit]- Wikipedia:Five pillars
- Wikipedia:Core content policies
- Wikipedia:General notability guideline
- Wikipedia:Verifiability
- Wikipedia:Conflict of interest
- Wikipedia:Identifying reliable sources
- Wikipedia:No original research (Examples of Original Research)
- Wikipedia:Citing sources
- Wikipedia:Identifying and using primary sources
WikiProjects and Resources for GLAM Professionals
[edit]- Wikipedia:GLAM
- Sample User Page Conflict of Interest Statement for GLAM Projects (User:Dominic, WIkipedian in Resident NARA)
- Wikipedia:GLAM/Getting started
- Wikipedia:The Wikipedia Library/Cultural Professionals
- WikiProject Women in Red
Quick Editing Tips
[edit]Tools, Resources
[edit]For Wikimedia DC Use
[edit]Suggested Article Work List
[edit]Section headings indicate article rating. Read more about the Article Assessment Quality Scale
Articles for Creation
Existing Articles
- Mary Newbury Adams (1837–1901) – suffragist and education advocate[1]
- Sadie L. Adams (1872-1945) - African-American suffragist and child welfare advocate.
- Jane Addams (1860–1935) – social activist, president Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
- Edith Ainge (1873–1948) – member of Silent Sentinels, Treasurer for NWP, jailed five times.[2][3][4]
- Mary Long Alderson (1860-1937) - Montana suffragist
- Nina E. Allender (1873–1957) – speaker, organizer and cartoonist
- Naomi Anderson (born 1863) – black suffragist, temperance advocate
- Susan B. Anthony (1820–1906) – co-founder and leader National Woman Suffrage Association, one of the leaders of the National American Woman Suffrage Association; Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which guaranteed the right of women to vote, was popularly known as the Susan B. Anthony Amendment[5]
- Annie Arniel (1873–1924) – member of the Silent Sentinels, arrested eight times in direct actions
- Helen Vickroy Austin (1829–1921) – journalist, horticulturist, suffragist
- Elnora Monroe Babcock (1852–1934) – pioneer leader in the suffrage movement; chair of the National Woman Suffrage Association's press department
- Eugenia M. Bacon (1853-1933) - suffragist
- Adella Brown Bailey (1860-1937) - politician and suffragist
- Anna Simms Banks
- Ida B. Wells-Barnett (1862–1931) – African-American journalist, newspaper editor, suffragist, sociologist, and early leader in the civil rights movement
- Bertha Hirsch Baruch – writer, president of the Los Angeles Suffrage Association
- Helen Valeska Bary (1888–1973) – suffragist, researcher, and social reformer[6][7]
- Ida M. Bowman Becks
- Alva Belmont (1853–1933) – founder of the Political Equality League that was in 1913 merged into the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage
- Kate Himrod Biggers (1849–1935)- president of the Oklahoma Woman's Suffrage Association
- Irene Moorman Blackstone (1872-after 1944) African-American suffragist instrumental in integrating the suffrage fight in New York
- Alice Stone Blackwell (1857–1950) – journalist, activist
- Antoinette Brown Blackwell (1825–1921) – co-founder, with Lucy Stone, of the American Woman Suffrage Association
- Henry Browne Blackwell (1825–1909) – founded Woman's Journal with Lucy Stone
- Katherine Devereux Blake (1858–1950) - educator, suffragist, peace activist
- Lillie Devereux Blake (1833–1913) – writer, suffragist, reformer
- Lucretia Longshore Blankenburg (1845–1937) – suffragist, reformer
- Isabella Williams Blaney (1854–1933) - suffragist, politician
- Harriot Eaton Stanton Blatch (1856–1940) – writer (contributor to History of Woman Suffrage), founded Women's Political Union, daughter of pioneering activist Elizabeth Cady Stanton
- Amelia Bloomer (1818–1894) – women's rights and temperance advocate; her name was associated with women's clothing reform style known as bloomers
- Anna Whitehead Bodeker (1826-1904) — leader of the earliest attempts to organize for suffrage in Virginia; co-founder and inaugural president of Virginia State Woman Suffrage Association, the first suffrage association in Virginia
- Marietta Bones (May 4, 1842 – July 11, 1901) – suffragist, social reformer, philanthropist
- Helen Varick Boswell (1869-1942) - member of the Woman's National Republican Association and the General Federation of Women's Clubs
- Lucy Gwynne Branham (1892–1966) – professor, organizer, lobbyist, active in the National Women's Party and its Silent Sentinels, daughter of suffragette Lucy Fisher Gwynne Branham
- Madeline McDowell Breckinridge (1872–1920) – suffrage leader, one-time vice president of the National Woman Suffrage Association, one of Kentucky's leading Progressive reformers
- Sophonisba Breckinridge (1866–1948) – activist, Progressive Era social reformer, social scientist and innovator in higher education
- Minerva Kline Brooks (1883-1929) - suffragist
- Gertrude Foster Brown (1867–1956) – pianist, suffragette, author of Your vote and how to use it (1918)
- Olympia Brown (1835–1926) – activist, first woman to graduate from a theological school, as well as becoming the first full-time ordained minister
- Emma Bugbee (1888–1981) – journalist
- Emeline S. Burlingame (1836–1923) – editor, evangelist, suffragist
- Lucy Burns (1879–1966) – women's rights advocate, co-founder of the National Woman's Party
- Mary Edith Campbell (1876-1962) - first woman elected to the Board of Education in Cincinnati, Ohio
- Jennie Curtis Cannon (1851-1929) - Vice President of the National American Woman Suffrage Association
- Frances Jennings Casement (1840–1928) – voting advocate, married General John S. Casement, who lobbied for voting rights for women
- Melnea Cass
- Carrie Chapman Catt (1859–1947) – president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, founder of the League of Women Voters and the International Alliance of Women, campaigned for the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
- Emily Thornton Charles (1845–1895) – poet, journalist, suffragist, newspaper founder
- Tennessee Celeste Claflin (1844–1923) – one of the first women to open a Wall Street brokerage firm, advocate of legalized prostitution
- Adele Goodman Clark (September 27, 1882 – June 4, 1983) artist, suffragist, and co-founder of the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia
- Laura Clay (1849–1941) – co-founder and first president of Kentucky Equal Rights Association, leader of women's suffrage movement, active in the Democratic Party
- Mary Barr Clay (1839–1924) – first Kentuckian to hold the office of president in a national woman’s organization (American Woman Suffrage Association), and the first Kentucky woman to speak publicly on women's rights
- Lillian Exum Clement (1894-1925) – first woman elected to the North Carolina General Assembly and the first woman to serve in any state legislature in the Southern United States
- H. Maria George Colby (1844–1910) – journalist, activist, suffragist
- Emily Parmely Collins (1814–1909) – suffragist, activist, writer
- Jennie Collins (1828–1887) – labor reformer, humanitarian, and suffragist
- Mattie E. Coleman (1870-1943) – physician, suffragist
- Sarah Tarleton Colvin (1865–1949) – chairman of the Minnesota chapter of the National Woman's Party, arrested during the "Watchfire for Freedom" demonstrations
- Helen Appo Cook (1837–1913) – prominent African American community activist and leader in the women’s club movement.
- Ida Craft – known as the Colonel, took part in Suffrage Hikes
- Emma Amelia Cranmer (1858–1937) – reformer, suffragist, writer
- Minnie Fisher Cunningham (1882–1964) – first executive secretary of the League of Women Voters, member of the National American Women's Suffrage Association
- Lucile Atcherson Curtis (1894–1986) – first woman in what became the US Foreign Service
- Martha E. Sewall Curtis (1858–1915), suffragist, writer
- Susan McKinney Steward
- Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren (1825–1889) – writer, translator, anti-suffragist
- Lucinda Lee Dalton (1847–1925) – Mormon feminist and writer
- Carrie Chase Davis (1863–1953), physician, suffragist
- Paulina Kellogg Wright Davis (1813–1876) – a founder of the New England Woman Suffrage Association; active with the National Woman Suffrage Association; co-arranged and presided at the first National Women's Rights Convention
- Jesse Leech Davisson (1860-1940) - suffragist active in Ohio
- Cornelia De Bey (1860–1948) - homeopath, politician, suffragist, educator
- Emma Smith DeVoe (1848–1927) leading Washington State suffragist, founded the National Council of Women Voters.
- Mamie Dillard (1874-1954) - African American educator, clubwoman and suffragist
- Mary L. Doe (1836–?) – first president of the Michigan State Equal Suffrage Association
- Rheta Childe Dorr (1868–1948) – journalist, suffragist newspaper editor, writer, and political activist
- Eva Craig Graves Doughty (1852–?) – journalist, suffragist
- Frederick Douglass (1818–1895) – African-American social reformer, orator, writer, statesman
- Wilhelmina Kekelaokalaninui Widemann Dowsett (1861-1929) – Native Hawaiian suffragist, organized the National Women's Equal Suffrage Association of Hawaii
- Anne Dallas Dudley (1876–1955) – suffrage activist; in 1920, she, along with Abby Crawford Milton and Catherine Talty Kenny, led the campaign in Tennessee to approve ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution[8][9]
- Abigail Scott Duniway (1834–1915) – women's rights advocate, editor, writer
- Zara DuPont (1869-1946) - first Vice President of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association
- Crystal Eastman (1881–1928) – lawyer, antimilitarist, feminist, socialist, and journalist
- Mary F. Eastman – educator, lecturer, writer, and suffragette
- Max Eastman (1883–1969) – writer, philosopher, poet, prominent political activist
- Mary E. Eato
- Mary G. Charlton Edholm (1854–1935) — reformer and journalist
- Katherine Philips Edson (1870–1933) – social worker and feminist, worked to add women's suffrage to the California State Constitution
- Elizabeth Piper Ensley (1848–1919) – Caribbean-American woman who was the treasurer of the Colorado Non-Partisan Equal Suffrage Association
- Helga Estby (1860–1942) – Norwegian immigrant, noted for her walk across the United States during 1896 to save her family farm
- Caroline McCullough Everhard (1843–1902) - American banker and suffragist, president of the Ohio Suffrage Association
- Sarah J. Garnet
- Elizabeth Glendower Evans (1856-1937) - social reformer and suffragist
- Janet Ayer Fairbank (1878–1951) – author and champion of progressive causes
- Lillian Feickert (1877–1945) – suffragette; first woman from New Jersey to run for United States Senate[10]
- Susan Frances Nelson Ferree (1844–1919) – journalist, activist, suffragist
- Sara Bard Field (1882–1974) – active with the National Advisory Council, National Woman's Party, and in Oregon and Nevada; crossed the US to deliver a petition with 500,000 signatures to President Wilson
- Margaret Foley (1875–1957) – active with the Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Association
- Margaretta Forten
- Bettiola Heloise Fortson
- Jessica Garretson Finch – president of the New York Equal Franchise Society
- Mariana Thompson Folsom (July 30, 1845 – January 31, 1909) – Universalist minister and lecturer for Iowa Suffrage Association and Texas Equal Rights[11]
- Clara S. Foltz (1849–1934) – lawyer, sister of US Senator Samuel M. Shortridge
- Nellie Griswold Francis (1874–1969) – founded and led the Everywoman Suffrage Club, an African-American suffragist group in Minnesota, civil rights and anti-lynching activist
- Ellen Sulley Fray (1832–1903) - one of the district presidents of the Ohio Women's Suffrage Association
- Elisabeth Freeman (1876–1942) – Suffrage Hike participant
- Antoinette Funk (1869–1942) – lawyer and executive secretary of the Congressional Committee of the National American Woman Suffrage Association; supporter of the women's movement in WWI
- Matilda Joslyn Gage (1826–1898) – activist, freethinker, author
- Edna Fischel Gellhorn (1878–1970) – reformer, co-founder of the National League of Women Voters
- Sallie Topkis Ginns (1880-1976) - inductee in the Hall of Fame of Delaware Women
- Mary Tenney Gray (1833–1904) – writer, clubwoman, philanthropist, suffragist
- Helen Hoy Greeley (1878-1965) – Secretary, New Jersey Next Campaign (1915), stump speaker, organizer, and mobilizer in California and Oregon campaigns (1911), speaker for Women's Political Union in NYC[12][13]
- Irene W. Griffin (d. 2012) - first black woman to register to vote in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana
- Josephine Sophia White Griffing (1814–1872) – active in the American Equal Rights Association and the National Woman Suffrage Association
- Sarah Grimke (1792–1873) – abolitionist, writer
- Eliza Calvert Hall (pen name of Eliza Caroline "Lida" Calvert Obenchain) (1856–1935) – author, women's rights advocate
- Ida Husted Harper (1851–1931) – organizer, major writer and historian of the US suffrage movement
- Florence Jaffray Harriman (1870–1967) – social reformer, organiser and diplomat
- Mary Garrett Hay (1857–1928) – companion to Carrie Chapman Catt and suffrage organizer in New York
- Gillette Hayden (1880–1929) – dentist and periodontist[14]
- Sallie Davis Hayden (1842–1907) – one of the founders of the suffrage movement in Arizona
- Josephine K. Henry (1846–1928) – Progressive Era women's rights leader, social reformer and writer
- Katharine Houghton Hepburn (1878–1951) – social reformer – National Women's Party chairman in Connecticut. Graduate of Bryn Mawr College. Mother of Katharine Hepburn.
- Elsie Hill (1883–1970) – activist
- Helena Hill (1875–1958) – activist, geologist
- Edith Houghton Hooker (1879–1948) – activist, editor The Suffragist
- Julia Ward Howe (1819–1910) – prominent abolitionist, social activist and poet
- Emily Howland (1827–1929) – philanthropist, educator
- Florence Frances Huberwald – singer, teacher, suffragist, national leader of the women's movement
- Josephine Brawley Hughes (1839–1926) – established the Arizona Suffrage Association in 1891
- Sarah Gibson Humphreys (1830–1907) – author, suffragist
- Addie Waites Hunton (1866–1943) — suffragist, race and gender activist, writer, political organizer, educator
- Cornelia Collins Hussey (1827–1902) — philanthropist, writer
- May Arkwright Hutton (1860–1915) - suffrage leader and labor rights advocate in the Pacific Northwest.
- Inez Haynes Irwin (1873–1970) – co-founder of the College Equal Suffrage League, active in National Woman's Party, wrote the party's history
- Lottie Wilson Jackson (1854-1914) - painter and suffragist
- Mary E. Jackson
- Mary Corinna Putnam Jacobi (1842–1906) - an esteemed American medical physician, teacher, scientist, and writer[15]
- Ada James (1876–1952) – social worker and reformer
- Martha Waldron Janes (1832–?) – minister, suffragist, columnist
- Hester C. Jeffrey (1842–1934) – African American community organizer, creator of the Susan B. Anthony clubs
- Izetta Jewel (1883–1978) – stage actress, women's rights activist, politician and first woman to second the nomination of a presidential candidate at a major American political party convention
- Laura M. Johns (1849–1935) — suffragist, journalist
- Adelaide Johnson (1859–1955) - sculptor who created a monument for suffragists in Washington D.C.
- Harriet C. Johnson (1845-1907) — suffragist, educator
- Lucy Browne Johnston (1846 – 1937) - president of the Kansas Federation of Women's Clubs, and was involved in the Kansas Equal Suffrage Association
- Effie McCollum Jones (1869-1952) - American Universalist minister and suffragist
- Jane Elizabeth Jones (1813–1896) – suffragist, abolitionist, member of the early women's rights movement.
- Rosalie Gardiner Jones (1883–1978) – socialite, took part in Suffrage Hike, known as "General Jones"
- Caroline Katzenstein (1888–1968) – American suffragist and author from Philadelphia, helped form the National Woman's Party
- Belle Kearney (1863–1939) – speaker and lobbyist for the National American Woman Suffrage Association; first woman elected to the Mississippi State Senate
- Edna Buckman Kearns (1882–1934) – National Woman's Party campaigner, known for her horse-drawn suffrage campaign wagon (now in the collection of New York State Museum)
- Mary Morton Kehew (1859–1918) – labor/social reformer and suffragist from Boston
- Eliza D. Keith (1854–1939) – educator, suffragist, journalist
- Helen Keller (1880–1968) – author and political activist
- Abby Kelley (1811–1887) – abolitionist, radical social reformer, fundraiser, lecturer and organizer for the American Anti-Slavery Society
- Elizabeth Thacher Kent (1868–1952) – feminist, suffragist, environmentalist
- Caroline Burnham Kilgore (1838–1909) – the first woman to be admitted to the bar in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
- Sarah Knox-Goodrich (1826–1903) – women's rights activist from San Jose, California
- Daisy Elizabeth Adams Lampkin (1883–1965) – civil rights activist, organization executive, and community practitioner
- Orra Henderson Moore Gray Langhorne (1841-1904) suffragist, founder of Virginia Suffrage Society
- Mary Torrans Lathrap (1838–1895) – poet, preacher, suffragist, social reformer
- Clara Chan Lee (1886–1993) – first Chinese American to register to vote in the US, November 8, 1911[16]
- Mabel Ping-Hua Lee (1896–1966) – suffragist, advocate for women's rights and for the Chinese immigrant community
- Dora Lewis (1862–1928) – in 1913 became an executive member of the National Women's Party; in 1918 became their chairwoman of finance; in 1919 became their national treasurer; in 1920 headed their ratification committee
- Miriam Leslie (1836–1914) – publisher, author; namesake of the Leslie Woman Suffrage Commission
- Lena Morrow Lewis (1868–1950) – organizer in South Dakota and Oregon; enlisted the support of labor unions
- Mary Livermore (1820–1905) – journalist and advocate of women's rights
- Sarah Hunt Lockrey (1863–1929) - physician and suffragist
- Adella Hunt Logan (1863–1915) – African-American intellectual, activist and leading suffragist of the historically black Tuskegee University's Woman's Club
- Florence Luscomb (1887–1985) – architect and prominent leader of Massachusetts suffragists
- Katherine Duer Mackay (1878–1930) – founder of the Equal Franchise Society
- Theresa Malkiel (1874–1949) – labor organizer and suffragist
- Arabella Mansfield (1846–1911) – first female lawyer in the United States, chaired the Iowa Women’s Suffrage Convention in 1870, and worked with Susan B. Anthony
- Wenona Marlin – New York suffragist from Ohio
- Anne Henrietta Martin (1875–1951) – Vice-chairman of National Woman's Party, arrested as a Silent Sentinel, president Nevada Equal Franchise Society, first US woman to run for Senate
- Jennie McCowen (1845–1924) – physician, writer, lecturer, medical journal editor, suffragist
- Mary A. McCurdy(1852-1934) - African American suffragist
- Mary Ann M'Clintock (1800-1884) - suffragist who helped plan the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention.
- Thomas M'Clintock (1792–1876) - abolitionist and suffragist, husband of Mary Ann M'Clintock
- Nell Mercer (1893–1979) - member of the Silent Sentinels
- Ellis Meredith (1865–1955) – journalist
- Jane Hungerford Milbank (1871–1931) – author and poet
- Inez Milholland (1886–1916) – key participant in the National Woman's Party and the Woman Suffrage Parade of 1913
- Harriet May Mills (1857–1936) – prominent civil rights leader, played a major role in women's rights movement
- Abby Crawford Milton (1881–1991) – traveled throughout Tennessee making speeches and organizing suffrage leagues in small communities; in 1920, she, along with Anne Dallas Dudley and Catherine Talty Kenny, led the campaign in Tennessee to approve ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the US Constitution[8][9]
- Virginia Minor (1824–1894) – co-founder and president of the Woman's Suffrage Association of Missouri; unsuccessfully argued in Minor v. Happersett (1874 Supreme Court case) that the Fourteenth Amendment gave women the right to vote
- Zeola Hershey Misener (1878–1966) – Indiana suffragist and politician
- Esther Hobart Morris (1814–1902) – first female Justice of the Peace in the United States
- Mary Foulke Morrisson (1879–1971) – organizer of 1916 suffrage parade in Chicago at the Republican national Convention; founder of chapters of the League of Women Voters
- Lucretia Mott (1793–1880) – Quaker, abolitionist; women's rights activist; social reformer
- Frances Lillian Willard "Fannie" Munds (1866–1948) – leader of the suffrage movement in Arizona and member of the Arizona Senate
- Lilla Day Monroe (1858-1929), Kansas suffragist, lawyer
- A. Viola Neblett (1842–1897), American activist, suffragist, women's rights pioneer
- Frances Nacke Noel (1873–1963), women's labor activist and suffragist
- Mary A. Nolan (d. 1925), one of the oldest suffragists active on NWP picket lines
- Eunice Rockwood Oberly (1878-1921), librarian
- Sarah Massey Overton (1850–1914) – women's rights activist and black rights activist
- Maud Wood Park (1871–1955) – founder of the College Equal Suffrage League, co-founder of the Boston Equal Suffrage Association for Good Government (BESAGG); worked for passage of the 19th Amendment
- Alice Paul (1885–1977) – one of the leaders of the 1910s Women's Voting Rights Movement for the 19th Amendment; founder of the National Woman's Party; initiator of the Silent Sentinels and Woman Suffrage Parade of 1913; author of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment
- Mary Gray Peck (1867–1957), journalist, suffragist, clubwoman
- Juno Frankie Pierce, also known as Frankie Pierce or J. Frankie Pierce (1864–1954) – African-American suffragist[17][18][19][20]
- Helen Pitts (1838–1903) – active in women's rights movement and co-edited The Alpha
- Anita Pollitzer (1894–1975) – photographer, served as National Chairman in the National Woman's Party
- Marjorie Merriweather Post (1887–1973) – philanthropist, heiress to the Post Cereal company fortune
- Caroline Remond Putnam
- Mamie Shields Pyle (1866–1949) - suffrage leader in South Dakota
- Florence Spearing Randolph
- Jeannette Rankin (June 11, 1880 – May 18, 1973) – first U.S. female member of Congress (R) Montana. Rankin opened congressional debate on a Constitutional amendment granting universal suffrage to women, and voted for the resolution in 1919, which would become the 19th Amendment.
- Florence Kenyon Hayden Rector (1882–1973) – first licensed female architect in the state of Ohio and the only female architect practicing in central Ohio between 1900 and 1930
- Harriet Redmond (circa 1862-1952) - Oregon suffragist
- Rebecca Hourwich Reyher (1897–1987) - author and lecturer[21][22]
- Florida Ruffin Ridley (1861–1943) – African-American civil rights activist, suffragist, teacher, writer, and editor from Boston
- Ruth Logan Roberts
- Joy Young Rogers (1891-1953) - assistant editor of the Suffragist
- Ellen Alida Rose (1843–?), Wisconsin agriculturist, suffragist
- Juliet Barrett Rublee (1875–1966) – birth control advocate, suffragist, and film producer[23][24][25]
- Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin (1842–1924) – African-American publisher, journalist, civil rights leader, suffragist, and editor
- Ruth Logan Roberts (1891–1968) – suffragist, activist, YWCA leader, and host of a salon in Harlem
- Nina Samorodin (1892-1981) – Russian-born NWP member, executive secretary of National Labor Alliance for Trade Relations with and Recognition of Russia, secretary of Women’s Trade-Union League
- Margaret Sanger (1879–1966) – birth control activist, sex educator, nurse, established Planned Parenthood Federation of America
- Annie Nowlin Savery (1831–1891) - English-born Iowa suffragist active from the 1860s
- Florida Scott-Maxwell (1883-1979) - American author
- Julia Sears (1840–1929) – pioneering academic and first woman in the US to head a public college, now Minnesota State University
- Alice Wiley Seay
- May Wright Sewall (1844–1920) – chairperson of the National Woman's Suffrage Association's executive committee from 1882 to 1890
- Mary Townsend Seymour
- Anna Howard Shaw (1847–1919) – president of National Women's Suffrage Association from 1904 to 1915
- Mary Shaw (1854–1929) – early feminist, playwright and actress
- Pauline Agassiz Shaw (1841–1917) – co-founder and first president of the Boston Equal Suffrage Association for Good Government
- Lurana W. Sheldon (1862–1945) – writer, editor, suffragist
- Nettie Rogers Shuler (1862–1939) – writer, suffragist
- Judith Winsor Smith (1821–1921) – president of the East Boston Woman Suffrage League
- May Gorslin Preston Slosson (1858–1943) – educator and first woman to obtain a doctoral degree in Philosophy in the United States
- The Smiths of Glastonbury – family of 6 women in Connectictut who were active in championing suffrage, property rights, and education for women
- Louise Southgate, M.D. (1857–1941) – physician and suffragist in Covington, Kentucky, a leader in both the Ohio and the Kentucky Equal Rights Association and an early proponent for women's reproductive health
- Caroline Spencer (1861–1928) – American physician and suffragist; inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2006.
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815–1902) – initiator of the Seneca Falls Convention, author of the Declaration of Sentiments, co-founder of National Women's Suffrage Association, major pioneer of women's rights in America
- Helen Ekin Starrett (1840–1920) – author, journalist, educator, editor, business owner, lecturer, inventor, poet, pioneer suffragist, and one of the two state delegates from the 1869 National Convention to attend the Victory Convention in 1920
- Sarah Burger Stearns (1836–1904) – first president of the Minnesota Woman Suffrage Association
- Rowena Granice Steele (1824–1901) – advocate of woman suffrage, as a speaker and writer
- Doris Stevens (1892–1963) – organizer for National American Women Suffrage Association and the National Woman's Party, prominent Silent Sentinels participant, author of Jailed for Freedom
- Sara Yorke Stevenson (1847–1921) – American archaeologist and Egyptologist, active in the Philadelphia suffrage movement
- Lucy Stone (1818–1893) – prominent orator, abolitionist, and a vocal advocate and organizer for the rights for women; the main force behind the American Woman Suffrage Association and the Woman's Journal
- Adeline Morrison Swain (1820-1899) - first woman to run for public office in Iowa
- Helen Taft (1891–1987) – daughter of President William Howard Taft; traveled the nation giving pro-suffrage speeches
- Lydia Taft (1712–1778) – first woman known to legally vote in colonial America
- Mary Church Terrell (1863 –1954) – African-American educator, journalist, and co-founder of the National Association of Colored Women's League
- Adolphine Fletcher Terry (1882–1976) – author, advocate for women's suffrage, education reform and social justice in Arkansas
- M. Carey Thomas (1857–1935) – educator, linguist, and second President of Bryn Mawr College
- Grace Gallatin Seton Thompson (1872–1959) – American author
- Dorothy Thompson (1893–1961) – Buffalo and New York activist, later journalist and radio broadcaster
- Ella St. Clair Thompson (1870-1944)
- Minnie J. Terrell Todd (1844-1929) - Nebraska suffragist
- Elizabeth Richards Tilton (May 28, 1834-April 13, 1897) - suffragist, founder of the Brooklyn Women's Club, poetry editor of The Revolution, hellish scandal
- Augusta Lewis Troup (1848–1920) – women's rights activist and journalist who advocated for equal pay, better working conditions for women, and women's right to vote
- Sojourner Truth (c. 1797–1883) – abolitionist, women's rights activist, speaker, gave women's rights speech "Ain't I a Woman?"
- Harriet Tubman (1822–1913) – African-American abolitionist, humanitarian and Union spy during the American Civil War
- Lila Meade Valentine (1865-1921) – Education and health care reformer, women’s rights activist, and the first president of the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia
- Narcissa Cox Vanderlip, née Mabel Narcissa Cox (1879-1966) - leading New York suffragist and co-founder of the New York State League of Women Voters[26][27][28]
- Mina Van Winkle (1875–1932) – crusading social worker, groundbreaking police lieutenant and national leader in the protection of girls and other women during the law enforcement and judicial process
- Mabel Vernon (1883–1975) – principal member of the Congressional Union for Women Suffrage, major organizer for the Silent Sentinels
- Evelyn Wotherspoon Wainwright (1851-1929) - founding founding member of the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage and the National Woman's Party
- Anna C. Wait (1837-1916) - Kansas Equal Suffrage Association
- Sarah E. Wall (1825–1907) – organizer of an anti-tax protest that defended a woman's right not to pay taxation without representation
- Lizzie Weeks
- Emmeline B. Wells (1828–1921) – American journalist, editor, poet, women's rights advocate, and diarist
- Lilian Welsh (1858–1938) – American physician, educator, and advocate for women's health
- Ruza Wenclawska (1889–1977) – factory inspector and trade union organizer
- Marion Craig Wentworth (1872–1942) – playwright
- Mary Holloway Wilhite (1831–1892) – American physician, philanthropist; woman's suffrage and women's rights leader
- Frances Willard (1839–1898) – leader of the Women's Christian Temperance Union and International Council of Women, lecturer, writer
- Maud E. Craig Sampson Williams (1880–1958) – suffragette from Texas; formed the El Paso Negro Woman’s Civic and Equal Franchise League
- Alice Ames Winter (1865–1944), American litterateur, author, clubwoman, suffragist
- Margaret Fay Whittemore (1884-1937) vice-president of the National Woman's Party 1925
- Emma Wold - president of the College Equal Suffrage Association in Oregon, later headquarters secretary of the National Woman's Party
- Clara Snell Wolfe (1872-1970) 1st Vice Chairman National Woman's Party and Chairman Ohio Branch
- Victoria Woodhull (1838–1927) – women's rights activist, first woman to speak before a committee of Congress, first female candidate for President of the United States, one of the first women to start a weekly newspaper (Woodhull & Claflin's Weekly,) activist for labor reforms, advocate of free love
Attendees
[edit]Potential Sources
[edit]- ^ Knight, R. Cecilia. "Adams, Mary Newbury (or Newberry)". University of Iowa. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
- ^ "Miss Edith Ainge, of Jamestown, New York, the first delegate to the convention of the National Woman's Party to arrive at Woman's Party headquarters in Washington, Miss Ainge is holding the New York state banner which will be carried by New York's delegation of 68 women at the conven". The Library of Congress. Retrieved 2018-07-31.
- ^ "Timeline – Making Women's History". www.sunyjcc.edu. Retrieved 2018-07-31.
- ^ "Edith Ainge | Turning Point Suffragist Memorial". suffragistmemorial.org. Retrieved 2018-07-31.
- ^ "Senators to Vote on Suffrage Today; Fate of Susan B. Anthony Amendment Hangs in Balance on Eve of Final Test". New York Times. September 26, 1918.
- ^ Parker, Jacqueline (1974). Helen Valeska Bary: Labor Administration and Social Security: A Woman's Life. Berkeley CA: University of California.
- ^ Santiago-Valles, Kelvin A. (1994). Subject People and Colonial Discourses: Economic Transformation and Social Disorder in Puerto Rico, 1898–1947. SUNY Press. pp. 58, 161. ISBN 9781438418650. Retrieved 1 January 2017.
- ^ a b "Services For Mrs. Dudley To Be Held Thursday". Nashville Banner. September 14, 1955.
- ^ a b Anastatia Sims (1998). "Woman Suffrage Movement". In Carroll Van West. Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Tennessee Historical Society. ISBN 1-55853-599-3.
- ^ "L.F.Feickert". Njwomenshistory.orgpx. Archived from the original on March 14, 2012. Retrieved 2012-08-15.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/ffo43
- ^ "Mount Airy: Home of Helen Hoy Greeley". Piedmont Virginia Digital History: The Land Between the Rivers. 1913-02-07. Retrieved 2018-07-09.
- ^ "Helen Hoy Greeley Collected Papers (CDG-A), Swarthmore College Peace Collection". Swarthmore Home. 2015-08-21. Retrieved 2018-07-09.
- ^ Gillette Hayden, Nationally Acclaimed Woman Dentist, Dies, The Columbus Dispatch, March 27, 1929 page 1
- ^ Denise Grady (November 11, 2013). "Honoring Female Pioneers in Science". New York Times. Retrieved 2014-12-14.
Mary Corinna Putnam Jacobi, born in 1842 in London, grew up in New York and began publishing short stories at 17. But what she really wanted was to be a doctor. ...
- ^ Yung, Judy (1995). Unbound Feet: A Social History of Chinese Women in San Francisco. University of California Press.
- ^ The African-American history of Nashville, Tennessee, 1780–1930: elites and dilemmas, by Bobby L. Lovett, University of Arkansas Press, 1999, page 232
- ^ Tennessee Through Time, The Later Years. Gibbs Smith. 1 August 2007. pp. 174–. ISBN 978-1-58685-806-3.
- ^ "Black History Month: J. Frankie Pierce founded school for girls | The Tennessean | tennessean.com". Archive.tennessean.com. 2014-02-14. Retrieved 2015-09-07.[dead link]
- ^ "Frankie Pierce & the Tennessee Vocational School for Colored Girls". Ww2.tnstate.edu. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
- ^ "Rebecca Hourwich Reyher — Feminist Press". Feministpress.org. 2016-09-21. Retrieved 2019-01-03.
- ^ JAN. 13, 1987 (1987-01-13). "REBECCA H. REYHER - The New York Times". Nytimes.com. Retrieved 2019-01-03.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Juliet Barrett Rublee Papers, 1917–1955: Biographical and Historical Note". Asteria.fivecolleges.edu. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
- ^ "Mrs. Juliet Barrett Rublee, Grand Marshal of the procession organized by the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage which on May 9th, 1914 marched to the Capitol to present resolutions gathered in all parts of the United States calling on Congress to take favorable action on the National Woman Suffr | Library of Congress". Loc.gov. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
- ^ "Juliet Barrett Rublee – Women Film Pioneers Project". Wfpp.cdrs.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
- ^ Bruce Megowan; Maureen Megowan (1 July 2014). Historic Tales from Palos Verdes and the South Bay. Arcadia Publishing Incorporated. pp. 53–. ISBN 978-1-62585-144-4.
- ^ "Narcissa Cox Vanderlip (1879-1966)". .gwu.edu. Retrieved 2018-12-31.
- ^ Cheever, Mary (1990). The Changing Landscape: A History of Briarcliff Manor-Scarborough. West Kennebunk, Maine: Phoenix Publishing. ISBN 0-914659-49-9. OCLC 22274920.