Anne Fitzhugh Miller, who attended both meetings, noted that three thousand attended the Carnegie Hall suffrage meeting and over one thousand could not be seated while only a few hundred attended the anti-suffr More
Quotes official anti-suffrage position which cites various suffrage campaign failures as evidence most women do not want suffrage, read by Mrs. Emil Kuichling
Picryl description: Public domain newspaper clippings page scan, free to use, no copyright restrictions image.
Extracts from speeches of Mrs. William Forse Scott and Mary Dean Adams, against women immigrants voting; Ella Hawley Crossett and Fanny Garrison Villard stress large number of organizations supporting woman suf More
Photograph shows men looking at material posted in the window of the National Anti-Suffrage Association headquarters; sign in window reads "Headquarters National Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage".
In Anne Fitzhugh Miller hand: "The bulk of the bull-dozers are again the suffrage. Mre. Wadsworth on Lockland Piazza, August 4, 1911"
Photograph shows group portrait of women involved in anti-suffrage event along the Hudson River on May 30, 1913. (Source: New York Times, May 31, 1913, p. 6) Forms part of the George Grantham Bain Collection.
Illustration shows an elderly man standing at a table with three women and another man during a New Year's party; he is concerned that his wife will find him with a female companion. Caption: Gaylord (in cafe More
Details of suffrage hearings including extracts of speeches by anti-suffragists Mrs. William Forse Scott, Mary Dean Adams and Margaret Doane Gardiner and suffragists Fanny Garrison Villard, Anna Howard Shaw, He More
Clipping on February 1908 hearings inadvertently placed with 1909 hearing coverage.
J. Redfern Mason counters Rev. Joseph Leighton's anti suffragist arguments: voting is a natural right of both men and women; trade unions alone cannot protect working women; woman suffrage could uplift politics.
Coverage of suffrage hearings, arguments both for and against full suffrage and tax suffrage; Mrs. Richard K Noyes concerned about enfranchising disreputable women and black women; extracts from Mrs. Richard Al More
Reports organizing meeting of national anti-suffrage league, chaired by Lady Jersey; Manifesto and constitution printed as adopted; list of supporters including Lords, Ladies and MPs; Mary Ward spoke of urgent More
One thousand women attend suffrage hearings aimed at 23 Judiciary Committee members; reports flamboyant banter by suffragists and anti-suffragists.
Argues that the majority of Massachusetts women, including single and widowed women do not was woman suffrage