The World's Largest Public Domain Media Search Engine
Mrs. Inez Milholland Boissevain, of New York.  Member of National Advisory Council of Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage.  Graduate of Vassar College and of the New York Law University.

Similar

Mrs. Inez Milholland Boissevain, of New York. Member of National Advisory Council of Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage. Graduate of Vassar College and of the New York Law University.

description

Summary

Title and photographer transcribed from item.
Summary: Formal, half-length portrait of lawyer and suffrage activist Inez Milholland Boissevain, facing left and looking toward camera, wearing a sleeveless, low-cut dress and possibly a tiara.
Photograph published in the Official Program, Woman Suffrage Procession, Washington, D.C., March 3, 1913 (Washington, D.C.: Press of the Sudwarth Company): [10].
Cropped version of the photograph published in The Suffragist, 4, no. 50 (Dec. 9, 1916): 10, and The Suffragist, 5, no. 96 (Nov. 24, 1917): 9.

Suffragettes Women's suffrage is the right of women to vote in elections. Beginning in the late 1800s, women worked for broad-based economic and political equality and for social reforms, and sought to change voting laws in order to allow them to vote. National and international organizations formed to coordinate efforts to gain voting rights, especially the International Woman Suffrage Alliance (founded in 1904, Berlin, Germany), and also worked for equal civil rights for women. Women who owned property gained the right to vote in the Isle of Man in 1881, and in 1893, the British colony of New Zealand granted all women the right to vote. Most independent countries enacted women's suffrage in the interwar era, including Canada in 1917; Britain, Germany, Poland in 1918; Austria and the Netherlands in 1919; and the United States in 1920. Leslie Hume argues that the First World War changed the popular mood: "The women's contribution to the war effort challenged the notion of women's physical and mental inferiority and made it more difficult to maintain that women were, both by constitution and temperament, unfit to vote. If women could work in munitions factories, it seemed both ungrateful and illogical to deny them a place in the polling booth. But the vote was much more than simply a reward for war work; the point was that women's participation in the war helped to dispel the fears that surrounded women's entry into the public arena..."

date_range

Date

01/01/1913
person

Contributors

Edmonston, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
place

Location

create

Source

Library of Congress
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

Explore more

milholland inez
milholland inez