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- Sailors attacking pickets, 1917, while policemen look casually on-- (Two policemen leaning against fence at left of street lamp pole on right) (1)
- Sara Bard Field speaking at Salt Lake City, Oct. 4, 1915, Gov[ernor] Spry of Utah and Mayor Park of Salt Lake City in attendance. (1)
- Sarah C. Grant of St. Paul, Minn., organizing in Illinois for Congressional Union, is a graduate of the Johns Hopkins Hospital Training School for Nurses in 1908, and for three and one-half years a member of the Social Service department of the Massachusetts Hospital, Boston, Mass. (1)
- Section of Working Women's Picket --Feb. 17 [18], 1917 (1)
- Senator Freylinghuysen congratulates Betty Gram on New Jersey's ratification, Feb. 1920. (1)
- Senator Rebecca Felton, [first] woman U.S. senator. (1)
- "Silent sentinel" Alison Turnbull Hopkins at the White House on New Jersey Day. (1)
- Some of the picket line of Nov. 10, 1917. Left to right: Mrs. Catherine Martinette, Eagle Grove, Iowa. Mrs. William Kent, Kentfield, California. Miss Mary Bartlett Dixon, Easton, Md. Mrs. C.T. Robertson, Salt Lake City, Utah. Miss Cora Week, New York City. Miss Amy Ju[e]ngling, Buffalo, N.Y. Miss Hattie Kruger, Buffalo, N.Y. Miss Belle Sheinberg, N.Y.C. Miss Julia Emory, Baltimore, Md. (1)
- Speaker Gillette, Jane Addams and Sarah Bard Field, the three Speakers at the Woman's Memorial Services in the Capitol on Tuesday evening, February 15, standing in Front of the Memorial Statue, which represents Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott. (1)
- Speakers on "Prison Special" tour, San Francisco, 1919. (1)
- Starting for ceremonial of dedication for Alva Belmont House. (1)
- Sue S. White, Chairman, Tenn. N.W.P. [Tennessee National Woman's Party], mainly responsible winning Tenn. Ratification as 36th State. (1)
- Suf[frage] Group Union Station Leaving to est[ablish] campaign headquarters. Rose Winslow, Lucy Burns, Doris Stevens, Jessie Mackaye [and others] (1)
- Suffrage demonstration at Lafayette Statue (to get the last vote in the Senate) before June 4 1919 (1)
- Suffrage envoy Sara Bard Field (left) and her driver, Ingeborg Kinstedt (center), and machinist, Maria Kindberg (right), during their cross-country journey to present suffrage petitions to Congress, September-December 1915. (1)
- Suffrage envoys from San Francisco greeted in New Jersey on their way to Washington to present a petition to Congress Suffrage envoys from San Francisco greeted containing more than 500,000 signatures. (1)
- Suffrage open air meeting at the National Capitol demanding that Congress pass the National woman suffrage amendment-- Feb. 1913. Corner Penn. Ave. and 15th St. where the Washington Hotel now stands. (1)
- The Suffrage Picket Riots, Aug. 1917 (1)
- Suffrage pickets marching around the White House-- March 4, 1917 (1)
- Suffrage Prisoners Leaving D.C. Prison (1)
- Suffrage Procession, Wash[ington] D.C., May 9, 1914 (1)
- Suffrage protestors burn speech by President Wilson at Lafayette Statue in Washington, D.C. (1)
- Suffragist Margaret Foley distributing the Woman's Journal and Suffrage News (1)
- Suffragist seeking assistance from Grocer in Branford, New York, ca. 1915. (1)
- Suffragists demonstrating against Woodrow Wilson in Chicago, 1916 (1)
- Suffragists distributing hand bills advertising March 3, 1913, suffrage parade. (1)
- Suffragists marching in rainy street during the Grand Picket, March 4, 1917. (1)
- [Suffragists picketing with banners in the rain during the Grand Picket] Mar. 4, 1917. (1)
- Suffragists Protest Woodrow Wilson's Opposition to Woman Suffrage, October 1916 (1)
- Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Two great pioneers in the Equal Rights cause. Without them, American women would not have progressed as far as they have in their fight for freedom. (1)