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- F[lorence] B[ayard] Hilles. (1)
- Fannie Hurst, novelist and short story writer, author of "Lummox," "Back Street," and many other successful and distinguished works of fiction. Miss Hurst is one of the judges in the Equal Rights Essay Contest organized by the Students Council of the National Woman's Party. (1)
- First C[ongressional] U[nion] H[eadquarters] (1)
- The first suffrage picket line leaving the National Woman's Party headquarters to march to the White House gates on January 10, 1917. From left to right: Miss Berta Crone, of San Francisco, Miss Vivian Pierce, of San Diego, Miss Mildred Gilbert of San Francisco, Miss Maude Jamieson, of Norfolk, Va., Miss Joy Young of New York, Miss Mary Dowell of Philadelphia, Miss Gertrude Crocker of Chicago, Mrs. Bessie Papandre, of San Francisco, Miss Elizabeth Geary, of Chicago, Miss Frances Pepper of Washington, D.C., Miss Elizabeth Smith of Washington, D.C., and Miss Pauline Floyd of El Dorado, Ark. (1)
- Flora MacDonald Denison, Pres[ident] Canadian Suffrage Association. (1)
- The "Flying Squadron" at Colorado Springs, Colo[rado]. "Suffrage Special" (1)
- [Fola LaFollette] going to annual meeting [of] C[ongressional] U[nion], Jan. 11, 1914, at Mrs. [Elizabeth T.] Kent's (1)
- Fourth Headquarters - 1922-1929 National Woman's Party, 21-25 First Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. (1)
- Frances E. Willard (1)
- Frances Pepper (left) and Elizabeth Smith (right) working in the offices of The Suffragist, the weekly journal published by the Congressional Union and National Woman's Party from 1913 to 1921. (1)