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- N[ew] J[ersey] Headquarters C[ongressional] U[nion]. (1)
- Nation-wide demonstrations were held on May 2nd in support of Federal Amendment. Envoys from these demonstrations brought petitions to Washington on May 9th and carried them in procession to Congress from Lafayette Square. Five thousand women massed on and about the East Steps of the Capitol singing Ethel Smyth's Hymn of the Women before entering the Rotunda to deliver the petitions. (1)
- National American Woman's Suffrage Association Convention, Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, center, presiding. (1)
- National Council meeting, "Old Brick Capitol," ca. early 1920s. [L to R] 1. Anita Pollitzer, 2. Florence Bayard Hilles, 3. Margaret Whittemore, 4. Dr. Caroline Spencer, 5. Mrs. Harvey W. 'Wiley, 6. Mrs. Wm. Kent, 7. Maude Younger, 8. Mabel Vernon, 9. Mrs. Richard Wainwright, 10. Alice Paul, 11. Edith Hooker. (1)
- National Council Meeting, 1924. L-R: 1. Dora Ogle (Md), 2. Mrs. J.D. Wilkinson (La), 3. Mrs. Lawrence Lewis (Pa), 4. Lavinia Egan (La), 5. Edith Ainge (N.Y.), 6. Alice Paul (N.J.), 7. Martha Souder (Pa), 8. Florence Boeckel (D.C.), 9. Edith Hooker (Nev.) (1)
- National Woman's Party activists watch Alice Paul sew a star onto the NWP Ratification Flag, representing another state's ratification of the 19th Amendment (1)
- National Woman's Party Headquarters in Nashville, Tenn., in which the campaign for ratification of the suffrage amendment is being conducted, photographed on the day that Parley P. Christensen, presidential nominee for the new Farmer-Labor Party addressed a mass meeting, urging immediate ratification. Left to right: Rankin Smith, Central Trades and Labor Council; Jim F. Nicholson, Business Manager of the Machinist; W.C. Birthright, Secretary of the Tenn. Federation of Labor; Mrs. Anne Calvert Neely, Mississippi state chairman of the National Woman's Party; W.M. Mitchell; Mrs. Mabel Reber, of New York; Mrs. Walter C. Jackson of Murfreesboro; Mrs. Florence Bayard Hilles, of Wilmington, Delaware, member of the Executive Committee of the Woman's Party; Parley P. Christensen, Presidential candidate of the Farmer-Labor Party; Miss Sue White, of Nashville, Tennessee state chairman of the Woman's Party; W.M. Fox, president of the Trades and Labor Council; Miss Mary Winsor of Philadelphia, Pa., member of the Advisory Council of the Woman's Party; Archie Craig; Charles P. Sweeney. (1)
- National Woman's Party Headquarters is Sold to United States. The National Woman's Party Headquarters, 21 First Street, Northeast, one of the most historic buildings in Washington which was used as the Capitol of the United States from 1815 to 1819 has been taken over by the government and will be torn down to make way for the proposed Supreme Court Building. Attorney General William D. Mitchell is here shown presenting a check for $299,200.00 to Burnita S. Matthews, att[orney] for the Woman's Party, in payment for the site. On the left is Maud Younger, Congressional Chairman of the National Woman's Party. ()
- National Woman's Party Headquarters: Alva Belmont House (1)
- National Woman's Party members and crowd gathered in front of the Alva E. Belmont House during its dedication ceremony. (1)
- National Woman's Party members gathered outside with banners during the dedication ceremonies for the Alva E. Belmont House, 1922. (1)
- [National Woman's Party members meet in Colorado Springs for a conference to decide a course of action during the 1916 presidential election campaign.] Aug. 10--11 to 15, 1916. Left to right: Mrs. Hetty Wallis, Texas, Advisory Council, Harriot Stanton Blatch, N.Y., Florence Bayard Hilles, Del., Bertha Fowler, Colorado, Anne Martin, Nevada, Mrs. William Kent, California. Colorado Springs Conference 1916. (1)
- National Woman's Party members picketing 1917 Republican Party Convention. (1)
- National Woman's Party members standing in line with banners during the dedication ceremonies for the Alva E. Belmont House, 1922. (1)
- National Woman's Party members walking with banners during the dedication ceremonies for the Alva E. Belmont House, 1922. (1)
- National Woman's Party National Council, October 25, 1922 (1)
- Negro women prostitutes were brought to this sleeping room and placed in beds alternating with suffrage prisoners, 1917. (1)
- Nell Mercer, Norfolk, Virginia (1)
- New Jersey delegates in front of Congressional Union headquarters. (1)
- New York Pickets at the White House, January 26, 1917 (1)
- Nina B. Lamkin, Director Woman's Division, Highland Park, Michigan, Recreation Commission. Directing Pageant for Mid-Western Conference National Woman's Party. Bloomfield Hills, Detroit, Michigan. June 4th to 7th inclusive. (1)