Tag Archives: Women’s suffrage

January 2015 – Suppers for Suffragists Fundraiser Recap

TPSM Board members and volunteers discuss fundraising and outreach opportunities.

TPSM Board members and volunteers discuss fundraising and outreach opportunities.

Thank you to all those who attended our January Suppers for Suffragists fundraising event on January 29, 2015 at California Tortilla in Crystal City, Arlington, Virginia, and a special thank you to the managers and staff at California Tortilla for their generosity and support in hosting our guests. It was wonderful to see so many people there, despite the inclement weather, to support the Turning Point Suffragist Memorial.

We look forward to future events, including our next Suppers for Suffragists fundraiser on Thursday, February 26, 2015, from 11AM to 4PM at Panda Express at the University of Maryland – College Park campus.

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Ringing in the New Year

As we bid adieu to the year 2014, the Turning Point Suffragist Memorial Association would like to thank you for your ongoing support and interest in the women’s suffrage movement and the planned suffragist memorial. While this year has been one of great accomplishments, we still have much to do before breaking ground at the memorial site.

TPSMA must raise $1 Million by November 30, 2015.

And our success depends on you!

Make your year-end donation today to help build the Turning Point Suffragist Memorial! Your contribution will honor the suffragists who fought and won the right to vote for American women, in what became the largest expansion of democracy in the history of our nation.

Donate online via Razoo or Paypal, or mail your check made payable to “TPSMA” to:

Turning Point Suffragist Memorial Association
5400 Ox Road
Fairfax Station, Virginia 22039

Donation levels:
Voter:                  $5,000 (recognized on Donor Wall)
Friend:                $1,000 (recognized on Donor Wall)
Speaker:             $500
Suffragist:           $250
Advocate:           $100
Contributor:        $50
Other:                 $___


Video available at: http://youtu.be/KBfoXpMNhRw

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December 2014: Suffragist of the Month

TPSM’s December 2014 Suffragist of the MonthElizabeth Stuyvesant

Formerly of Cincinnati, she lived in New York City and was a professional dancer. She came from a family in which duty to country was valued.  Her great-grandfather died in the Revolutionary War, her grandfather in the Civil War, and her brother fought in France during World War I.  She acknowledged her father’s influence on her life: “Growing up under the influence of my father’s genuinely libertarian nature” she received respect and intellectual stimulation that propelled her into college, social work, and the suffrage movement (Filene, 26).

For five years she did social work in New York City; she was active in settlement work and in the campaign for birth control.  This brought her to decide to join the fight for woman’s political liberty through the suffrage movement.

She was a state organizer and active in the National Woman’s Party.  As a “silent sentinel” in 1917, she was arrested on July 4, 1917, while picketing the White House for suffrage and sentenced to three days in the District Jail.  She wrote “There was not one of us that did not come out of that experience with less awe for policeman, judge, and with established ideas and with a clearer understanding of the true nature of authority” (Adams, 35).  She continued picketing, and in August she was among those attacked by a mob at the White House as the observing police officers  did nothing to protect them.  She was struck and her blouse was torn from her body (Stevens, 90).

As a working professional woman – in the minority then — she wrote an essay, “Staying Free” published in The Nation, a liberal magazine.  Her essay was one of a series on the “Modern Women” of the 1920s.  Her professional work included that for the Socialist Party in the New York City mayoral election of 1917 (Showalter, 7).

Sources: Elaine Showalter (editor), These Modern Women: Autobiographical Essays from the Twenties (New York: Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 1989), 7.  Peter G. Filene, Him/Her/Self: Gender Identities in Modern America (Baltimore MD: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1974… 1998), 26.  Katherine H. Adams, Michael L. Keene, After the Vote Was Won: The Later Achievements of Fifteen Suffragists (Jefferson NC: McFarland and Company, 2010). Dora Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (Troutdale OR: NewSage Press, 1963).

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Night of Terror Timeline: November 14-15, 1917

November 14th

November 15th

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Filed under Night of Terror Observance, Suffrage

Night of Terror Timeline: November 13, 1917

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November 13, 2014 · 8:20 PM

Night of Terror Timeline: November 12, 1917

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November 12, 2014 · 10:16 PM

Night of Terror Timeline: November 10, 1917

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November 10, 2014 · 5:28 PM

Countdown to the Night of Terror

Today we begin posting our timeline countdown to the Night of Terror. Follow us on Twitter @tpsm2020.

Timeline: November 9, 1917

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November 2014: Suffragist of the Month

Each month, the Turning Point Suffragist Memorial Association recognizes one woman as Suffragist of the Month. This month, we recognize Dora Lewis (aka Mrs. Lawrence Lewis). Her recognition is timely as she is known to have been one of the women arrested and imprisoned at Occoquan Workhouse on the Night of Terror of November 14-15, 1917.

Her biography (below) is copied from TPSM’s website.

0ebe20beaa09a9b67556d2c710d84d25Dora Lewis was born in 1862 and was a member of a prominent Philadelphia family. While working with the National Woman’s Party she was among those suffragists who endured the “Night of Terror” in November of 1917, after being taken to the Occoquan Workhouse to serve a sentence for “obstructing the sidewalk.”

Lewis became involved in the suffrage movement as a wealthy widow from Philadelphia (Cooney, 185). She was one of the earliest supporters of Alice Paul and the National Woman’s Party but actually began working for the cause with the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA).  Her first major project with NAWSA was working with Paul to increase the support for a federal women’s suffrage amendment (Cooney, 185). When Paul and Lucy Burns created the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage in 1913 – which later became the National Woman’s Party (NWP) in 1916 — Lewis was one of the first women to become a member of the organization.

Incredibly active in the National Woman’s Party, Lewis served as a member of the National Woman’s Party executive committee, chairman of the finance committee, national treasurer, and ratification committee chairman. Lewis was also very active in picketing the White House on behalf of women’s suffrage and was often at odds with law enforcement. In November 1917, Lewis and other picketers stood before the White House gates, protesting the imprisonment of Alice Paul. In particular, the women were picketing against the denial of Paul’s status as a political prisoner (Irwin, 257) and were arrested. Lewis was tried on November 14th and sentenced to sixty days in the Occoquan Workhouse (Walton, 196). She and her fellow suffragists while in the Workhouse, fought to be treated as political prisoners.

From the evening of November 14th until the early hours of the morning on November 15th, the women endured what was later called the “Night of Terror.” Lewis and more than thirty other women were subjected to brutality at the hands of the prison guards (Walton, 199).  They were kicked, dragged, choked and subjected to beatings. Lewis was thrown into a tiny cell and hit her head on an iron bed, knocking her unconscious and causing many of her comrades to believe she was dead (Cooney, 360). Despite their brutal treatment, Lewis and Lucy Burns led the other imprisoned women in a hunger strike (Walton, 200). A few days after their hunger strike began, Lewis and the other women were subjected to force feedings. Lewis explained that as they forced the feeding tube down her throat she was, “gasping and suffocating with the agony of it” and “everything turned black when the fluid began pouring in” (Irwin, 288). As the American public became aware of the treatment of the women, many people called for the release of the suffragists. On November 27th, less than ten days after their hunger strike began, Lewis and the other imprisoned suffragists were released (Walton, 206-207).

Lewis’ involvement in the NWP did not end with her imprisonment on the Night of Terror, despite the brutality she faced. She remained an active member of the NWP and was devoted to women’s suffrage. On August 6, 1918, she was the main speaker at a protest at Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., that was held in memory of Inez Milholland, the iconic suffragist on horseback who led suffrage parades and who became ill and died while on a speaking tour to promote women’s suffrage. Lewis was beginning her speech when she was dragged away and arrested. Other suffragists quickly rose to take her place and they too were arrested (Irwin, 364). A year later, Lewis began the watch fire protests at the White House in which President Woodrow Wilson’s speeches were burned. She took part on New Year’s Day 1919 and was promptly arrested. (Irwin, 375). Lewis’ involvement in the fight for women’s suffrage continued as she traveled to various states considering ratification of the 19th Amendment. She was loyal to her cause and to the goals of the National Woman’s Party.

Sources: Robert P.J. Cooney Jr., Winning the Vote: The Triumph of the American Woman Suffrage Movement (Santa Cruz, CA: American Graphic Press, 2005); Inez Haynes Irwin, The Story of Alice Paul and the National Women’s [Sic] Party (Fairfax, Va: Denlinger’s Publishers, 1977); Mary Walton, A Woman’s Crusade: Alice Paul and the Battle for the Ballot (New York: Palgrave Macmillian, 2010); photo courtesy of the Library of Congress.

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Day #5 of the ‘Night of Terror” observance & the “why” of the White House picketing

Read this great post from Suffrage Wagon News Channel on WHY the suffragists decided to picket the White House!

Suffrage Wagon News Channel: BLOG

Marguerite Kearns at Suffrage Wagon News Channelby Marguerite Kearns

I’m late getting the blog post Day#5 finished, but it’s still 10:54 p.m. where I am. One of my stalwart friends asked me the other day: “But why did the women picket the White House in 1917? Couldn’t they have expressed their point of view in some other way?”

Good question and one that I welcome in this fifth day of partnering with Turning Point Suffragist Memorial to raise awareness of and support for the building of a suffragist memorial to honor those brave women who experienced the “Night of Terror” at the Occoquan Workhouse near Washington, DC in 1917.

When you look at the 1917 picketing from a larger perspective, put yourself back into time. How would you feel as someone in the second generation of women petitioning for the right to vote? Then turn the clock back to 1848 and the women’s convention at Seneca…

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November 6, 2014 · 10:14 AM