Arkansas women and the right to vote : the Little Rock campaigns, 1868-1920 /
Saved in:
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Little Rock, Arkansas :
Butler Center Books,
2015.
|
Edition: | First edition. |
Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction: A lost opportunity
- City Hall : did she or didn't she? : 500 West Markham Street
- Liberty Hall : Dr. Anna Howard Shaw speaks : Spring Street, S.W. corner 2nd
- Suffragists meet : but where? : West Markham street
- Equal Suffrage State Central Committee Offices, 1917 : 221 West 2nd Street
- The Old State House : 300 West Markham Street
- Capital Theater : 200 block, West Markham Street (south side)
- Marion Hotel : 200 block, West Markham Street (north side)
- The suffragists "at home" at the Capital Hotel : 113-123 West Markham Street
- The Woman's Chronicle : 122 West Second Street
- Old City Hall : 120-122 West Markham Street
- Woman's Christian Temperance Union : 106 East Markham Street
- Votes for woman at the Board of Trade : Second and Scott streets
- Kempner Theatre : Carrie Chapman Catt speaks in 1916 : 500 block, South Louisiana
- Carnegie Library : Seventh and South Louisiana (1911-1963)
- Royal Arcanum Hall : 105 West Eighth Street
- The Arkansas Ladies' Journal : 723 South Main Street
- YMCA : Carrie Chapman Catt : 717-719 South Main Street
- Suffrage organization 1.0 : Turner Studio, 1888 : 814 Main Street
- Adolphine Fletcher Terry House : 411 East Seventh Street
- Where women marched
- The McDiarmid House : 1424 Center Street
- Suffrage organization 2.0 : Lulu Markwell's home, 1911 : 1422 Rock Street
- The new State Capitol
- Memorials to the suffragists
- Appendix I: Arkansas suffragists to c. 1900
- Appendix II: Suffragists in Arkansas, 1911-1919.