List of suffragists and suffragettes

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(Redirected from
Women's suffrage organizations
)

British Women's Social and Political Union lapel pin

This list of suffragists and suffragettes includes noted individuals active in the worldwide

Selma to Montgomery march. US and Australian activists most often preferred to be called suffragists, though both terms were occasionally used.[7]

Madelin "Madge" Breckinridge
Gertrude Foster Brown
Carrie Chapman Catt
Matilda Joslyn Gage
Statue of Esther Hobart Morris, located at the front exterior of the Wyoming State Capitol
Anna Howard Shaw
Sojourner Truth
Victoria Woodhull

Argentina

  • Cecilia Grierson (1859–1934) – the first woman physician in Argentina; supporter of women's emancipation, including suffrage
  • Julieta Lanteri (1873–1932) – physician, freethinker, and activist; the first woman to vote in Argentina
  • Alicia Moreau de Justo (1885–1986) – physician, politician, pacifist and human rights activist
  • Eva Perón (1919–1952) – First Lady of Argentina, created the first large female political party in the nation
  • Elvira Rawson de Dellepiane (1867–1954) – physician, activist for women's and children's rights; co-founder of the Association Pro-Derechos de la Mujer

Australia

Edith Cowan
  • Maybanke Anderson (1845–1927) – promoter of women's and children's rights, campaigner for women's suffrage and federation
  • Eliza Ashton (1851/1852–1900) – journalist and founding member of the Womanhood Suffrage League of New South Wales
  • Annette Bear-Crawford (1853–1899) – women's suffragist and federationist in Victoria
  • Rosetta Jane Birks (1856–1911) – social reformer, philanthropist and South Australian women's suffragist
  • Elizabeth Brentnall (1830–1909) – Australian suffragist, temperance activist and philanthropist.
  • Dora Meeson Coates (1869–1955) – artist, member of British Artists' Suffrage League
  • Mary Colton (1822–1898) – president of the Women's Suffrage League from 1892 to 1895
  • Edith Cowan (1861–1932) – politician, social campaigner, first woman elected to an Australian parliament
  • Henrietta Dugdale (1827–1918) – initiated the first female suffrage society in Australia
  • Kate Dwyer (1861–1949) – schoolteacher and Labor leader, member of the Womanhood Suffrage League of New South Wales
  • Fanny Furner (1864–1938) – activist, first women to stand for election in local government in Manly
  • Belle Theresa Golding (1864–1940) – feminist, suffragist and labor activist
  • Isabella Goldstein (1849 – 1916) Australian suffragist and social reformer
  • Vida Goldstein (1869–1949) – feminist politician, first woman in British Empire to stand for election to a national parliament
  • Maria Elizabeth Kirk (1855-1928) Temperance in UK and suffrage in Australia.
  • Serena Lake (1842–1902) – South Australian evangelical preacher, social reformer, campaigner for women's suffrage
  • Louisa Lawson (1848–1920) – poet, writer, publisher, and feminist
  • Mary Lee (1821–1909) – suffragist and social reformer in South Australia
  • Muriel Matters (1877–1969) – lecturer, journalist, educator, actress, elocutionist, member of the Women's Freedom League
  • May Jordan McConnel (1860–1929) – trade unionist and suffragist, member of the Women's Equal Franchise Association
  • Emma Miller (1839–1917) – pioneer trade union organiser, co-founder of the Women's Equal Franchise Association
  • Elizabeth Webb Nicholls (1850–1943) – campaigner for women's suffrage in South Australia
  • Jessie Rooke (1845–1906) – Tasmanian suffragist and temperance reformer
  • Rose Scott (1847–1925) – founder of the Women's Political Education League
  • Catherine Helen Spence (1825–1910) – author, teacher, and journalist; commemorated on a special issue of the Australian five-dollar note
  • Jessie Street (1889–1970) – feminist, human rights campaigner
  • Mary Hynes Swanton (1861–1940) Australian women's rights and trade unionist
  • Mary Windeyer (1836–1912) – women's suffrage campaigner in New South Wales
  • Lilian Locke (1869-1950) – honorary secretary of the United Council for State Suffrage, political organiser, trade unionist and labor activist

[8][9]

Austria

  • Marianne Hainisch (1839–1936) – founder and leader of the Austrian women's movement, mother of first President of Austria
  • Ernestine von Fürth, (1877–1946) – co-founder of the New Viennese Women's Club, chairwoman of the Austrian Women's Suffrage Committee
  • IWSA
  • International Woman Suffrage Alliance

Bahamas

Barbados

  • Nellie Weekes (1896–1990) – campaigner for women's involvement in politics, who ran for office in 1942, before women were allowed to vote in the country

Belgium

  • International Woman Suffrage Alliance
  • Léonie de Waha (1836–1926) – Belgian feminist, philanthropist, educator and Walloon activist
  • Isabelle Gatti de Gamond (1839–1905) – Belgian educator, feminist, suffragist and politician
  • Marie Parent (1853–1934) – journal editor, temperance activist, feminist and suffragist
  • Marie Popelin (1846–1913) – lawyer and early feminist political campaigner; worked for universal adult suffrage
  • Louise van den Plas (1877–1968) – suffragist and founder of the first Christian feminist movement in Belgium

Brazil

  • Leolinda de Figueiredo Daltro
    (1859–1935) – teacher and indigenous' rights activist; co-founder of the Feminine Republican Party
  • Celina Guimarães Viana (1890–1972) – Brazilian professor and suffragist; first woman to vote in Brazil
  • Ivone Guimarães (1908–1999) – Brazilian professor and activist for women's suffrage
  • Jerônima Mesquita (1880–1972) – co-founder of the Federação Brasileira pelo Progresso Feminino
  • Carlota Pereira de Queirós (1892–1982) – the first woman to vote and be elected to the Brazilian parliament
  • Marie Rennotte (1852–1942) – Native Belgian, naturalized Brazilian teacher and lawyer who founded the Aliança Paulista pelo Sufrágio Feminino with Carrie Chapman Catt's help
  • Miêtta Santiago (1903–1995) – Brazilian writer, poet, and lawyer; challenged the constitutionality of the ban on women voting in Brazil
  • Maria Werneck de Castro (1909–1993) – lawyer, militant communist, feminist, and supporter of women's suffrage

Bulgaria

  • Zheni Bozhilova-Pateva
    (1878–1955) – teacher, writer, and one of the most active women's rights activists of her era
  • Dimitrana Ivanova (1881–1960) – reform pedagogue, women's rights activist
  • Julia Malinova (1869–1953) – women's rights activist

Canada

Edith Archibald
  • Edith Archibald (1854–1936) – writer who led the Maritime Women's Christian Temperance Union and the National Council of Women of Canada and the Local Council of Women of Halifax
  • Francis Marion Beynon (1884–1951) – Canadian journalist, feminist and pacifist
  • Laura Borden (1861–1940) – wife of Sir Robert Laird Borden, the eighth Prime Minister of Canada
  • Henrietta Muir Edwards
    (1849–1931) – women's rights activist and reformer
  • Helena Gutteridge (1879–1960) – first woman elected to city council in Vancouver
  • Gertrude Harding (1889–1977) – one of the highest-ranking and longest-lasting members of the Women's Social and Political Union
  • Anna Leonowens (1831–1915) – travel writer, educator and social activist
  • Elizabeth Roberts MacDonald (1864–1922) – writer; president, Women's Suffrage Association of Nelson, British Columbia
  • The Famous Five
  • Sarah Galt Elwood McKee (1842–1934) – social reformer and temperance leader
  • Louise McKinney (1868–1931) – politician, women's rights activist, Alberta legislature
  • Emily Murphy (1868–1933) – women's rights activist, jurist, author
  • Irene Parlby (1868–1965) – women's farm leader, activist, politician
  • Eliza Ritchie (1856–1933) – educator and member of the executive of the Local Council of Women of Halifax
  • Octavia Ritchie (1868–1948) – physician
  • Emily Stowe (1831–1903) – doctor, campaigned for the country's first medical college for women
  • Jennie Fowler Willing (1834–1916) – educator, author, preacher, social reformer, suffragist
  • Thérèse Forget Casgrain
    (1896–1981) – leader of the Quebec suffragist movement

Chile

  • Celinda Arregui (1864–1941) – feminist politician, writer, teacher, suffrage activist
  • María de la Cruz (1912-1995) – political activist, journalist, writer, political commentator, first woman elected to the Chilean senate
  • Henrietta Müller (1846–1906) – Chilean-British women's rights activist and theosophist
  • Marta Vergara (1898–1995) – co-founder of MEMch; Inter-American Commission of Women delegate

China

  • Lin Zongsu (1878–1944) – founder of the first suffrage organization in China

Colombia

  • Lucila Rubio de Laverde (1908–1970) – co-founder of the suffrage organizations, Unión Femenina de Colombia (Women's Union of Colombia) (UFC) and the Alianza Femenina de Colombia (Women's Alliance of Colombia)
  • María Currea Manrique (1890–1985) – co-founder of the suffrage organizations, Unión Femenina de Colombia (Women's Union of Colombia) (UFC) and the Alianza Femenina de Colombia (Women's Alliance of Colombia)

Croatia

Czechia

  • Karla Máchová (1853–1920) – women's rights activist who, in 1908, was among the first three women to run for the Bohemian Diet
  • Františka Plamínková (1875–1942) – founded the Committee for Women's Suffrage (Czech: Výbor pro volební právo ženy) in 1905 and served as a vice president of the International Council of Women, as well as the International Woman's Suffrage Alliance
  • Marie Tůmová (1866–1925) –– women's suffragist who, in 1908, was among the first three women to run for the Bohemian Diet
  • Zdeňka Wiedermannová-Motyčkova
    (1868–1915) – founder of the Provincial Organization of Progressive Moravian Women

Cyprus

  • Polyxeni Loizia
    (1855—1942)
  • Persophone Papadopulou
    (1887–1948)

Denmark

Matilde Bajer
Eline Hansen
  • Nanna Aakjær (1874–1962) – woodcarver, suffragist
  • Matilde Bajer (1840–1934) – women's rights activist, suffragist, pacifist
  • Jutta Bojsen-Møller (1837–1927) – women's rights activist, suffragist, educator
  • Esther Carstensen (1873–1955) – voting rights campaigner, women's rights activist, journal editor
  • Helen Clay Pedersen (1862–1950) – British-born Danish women's rights activist and suffragist
  • Thora Daugaard (1874–1951) – suffragist, women's rights activist, peace activist, editor
  • Charlotte Eilersgaard (1858–1922) – novelist, playwright, women's rights activist, suffragist
  • Mathilde Fibiger (1830–1872) – feminist writer
  • Eline Hansen (1859–1919) – co-founder of Dansk Kvinderaad, later Danske Kvinders Nationalråd (DKN)
  • Meta Hansen (1865–1941) – active in Copenhagen's Women's Suffrage Association and the National Association for Women's Suffrage
  • Charlotte Klein (1834–1915) – women's rights activist and educator
  • Kristiane Konstantin-Hansen – textile artist, feminist, suffragist
  • Danske Kvindeforeningers Valgretsforbund
    or DKV
  • Elna Munch (1871–1945) – co-founder of the Landsforbundet for Kvinders Valgret (National Association for Women's Suffrage) or LKV
  • Johanne Münter (1844–1921) – writer, women's rights activist, suffragist
  • Nielsine Nielsen (1850–1916) – physician, suffragist, feminist, politician
  • Louise Nørlund (1854–1919) – co-founder and chairperson of the Danske Kvindeforeningers Valgretsforbund or DKV
  • Charlotte Norrie (1855–1940) – nurse, feminist, suffragist, educator
  • Johanne Rambusch (1865–1944) – co-founder of the Landsforbundet for Kvinders Valgret (Country Association for Women's Suffrage) or LKV
  • Vibeke Salicath (1861–1921) – feminist, suffragist and journalist
  • Dansk Kvindesamfund
  • Ingeborg Tolderlund (1848–1935) – women's rights advocate and suffragist active in Thisted
  • Clara Tybjerg (1864–1941) – feminist, suffragist, peace activist, educator

Egypt

El Salvador

Finland

  • Maikki Friberg (1861–1927) – educator, journal editor, suffragist and peace activist
  • Annie Furuhjelm (1859–1937) – journalist, feminist activist and politician
  • Alexandra Gripenberg (1857–1913) – writer, newspaper publisher, suffragist, women's rights activist
  • Lucina Hagman (1953–1946) – feminist, suffragist, early politician
  • Hilda Käkikoski (1864–1912) – women's activist, suffragist, writer, schoolteacher, early politician
  • Olga Oinola (1865–1949) – President of the Finnish Women Association

France

Marguerite Durand

Georgia

Germany

Bust of Clara Zetkin
Leaders of the women's movement in Germany, 1894
  • Jenny Apolant (1874–1925) – Jewish feminist, suffragist
  • Anita Augspurg (1857–1943) – jurist, actress, writer, pacifist, suffragist
  • Luise Büchner (1821–1877) – writer, women's rights activist
  • Marie Calm (1832–1887) – educator, writer
  • Minna Cauer (1841–1922) – educator, journalist, women's rights proponent, suffragist
  • Adela Coit (1863–1932) – suffragist
  • Hedwig Dohm (1831–1919) – feminist, writer, pacifist
  • Henriette Goldschmidt (1825–1920) – feminist, social worker
  • Lida Gustava Heymann
    (1868–1943) – women's rights activist, suffragist
  • Marie Loeper-Housselle (1837–1916) – educator
  • Luise Koch (1860–1934) – educator, women's rights activist, suffragist, politician
  • Helene Lange (1848–1930) – educator, pioneering women's rights activist, suffragist
  • Bertha von Marenholtz-Bülow – educator
  • Lina Morgenstern (1830–1909) – educator, women's rights activist
  • Louise Otto-Peters (1819–1895) – suffragist, women's rights activist, writer
  • Auguste Schmidt (1833–1902) – educator, women's rights activist
  • Marie Stritt (1855–1928) – women's rights activist, suffragist, leading member of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance
  • Mathilde Weber (1829–1901) – social worker
  • Clara Zetkin (1857–1933) – Marxist theorist, women's rights activist, suffragist, politician

Greece

  • Kalliroi Parren (1861–1940) – founder of the Greek women's movement
  • Avra Theodoropoulou (1880–1963) – music critic, pianist, suffragist, women's rights activist, nurse

Haiti

  • Yvonne Sylvain (1907–1989) – first female doctor from Haiti and advocate for gender equality

Honduras

Hungary

  • Vilma Glücklich (1872–1927) – educator, pacifist, suffragist, feminist
  • Rosika Schwimmer (1877–1948) – pacifist, feminist and suffragist
  • Adele Zay (1848–1928) – Transylvanian teacher, feminist and suffragist

Iceland

India

Indonesia

  • Thung Sin Nio (1902–1996) – women's rights activist, physician, economist, politician

Iran

  • Annie Basil (1911–1995) – Iranian-Indian activist for Armenian women
  • Táhirih (1817–1852) – also known as Fatimah Baraghani, renowned poet, removed her veil in public, "first woman suffrage martyr"

Ireland

Constance Markievicz

Italy

Malta

Japan

  • Raicho Hiratsuka
    (1886–1971)
  • Fusae Ichikawa
    (1893–1981) – founded the nation's first women's suffrage organization, the Women's Suffrage League of Japan; president of the New Japan Women's League
  • Shidzue Katō (1897–2001)
  • Oku Mumeo (1895–1997)
  • Shigeri Yamataka (1899–1977)

Jordan

  • Emily Bisharat (died 2004) – first female lawyer in Jordan, fought for women's suffrage

Liechtenstein

  • Melitta Marxer (1923–2015) – one of the "Sleeping Beauties" who took the issue of women's suffrage to the Council of Europe in 1983

Mexico

Netherlands

Newfoundland

New Zealand

Kate Sheppard

See also

List of New Zealand suffragists

Nicaragua

  • Josefa Toledo de Aguerri, also called Josefa Emilia Toledo Murillo (1866–1962) – Nicaraguan feminist, writer and reform pedagogue

Nigeria

Norway

  • Randi Blehr (1851–1928) – chairperson and co-founder of the Norwegian Association for Women's Rights
  • Anna Bugge (1862–1928) – chairman of the Norwegian Association for Women's Rights, also active in Sweden
  • Gudrun Løchen Drewsen (1867–1946) – Norwegian-born American women's rights activist and painter, promoted women's suffrage in New York City
  • Betzy Kjelsberg (1866–1950) – co-founder of the Norwegian Association for Women's Rights (1884), the National Association for Women's Suffrage (1885)
  • Gina Krog (1847–1916) – co-founder of the Norwegian Association for Women's Rights
  • Ragna Nielsen (1845–1924) – chairperson of the Norwegian Association for Women's Rights
  • Thekla Resvoll (1871–1948) – head of the Norwegian Female Student's Club and on the board of the women's suffrage movement (Kvinnestemmeretsforeningen)
  • Anna Rogstad (1854–1938) – vice president of the Association for Women's Suffrage
  • Hedevig Rosing (1827–1913) – co-leader of the movement in Norway; author, educator, school founder

Panama

  • Elida Campodónico (1894–1960) – teacher, women's rights advocate, attorney, first woman ambassador in Latin America
  • Clara González (1898–1990) – feminist, lawyer, judge, and activist
  • Gumercinda Páez (1904–1991) – teacher, women's rights activist and suffragette, and Constituent Assemblywoman of Panama

Peru

Philippines

Poland

Portugal

Puerto Rico

  • Isabel Andreu de Aguilar (1887–1948) – educator, helped establish the Puerto Rican Feminist League, was president of Puerto Rican Association of Women Suffragists, and first woman to run for Senate in PR
  • philanthropist; president of the Social League of Suffragists of Puerto Rico (Spanish: La Liga Social Sufragista (LSS) de Puerto Rico)[13][14][15][16]
  • Milagros Benet de Mewton (1868–1948) – teacher who filed a lawsuit to press for suffrage
  • Carlota Matienzo (1881–1926) – teacher, one of the founders of the Puerto Rican Feminine League and the Suffragist Social League
  • Felisa Rincón de Gautier (1897–1994) – mayor of San Juan, first woman to hold post of mayor of a capitol city in the Americas

Romania

  • Maria Baiulescu (1860–1941) – Austro-Hungarian born Romanian writer, suffragist and women's rights activist
  • Ana Conta-Kernbach (1865–1921) – teacher, pedagogue, writer, women's rights activist, suffragist
  • Eugenia de Reuss Ianculescu (1866–1938) – teacher, writer, women's rights activist, suffragist
  • Clara Maniu (1842–1929) – feminist, suffragist
  • Elena Meissner (1867–1940) – feminist, suffragist, headed Asociația de Emancipare Civilă și Politică a Femeii Române

Serbia

South Africa

  • Anna Petronella van Heerden (1887–1975) – campaigned for women's suffrage in the 1920s
  • Julia Solly (1862–1953) – British-born South African feminist and suffragist who helped acquire the vote for white women in 1930
  • Lady Barbara Steel (1857–1943) – helped acquire the vote for white women in 1930

Spain

  • Concepción Arenal (1820–1893) – pioneer and founder of the feminist movement in Spain; activist, writer, journalist and lawyer
  • Emilia Pardo Bazán (1851–1921) – Spanish writer, journalist, university professor and support for women's rights and education
  • Carmen de Burgos (1867–1932) – Spanish journalist, writer, translator and women's rights activist
  • Clara Campoamor (1888–1972) – Spanish politician and feminist best known for her advocacy for women's rights and suffrage during the writing of the Spanish constitution of 1931
  • María Espinosa de los Monteros (1875–1946) – Spanish women's rights activist, suffragist and business executive
  • Victoria Kent (1891–1987) – Spanish lawyer, suffragist and politician

Sweden

Signe Bergman

Switzerland

  • Simone Chapuis-Bischof (born 16 March 1931) – head of the Association Suisse Pour les Droits de la Femme (ADF) and the president of the journal Femmes Suisses
  • Caroline Farner (1842–1913) – the second female Swiss doctor
  • Marie Goegg-Pouchoulin (1826–1899) – Swiss doctor and campaigner for the Swiss women's movement
  • Marthe Gosteli (1917–2017) – Swiss suffrage activist and creator of the Swiss archive of women's history
  • Ursula Koch (born 1941) – politician, refused the 'male' oath in the Zürich cantonal parliament; first women president of the Social Democratic Party of Switzerland (SP)
  • Emilie Lieberherr (1924–2011) – Swiss politician who was a leading figure in the final struggle for women suffrage in Switzerland, and the famous 1969 March to Bern for women suffrage
  • Rosa Neuenschwander (1883–1962) – pioneer in vocational education, founder of the Schweizerische Landfrauenverband or SLFV (Swiss Country Association for Women Suffrage)
  • Camille Vidart (1854–1930) – suffragist, women's rights activist, pacifist and educator
  • Julie von May (von Rued) (1808–1875) – feminist
  • Bund Schweizerischer Frauenvereine
    (BSF)

Trinidad

United Kingdom

Elizabeth Garrett Anderson
Frances Buss
Mabel Capper (3rd from right, with petition) and fellow suffragettes, 1910
Millicent Fawcett
Lilian Lenton
Kathleen Lyttelton
Harriet Taylor Mill
Christabel Pankhurst
Ethel Smyth
Beatrice Webb
Rebecca West
Margaret McPhun
Dr Elizabeth Pace
Bundesarchiv Bild 102-09812, Jessie Stephen no-text
Jessie Newbery
Ethel Cox under arrest, 1914


United States

See also

United States Virgin Islands

  • Bertha C. Boschulte (1906–2004) – Secretary of the St. Thomas Teacher's Association, which sued for women's suffrage in the territory in 1935
  • Edith L. Williams (1887–1987) – first woman to attempt to register to vote in the US Virgin Islands

Uruguay

  • Paulina Luisi Janicki
    (1875–1949) – leader of the feminist movement in Uruguay, first Uruguayan woman to earn a medical degree in Uruguay (1909)

Venezuela

Yishuv

Major suffrage organizations

International

Belgium

Brazil

Bulgaria

  • Bulgarskiat Zhenski Suyut – Bulgarian organization from 1901 to 1944.[77]

Canada

China

  • Nüzi canzheng tongmenghui
    – Chinese organisation from 1912

Denmark

Finland

France

Greece

Italy

Japan

  • Fusen Kakutoku Dōmei (League for Women's Suffrage) – Japanese organisation.[83]

Malta

Netherlands

New Zealand

Norway

Spain

Sweden

Turkey

  • Türk Kadinlar Birligi
    – main suffrage organization in Turkey, founded 1924

United Kingdom

United States

Women's suffrage publications

International

United Kingdom

Back cover of The Woman Citizen magazine from 19 Jan 1918

United States

See also

References

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  2. OCLC 1037809229.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link
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  3. ^ Kratz, Jessie (14 May 2019). "What is Suffrage?". Pieces of History. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  4. ^ "Everything You Need to Know About the Word 'Suffragette'". Time. 22 October 2015. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  5. ^ "How the Term 'Suffragette' Evolved from Its Sexist Roots". Harper's BAZAAR. 18 August 2020. Retrieved 29 March 2023.
  6. ^ "Suffragist/Suffragette - What's the difference?". Government of South Australia - Office for Women. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  7. ^ "Did You Know? Suffragist vs Suffragette". U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  8. ^ "State Suffrage for Women". Portland Guardian. 18 January 1904. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
  9. ^ "Biography - Lilian Sophia Locke - Labour Australia". labouraustralia.anu.edu.au. Retrieved 26 August 2023.
  10. ^ "Huygens, Cornélie Lydie (1848–1902)". Huygens ING. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
  11. ^ Gambo Sawaba
  12. ^ Wuraola Esan
  13. ^ a b Lassalle, Beatriz (September 1949). "Biografía de Rosario Bellber González Por la Profesora Beatriz Lassalle". Revista, Volume 8, Issue 5 (in Spanish). La Asociación de Maestros de Puerto Rico. pp. 149, 158.
  14. ^ a b Asenjo, Conrado, ed. (1942). "Quién es Quién en Puerto Rico". Diccionario Biográfico De Record Personal (in Spanish) (Third edition 1941-42 ed.). San Juan, Puerto Rico: Cantero Fernández & Co. p. 33.
  15. ^ a b "Rosario Bellber González: maestra, sufragista y espiritista kardeciana Sandra A. Enríquez Seiders" (in Spanish). Revista Cruce. 15 March 2019. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  16. ^ a b Krüger Torres, Lola (1975). Enciclopedia Grandes Mujeres de Puerto Rico, Vol. IV (in Spanish). Hato Rey, Puerto Rico: Ramallo Bros. Printing, Inc. pp. 273–274.
  17. ^ Jackson, Sarah (12 October 2015). "The suffragettes weren't just white, middle-class women throwing stones". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
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  19. ^ "Maud Crofts: "We women want not privileges but equality." – First 100 Years". first100years.org.uk. 5 July 2016.
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  23. .
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  25. .
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  27. ^ "MRS Annie Seymour Pearson / Database - Women's Suffrage Resources".
  28. ISBN 978-0-19-861412-8. Retrieved 26 February 2018. (Subscription or UK public library membership
    required.)
  29. ^ "Wilkie, Annot (Robinson) – Socialist, Suffragette Wilkie, Helen – Socialist, Suffragette | Dundee Women's Trail". Dundeewomenstrail.org.uk. 18 January 2013. Retrieved 26 February 2018.
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  32. ^ Knight, R. Cecilia. "Adams, Mary Newbury (or Newberry)". University of Iowa. Retrieved 15 January 2018.
  33. ^ "Miss Edith Ainge, of Jamestown, New York, the first delegate to the convention of the National Woman's Party to arrive at Woman's Party headquarters in Washington, Miss Ainge is holding the New York state banner which will be carried by New York's delegation of 68 women at the conven". The Library of Congress. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  34. ^ "Timeline – Making Women's History". www.sunyjcc.edu. Archived from the original on 31 July 2018. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  35. ^ "Edith Ainge | Turning Point Suffragist Memorial". suffragistmemorial.org. 9 July 2017. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
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