Anti-suffrage postcard. Reads: Stand by the Women Vote NO on Woman Suffrage! Woman's right is the right of freedom from political duties. Over 80% of the women of New York DO NOT want to vote. The Women's Anti-Suffrage Association of Rochester.
Photograph of an Anti-Suffrage tent with unknown anti-suffragists standing in front. Tent sign reads: I am opposed to woman suffrage. Mayor of Rochester, NY, Hiram Edgerton stands next to the tent.
Anti-Women's Suffrage postcard. Reads: Easy to Remember: Vote No In November. Suffrage is going; not coming! Within one year it has been defeated in Congress and in nineteen states, viz:--Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut,…
Anti-Women's Suffrage postcard. Reads: New York has better laws for protection of women and children than obtain in any woman suffrage states. Eighty per cent. of the women in New York state do not want the ballot. These reasons are sufficient to…
Rochester's history is well-tied to the garment industry which brought long hours and unsafe conditions to its workers. Immigrant garment worker Ida Breiman joined a labor strike in an effort to secure better working conditions, shorter hours, and…
Elected in 1899, Helen Barrett Montgomery served on the Rochester School Board for 10 years. She was instrumental in introducing progressive reforms like kindergartens, vocational training, and health education.
A strip of admissions tickets for lectures at the Lyceum Theater on various topics of interest to suffragists, including lectures by Rev. Anna Howard Shaw, Harriet Stanton Blatch, Dr. A. E. Winship, Rev. Caroline Bartlett Crane, Hon. Samuel M. Jones,…
Portrait of Mary S. Anthony and Susan B. Anthony, date unknown. Mary is sitting in a chair holding a book while Susan stand next to her also holding a book.
Banquet, Political Equality Club, at the Livingston Hotel, Friday Evening, November the twentieth, Rochester, N.Y., 1896. A yellow ribbon is attached to the corner of the booklet.