The world's anti-slavery convention: London, June 12, 1840
Mrs. Collins' reminiscences
Reminiscences by Clarina I. Howard Nichols
Mrs. Stanton's reminiscences
Woman, church, and state.
Woman's patriotism in the war
National conventions, 1866-67
The Kansas campaign, 1867
New York Constitutional Convention
National conventions, 1869
The new departure, under the 14th amendment
National conventions, 1873-75
American Woman Suffrage Association.
v. 2 16. Woman's patriotism in the war : The first gun on Sumter, April 12, 1861 ; Woman's military genius ; Anna Ella Carroll ; The sanitary movement ; Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell ; The hospitals ; Dorothea Dix ; Services on the battle-field ; Clara Barton ; The freedman's bureau ; Josephine Griffing ; Ladies' national covenant ; Political campaigns ; Anna Dickinson ; The woman's loyal national league ; The mammoth petition ; Anniversaries ; The thirteenth amendment
17. Congressional Action : First petitions to congress December, 1865, against the word male in the 14th amendment ; Join resolutions before congress ; Messrs. Jenckes, Schenck, Broomall, and Stevens ; Republicans protest in presenting petitions ; The women seek aid of Democrats ; James Brooks in the house of representatives ; Horace Greeley on the petitions ; Caroline Healy Dall on Messrs. Jenckes and Schenck ; The district of Columbia suffrage bill ; Senator Cowan, of Pennsylvania, moved to strike out the word male ; A three days' debate in the Senate ; The final vote nine in favor of Mr. Cowan's amendment, and thirty-seven against
18. National Conventions in 1866-67 : The first national woman suffrage convention after the war ; Speeches by Ernestine L. Rose, Antoinette Brown Blackwell, Henry Ward Beecher, Frances D. Gage, Theodore Tilton, Wendell Phillips ; Petitions to congress and the constitutional convention ; Mrs. Stanton a candidate to congress ; Anniversary of the equal rights association
1867 : The battle ground of freedom ; Campaign of 1867 ; Liberals did not stand by their principles ; Black men opposed to woman suffrage ; Republican press and party untrue ; Democrats in opposition ; John Stuart Mill's letters and speeches extensively circulated ; Henry B. Blackwell and Lucy Stone opened the campaign ; Rev. Olympia Brown followed ; 60000 tracts distributed ; Appeal signed by thirty-one distinguished men ; Letters from Helen E. Starrett, Susan E. Wattles, Dr. R.S. Tenney, Lieut.-Governor J.B. Root, Rev. Olympia Brown ; The campaign closed by ex-Governor Robinson, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and the Hutchinson family ; Speeches and songs at the polls in every ward in Leavenworth election day ; Both amendments lost ; 9070 votes for woman suffrage, 10,843 for Negro suffrage
20. New York constitutional convention : Constitution amended once in twenty years ; Mrs. Stanton before the legislature claiming woman's right to vote for members to the convention ; An immense audience in the capitol ; The convention assembled June 4th, 1867. Twenty thousand petitions presented for striking the word male from the constitution ; Committee on the right of suffrage, and the qualifications for holding office- Horace Greeley, Chairman ; Mr. Graves, of Herkimer, leads the debate in favor of woman suffrage ; Horace Greeley's adverse report ; Leading advocates heard before the convention ; Speech of George William Curtis on striking the word man from section 1, article 11 ; Final Vote, 19 for, 125 against ; Equal rights anniversary of 1868.
v. 2 21. Reconstruction :The fourteenth and fifteenth amendments ; Universal suffrage and universal amnesty the key-note of reconstruction ; Gerrit Smith and Wendell Phillips hesitate ; A trying period in the woman suffrage ; Those opposed to the word "male" in the fourteenth amendment voted down in conventions ; The Negro's hour ; Virginia L. Minor on suffrage in the district of Columbia ; Women advised to be silent ; The hypocrisy of the Democrats preferable to that of the Republicans ; Senator Pomeroy's amendment ; Protests against a man's government ; Negro suffrage a political necessity ; Charles Sumner opposed to the fourteenth amendment, but voted for it as a party measure ; Woman suffrage for Utah ; Discussion in the house as to who constitute electors ; Bills for woman suffrage presented by the Hon. George W. Julian and Senators Wilson and Pomeroy ; The fifteenth amendment ; Anna E. Dickinson's suggestion ; Opinions of women on the fifteenth amendment ; The sixteenth amendment ; Miss Anthony chosen a delegate to the Democratic national convention July 4, 1868 ; Her address read by a unanimous vote ; Horatio Seymour in the chair ; Comments of the press ; The revolution.
1869 : First convention in Washington ; First hearing before congress ; Delegates invited from every state ; Senator Pomeroy, of Kansas ; Debate between colored men and women ; Grace Greenwood's graphic description ; What the members of the convention saw and heard in Washington ; Robert Purvis ; A western trip ; Conventions in Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis, Springfield, and Madison ; Editorial correspondence in the revolution ; Anniversaries in New York and Brooklyn ; Conventions in Newport and Saratoga
under the fourteenth amendment : Francis Minor's resolutions ; Hearing before congressional committee ; Descriptions by Mrs. Fannie Howland and Grace Greenwood ; Washington convention, 1870 ; Rev. Samuel J. May ; Senator Carpenter ; Professor Sprague, of Cornell University ; Notes of Mrs. Hooker ; May anniversary in New York ; The fifth avenue conference ; Second decade celebration ; Washington, 1871 ; Victoria woodhull's memorial ; Judiciary committee ; Majority and minority reports ; George W. Julian and A.A. Sargent in the House ; May anniversary, 1871 ; Washington in 1872 ; Senate judiciary committee ; Benjamin F. Butler ; The Sherman-Dahlgren protest ; Women in grant and Wilson campaign
1873,'74,'75 : Fifth Washington convention ; Mrs. Gage on centralization ; May anniversary in New York ; Washington convention, 1874 ; Fraces Ellen Burr's Report ; Rev. O.B. Frothingham in New York convention ; Territory of Pembina ; Discussion in the senate ; Conventions in Washington and New York, 1875 ; Hearings before congressional committees
25. Trials and decisions : Women voting under the XVI. Amendment ; Appeals to the courts ; Marilla M. Ricker, of New Hampshire, 1870 ; Nannette B. Gardner, Michigan ; Sara Andrews Spencer, District of Columbia ; Ellen Rand Van Valkenburgh, California ; Catherine V. Waite, Illinois ; Carrie S. Burnham, Pennsylvania ; Sarah M.T. Huntingdon, Connecticut ; Susan B. Anthony, New York ; Virginia L. Minor, Missouri ; Judges McKee, Jameson, Sharswood, Cartter ; Associate Justice Hunt ; Chief Justice Waite ; Myra Bradwell ; Hon. Matt. H. Carpenter ; Supreme Court decisions.
Hon. Matt. H. Carpenter ; Supreme Court decisions
26. American woman suffrage association : Circular letter ; Cleveland convention ; Association completed ; Henry Ward Beecher, President ; Convention in Steinway Hall, New York ; George William Curtis speaks ; The first annual meeting held in Cleveland ; Mrs. Tracy Cutler, President ; Mass meeting in Steinway Hall, New York, 1870 ; State action recommended ; Moses Coit Tyler speaks ; Mass meetings in 1871 in Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore, Pittsburgh ; Memorial to congress ; Letters from William Lloyd Garrison and others ; Hon. G.F. Hoar advocates woman suffrage ; Anniversary celebrated at St. Louis ; Dr. Stone, of Michigan ; Thomas Wentworth Higginson, President, 1872 ; Convention in Cooper Institute, New York ; Two hundred young women march in ; Meeting in Plymouth Church ; Letters from Louise May Alcott and Elizabeth Stuart Phelps ; The annual meetings in Detroit ; Julia Ward Howe, President ; Letter from James T. Field ; Mary F. Eastman addressed the convention. Bishop Gilbert Haven President for 1875 ; Convention in Steinway Hall, New York ; Hon. Charles Bradlaugh speaks ; Centennial celebration, July 3d ; Petition to congress for a XVI. Amendment ; Conventions in Indianapolis, Cincinnati, Washington, and Louisville.
The centennial year, 1876
National conventions, hearings and reports, 1877-79
Congressional reports and conventions, 1880-81
Congressional debates and conventions, 1882-83
[Progress of suffrage in the States].
Woman's constitutional right to vote
The National Suffrage Convention of 1884
Congressional hearings and reports of 1884
The National Suffrage Conventions of 1885-86
First discussion and vote in U.S. Senate, 1887
The National Suffrage Convention of 1887
International Council of Women: hearing of 1888
The National Suffrage Convention of 1889
National-American Conventions of 1890-1900
The American Woman Suffrage Association
Suffrage work in political and other conventions
The rights of women in the States
The rights of women in Great Britain
Woman suffrage in other countries
National organizations of women
Eminent advocates of woman suffrage
Testimony from woman suffrage states
Constitution of National-American Woman Suffrage Association.
Founding of National Association
The National Suffrage Conventions of 1902-1920
Story of Federal Suffrage Amendment
Various woman suffrage associations
Woman suffrage in presidential conventions
War service of organized suffragists.
Position of women in regard to laws, office holding, education, etc.
Woman suffrage in the territories and the Philippines
Woman suffrage in Great Britain and the British colonies
Woman suffrage in many countries
The International Woman Suffrage Alliance
Permanent organization in Berlin in 1904
Conference and congress in Copenhagen in 1906
Congress in Amsterdam in 1908
The first quinquennial in London
Anti-suffrage manifesto of Nebraska men.