In a Memorial Day address to the Women’s Military Service Club today in New York, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt praised the accomplishments of the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps. She also indicated that entire WAAC units may soon be stationed outside the U.S.
May 29, 1926: Feminist Groups Speak Out Against One Another Overseas
The rivalry between the National Women’s Party and the League of Women Voters went international this week, with one victory for each side so far.
May 28, 1980: Military Women Make History Across the Nation
Women are now among the elite who have graduated from each of the nation’s most prestigious military academies.
May 27, 1933: Equal Rights Amendment Push Picks Up Steam
The need for an Equal Rights Amendment has increased dramatically in the past few years, due to an assault on women’s rights and opportunities that some misguided individuals see as one of the solutions to our country’s current economic crisis.
May 16, 1913: Suffragists Condemn Comments by NYC Mayor
Local suffragists expressed immediate and universal outrage today over some remarks made by New York City Mayor William Gaynor in a newspaper interview.
May 15, 1894: Students Speak Out for Suffrage in Brooklyn
The woman suffrage movement’s youngest supporters may be among its most insightful and articulate if those who spoke earlier this afternoon at the Brooklyn Woman Suffrage Association’s headquarters are any example.
May 14, 1929: Charges Dismissed Against Women Arrested for Distributing Birth Control Information
A victory for birth control advocates today, as charges were dismissed against all five defendants arrested on April 15th for distributing contraceptive information, a violation of Section 1142 of the New York State Penal Code.
May 13, 1909: Suffragists Picket Reverend in Madison Square
Edith Bailey, Harriot Stanton Blatch, and several other suffragists held a rally today just outside the church of militant anti-suffragist Reverend Dr. Charles Henry Parkhurst.
May 12, 1942: Congress Passes Bill Establishing Women’s Army Auxiliary Corp
The bill to establish a Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) got final Congressional approval today with a Senate vote of 38 to 27.
May 9, 1945: Army Seeks 9,000 Nurses Following Germany’s Surrender
Today brought a reminder that the battles in the Pacific are far from over, and Army Nurses are as vital to our war effort as ever.
May 8, 1915: Suffrage Promoted at Panama-Pacific International Exposition
Huge numbers of visitors from the East, where no State has equal suffrage, are visiting the Exposition here in San Francisco.
May 7, 1894: Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Harriot Stanton Blatch Lead Mass Suffrage Meeting
There certainly seem to be plenty of people willing to do whatever it takes to remove a single word from the New York State Constitution, which presently grants the right to vote to “every male citizen of the age of 21 years.”
May 6, 1911: NYC Suffrage Parade Largely Exceeds Expectations
Anyone who still doubts that the woman suffrage movement is rapidly gaining support must have been a long way from New York’s Fifth Avenue earlier today.
May 5, 1916: Attendees Celebrating Emma Goldman’s Release from Prison Storm Carnegie Hall Stage for Birth Control Information
Rose Pastor Stokes has just caused a sensation in Carnegie Hall by distributing small slips of paper containing birth control information, a clear violation of Section 1142 of the New York State Penal Code.
Carolyn Maloney Leads Charge for National Women’s History Museum
Maloney has been working to establish the museum for nearly 20 years, first introducing a bill in 1997.
May 2, 1913: President Theodore Roosevelt Speaks Out for Suffrage
Theodore Roosevelt joined the ranks of suffrage speakers tonight, and left no doubt he will bring the same enthusiasm and stirring oratory to the “Votes for Women” campaign which have characterized his efforts for other causes he passionately supports.
May 1, 1895: New York State Investigates Labor Conditions for Women and Children
A special report investigating conditions of female and child labor in New York City was submitted today, and it paints a bleak portrait of working conditions for those who earn their living at department store counters, in factories, or through home work.
April 30, 1915: New York Senator Remains Opposed to Suffrage Following Meeting with Movement Leaders
There was a quite frustrating and somewhat heated exchange of views this afternoon in Washington, D.C., as Inez Milholland Boissevain, Doris Stevens, and several other members of the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage met with Senator James O’Gorman, Democrat of New York.
April 29, 1905: NYC Teachers Take Action for Equal Pay
“Equal pay for equal work” is the demand of an insurgent group of women teachers led by Anna Louise Goessling of P.S. 44 in Brooklyn, New York.
April 28, 1924: League of Women Voters Convenes In Expectation of Upcoming Elections
“Keep your backbone at the conventions. When they want your vote for a candidate of whom you don’t approve, don’t give it, even for a unit vote. Let the men see that women are going to help to lead them to the right kind of platforms and the right kind of candidates.”