Suffragette - Wikipedia A suffragette was a member or supporter of the British Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), an activist women's group agitating for votes for women, which in the early 20th century broke away from the much larger, peaceful and longer lasting National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), whose supporters were known as suffragists
20 Suffragists To Know - U. S. National Park Service These individuals fought for women's suffrage They lived across the United States, and came from around the world Some were active in the battle for women's right to vote in the early 1800s; others worked to educate and enroll voters and for voting rights into the late 1900s and beyond
Women’s suffrage | Definition, History, Causes, Effects, Leaders . . . Another convention, held in Syracuse, New York, in 1852, was the occasion of the first joint venture between Stanton and the dynamic suffragist leader Susan B Anthony; together these two figures led the American suffragist movement for the next 50 years
Suffragists And Suffragettes: What Was The Difference . . . - HistoryExtra By the early 20th century, two groups had become prevalent in the campaign for women’s suffrage Informally called suffragists and the suffragettes, both aimed to secure women’s right to vote – though they had very different approaches What was the difference between suffragists and suffragettes?
Turning Point Suffragist Memorial » Suffragist History Suffrage was a full-fledged political reform effort that took five generations of activism and commitment to achieve The movement had its own philosophers, its generals, its organizers, its foot soldiers, its writers – and its own separate political press
Suffragist Biographies - National Womens History Museum Frances Ellen Watkins Harper was not only the first African American woman to publish a short story, but she was also an influential abolitionist, suffragist, and reformer that co-founded the National Association of Colored Women’s Clubs
Womens suffrage - Wikipedia South Australian suffragist Catherine Helen Spence stood for office in 1897 In a first for the modern world, South Australia granted women the right to stand for Parliament in 1895