Why They Put Alice Paul in Solitary Confinement, 1917
Item
- Title
- Why They Put Alice Paul in Solitary Confinement, 1917
- Description
- Stories and songs relating to the imprisonment of Alice Paul and other suffragists at the Occoquan Workhouse that were sent from the National Woman's Party headquarters in Washington D.C. for Caroline Katzenstein to use for publicity in Philadelphia. The news of the suffragists' imprisonment were key in generating public interest in women's suffrage.
- Identifier
- 17524
- Type
- text
- Creator
- National Woman's Party
- Date Created
- 1917-06-26
- Format
- typescript
- Is Part Of
- Caroline Katzenstein papers (Am.8996)
- Spatial Coverage
- Philadelphia (Pa.) | 1326 Chestnut St Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Washington (D.C.)
- Subject
- Katzenstein, Caroline | Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association | Women—Suffrage | Women—Suffrage—United States | Women—History—19th century | Women—History—20th century | United States. Constitution. 19th Amendment | National American Woman Suffrage Association | National Woman's Party | Paul, Alice, 1885-1977
- Extent
- 8 pages
- Language
- eng
- Rights
- Rights assessment is your responsibility. This material is made available for noncommercial educational scholarly and/or charitable purposes. For other uses or for more information please contact The Historical Society of Pennsylvania’s Rights and Reproductions department at rnr@hsp.org.
- Item sets
- Caroline Katzenstein papers
Annotations
There are no annotations for this resource.