Alice Paul portrait, undated

Item

Title
Alice Paul portrait, undated
Description
Alice Paul was an American feminist, women's rights activist, and the figurehead and main strategist of the 1910s campaign for the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Along with Lucy Burns, Paul created the National Woman's Party and helped organize demonstrations, such as the Silent Sentinels, which propelled the suffrage movement to the ratification of the Amendment in 1920. Paul then spent a half century as leader of the NWP, which fought for the Equal Rights Amendment. This photograph is one of a series amassed by Caroline Katzenstein for her book, 'Lifting the Curtain,' which surveys the development of the woman's suffrage movement in the United States.
Identifier
17578
Type
image
Creator
Katzenstein, Caroline
Date Created
1910-1920
Format
photograph
Is Part Of
Caroline Katzenstein papers (Am.8996)
Spatial Coverage
Philadelphia (Pa.)
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
1 photograph
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.

Annotations

There are no annotations for this resource.

Image annotations