What would Grandmother Edna Kearns say about votes for women today?
Our first wave women’s rights activists would be concerned about partisan moves to limit the right to vote and make it easily accessible.
Continue ReadingFeatures suffrage wagon at the Long Island Museum
Our first wave women’s rights activists would be concerned about partisan moves to limit the right to vote and make it easily accessible.
Continue ReadingA reminder that Suffrage Wagon Cooking School has had requests for our classic roast corn recipe. Enjoy during the height of the growing season.
Continue ReadingA greeting of celebration from Suffrage Wagon News Channel! In 2019, we’re celebrating ten years of publishing…
Continue ReadingDescendants and volunteers. They are the backbone of the upcoming 2020 centennial of the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution.
Continue ReadingPatriotism as protest was the justification used in 1913 when Edna Kearns and others took to the road for organizing for votes for women.
Continue ReadingBook by Brooke Kroeger about the men supporters of the women’s rights first wave says such involvement was remarkable and it has no precedent today.
Continue ReadingTea drinking and activism went hand in hand for the first wave of the women’s rights movement in the US.
Continue ReadingThe work to prepare for 2020, the national votes for women centennial, started before today!
Continue ReadingGetting ready for March and Women’s History Month is as important as preparing for 2020.
Continue Reading