This episode of Ballot and Beyond, contributed by the Maryland Women’s Heritage Center, was written by Pamela Young. The reader is Allison Weiss, Executive Director, Sandy Spring Museum.
Sandy Spring, Maryland, was settled in 1727 by Quakers who strongly valued education and social justice. Many were active in social movements promoting peace and the abolition of slavery. Quakers believe in equality of all persons, so women are considered equals to men. With this emphasis on human equality, education, and justice, it is not surprising that Sandy Spring fostered activism for women's suffrage. In 1889, a local women's suffrage association was organized and went on to serve as a hotbed of suffrage activity emanating out of the rural Montgomery County community.
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Mrs. Edward H. Harris, Sr. | Suffragist By Any Name
Sadie Jacobs Crockin | Visionary Jewish Suffragist
Ellen Newbold La Motte | Activist & Adventurer
Reverend Doctor Pauli Murray | The Will To Thrive
Laura Byrne | Serving Suffrage With A Smile
Emilie Doetsch | Lawyer & Journalist
Catherine Sweet | Foiled Early Voter
Edith Houghton Hooker | Dynamic Suffrage Driver
Margaret Brent | Colonial Suffragist
Billie Holiday | Voice of Protest
Mary Risteau | Early Elected State Delegate
DuBois Circle | Inspired Fighting Against Injustice
Florence & Bertha Trail | Sisters in the Struggle
Madeleine Ellicott | By Women, For Women
Dr. Lillian Welsh | Academic Voice for Suffrage
Harriet Tubman | Abolitionist & Suffragist
Mary Pickersgill | Star-Spangled Seamstress
Margaret Briggs Gregory Hawkins | Education is Power
Lilian Reeves Crawford | Local Suffrage Leader
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