On Maryland's Eastern Shore, the farming village of Still Pond wrote in its charter a guarantee that women taxpayers had the right to vote in all municipal elections. In 1908, 14 women registered to vote including two African American women. On election day, three of the women along with 72 men showed up to vote. Those three women who went down in history as Maryland's first women to vote are: Anna Baker Maxwell, Eliza Lily Deringer Kelly & Mary Jane Clark Howard.
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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
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Florence & Bertha Trail | Sisters in the Struggle
Madeleine Ellicott | By Women, For Women
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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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