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.
Elizabeth Forbes | Jailed for Freedom
Clara Barton | Battlefield to Ballot Box
Edna Latimer | Hiking for Suffrage
U.S. Senator Verda Welcome | True Public Servant
Elizabeth King Ellicott | Women in Government
The Melvin Family | Rural Suffrage Leaders
Lucy Fisher Gwynne Branham & Lucy Branham | Mother-Daughter Suffrage Team
Henrietta Lacks | The Immortal
Ballot & Beyond: Dr. Rosalyn Terborg-Penn | African American Suffrage History
Ballot & Beyond: Victorine Q. Adams | Energizing African American Voters
Ballot & Beyond: Lavinia Margaret Engle | Protecting Women's Voting Rights
Ballot & Beyond: Eunice Kennedy Shriver | Special Olympics Founder
Ballot & Beyond: Sandi Timmins | Reducing Domestic Violence Against Women
Ballot & Beyond: Judge Diana G. Motz | Protecting Women's Rights
Ballot & Beyond: Lucille Clifton | Maryland State Poet Laureate
Ballot & Beyond: Lucy Diggs Slowe | First Lady of Tennis
Ballot & Beyond: The Honorable Rita C. Davidson | Serving Maryland's Highest Court
Ballot & Beyond: Dr. Liebe Sokol Diamond | Renowned Pediatric Orthopedic Surgeon
Ballot & Beyond: Sara A. Whitehurst | Jury Service for Women
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