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Lady Anne Azgapetian
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Formal portrait of Lady Anne Azgapetian, wife of General Azgapetian of Armenia, seated and holding daughter Araxie Azgapetian in her lap, both wearing hats and richly brocaded or embroidered clothing. A caption attached to an alternate photograph of Lady Anne Azgapetian in the same folder indicates that she was scheduled to speak on behalf of Armenian women at the National Woman's Party convention, February 15-19, 1921, in Washington, D.C. Photograph published in The Suffragist, 9, no. 1 (Jan.-Feb. 1921): 343.
Edmonston, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
Mrs. Anne Calvert Neely
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Postcard image of Juliet Rublee astride a horse with crowd of people in background.
Anne Martin
Title transcribed from item, with additional information derived by Library of Congress staff. Summary: Group of six National Woman's Party members posing together outside. Left to right: Mrs. Hetty Wallis, Texas, Advisory Council, Harriot Stanton Blatch, Florence Bayard Hilles, Bertha Fowler, Anne Martin, Mrs. William Kent.
Mrs. Anne Archbold
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Ten National Woman's Party members from New England states in Washington, D.C. Left to R- Jessica Henderson, Anne Archbold, Mrs. William Draper, Sallie Hovey, Hazel Mac Kaye, Gail Laughlin, Mrs. Ernest Schelling, Mary Kelly Macarty, L. W. E. Havemeyer, Elsie Hill.
Miss Anne Martin
Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Formal portrait, three-quarter length, Anne Martin, facing forward, seated in chair, with body turned slightly to left, wearing a suit with open-collared blouse. Verso: "Return to Caroline Katzenstein 213 Pennfield Bldg." Anne Martin of Reno, Nev., was a graduate of Stanford Univ. and professor of history at the Univ. of Nevada. She was president of the Nevada Woman's Civic League and led a successful fight for state suffrage in Nevada in 1914. She was legislative chairman for the Congressional Union (CU) and the NWP, and a member of the NWP executive committee. She was first chairman of NWP when formed from enfranchised states in 1916, and when it combined with CU under the name NWP in 1917, she became vice chairman. In 1918 she ran on independent ticket for the U.S. Senate in Nevada. She was arrested picketing for suffrage in Washington, D.C., July 14, 1917 and sentenced to 60 days at Occoquan Workhouse. She was pardoned by President Wilson after three days. Source: Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1920), 364.
Anne Tillery Renshaw
Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Formal portrait, head and shoulders, Anne Tillery Renshaw, facing right with head turned toward camera forward.
Harris & Ewing, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
Miss Anna McCue
Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Head and shoulders portrait of Anna McCue, facing camera, with bar brooch.
Jacobs, Boston Blk., Seattle (Photographer)
Mrs. Annie G. Porritt
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Informal photograph of Sybil Jane Moore (right) and two unidentified younger women (left), in street clothes, at curb with automobile. Another automobile appears parked curbside behind them.
Scherer, 1207 F St, Wash., D.C. (Photographer)
Mrs. Anna Kelton Wiley
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Studio portrait of Anna Kelton Wiley, seated, in embroidered apron, with sons John Preston Wiley (1914-1998) and Harvey W. Wiley, Jr. (1912-1951), in sailor suits. Anna Kelton Wiley was married to pure food and drugs expert Dr. Harvey Washington Wiley (1844-1930). Washington College of Law dean Emma M. Gillett (b. 1852), chair of the Legal Branch of the National Woman's Party and president of the Woman's Bar Association [1921], died 23 Jan. 1927. Anna Kelton Wiley (Mrs. Harvey W. Wiley) of Washington, D.C., was a member of the NWP national advisory council. She was active in lobbying, political work, and picketing for the NWP. She was arrested Nov. 10, 1917, and sentenced to 15 days in District Jail; she appealed her case and it was later upheld by a higher court. Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1920), 370.
Underwood & Underwood, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
Annie Fraher
Title transcribed from item, with additional information derived by Library of Congress staff. Summary: Photograph of Annie Fraher, Bertha Moller, Berthe Arnold, and Anita Pollitzer standing outside the National Woman's Party headquarters with large rolled suffrage petition. Cropped version of the photograph published in The Suffragist, 6, no. 37 (Oct. 5, 1918): 7. Caption: "A Suffrage Petition from all Sections carried to the Senate by Mrs. Annie Fraher, of Boston, Mrs. Charles [Bertha] Moller of Minneapolis; Miss Bertha Arnold, of Colorado Springs; Miss Anita Pollitzer, Charleston, South Carolina."
Harris & Ewing, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
Mrs. Anna Lowenburg
Title transcribed from item, with additional information derived by Library of Congress staff. Summary: Photograph of Suzanne Morin Swing posing with banner, "Democracy Should Begin At Home." Photograph published in The Suffragist, 5, no. 74 (June 23, 1917): 4. With no caption, for story "A Frenchwoman on the Picket Line."
Harris & Ewing, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
Rev. Anna Howard Shaw
Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Informal portrait, full-length, Anna Howard Shaw, facing forward, wearing coat and fur stole, standing in front of a door, with left arm bent at elbow and right arm in motion.
Harris & Ewing, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
Dr. Anna Howard Shaw
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Photograph of NAWSA convention proceeding, with women on stage, facing a audience. Anna Howard Shaw, standing, center, speaking from notes. Women on main floor and balcony. Also on verso: Alice Paul is on stage, seated, to right in the back row.
Annie Arniel
Summary: Florence Youmans of Minnesota (left), clutching a suffrage propaganda banner, and Annie Arniel of Delaware (center), being approached in front of the White House gates by an unidentified policewoman, who appears to have seized Arniel's banner, while a third unidentified suffrage picket watches from behind her tri-color purple, white, and gold National Woman's Party flag, and a fourth picket looks away in a different direction. Title taken from the caption accompanying a cropped version of the photograph published in The Suffragist, 5, no. 76 (July 7, 1917): 6. Mrs. Annie Arniel, Wilmington, Delaware, did picket duty at the White House beginning in 1917. She was one of the first six suffrage prisoners and served eight jail sentences: three days in June 1917 and sixty days in Occoquan Workhouse in August-September 1917 for picketing; fifteen days in August 1918 for the Lafayette Square meeting; and five sentences of five days each in January and February 1919, for watchfire demonstrations. Source: Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1920), 355.
Mrs. John T. Morrison
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Half-length photo of Josephine R. Linton, facing camera, in street clothes, passing out suffrage literature (The Suffragist), in feathered hat with handbag.
Miss Jane Pincus
Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Head-and-shoulders portrait of Jane Pincus, in checked dress with lace collar and broad-brimmed dark hat. Photograph published in The Suffragist, 2, no. 39 (Sept. 26, 1914): 5. Caption: "Miss Jane Pincus, Who Left Washington Last Week to Open Campaign Headquarters in Arizona." Part of story "News from the Field" on Congressional Election Campaign page.
Edmonston, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
Mrs. John Rogers
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Open-air photograph of Elizabeth S. Rogers speaking, half-length, in profile, wearing fur coat and hat. A man in bowler hat and a woman in hat with scarf securing it to her head partially visible in lower left and lower right corners of print. Building [Corcoran Museum of Art] in background. Back of print is labeled by hand in pencil: "Mrs. John Rogers--speaking in front of old Corcoran Art Gallery" and on front in red pen "Buck 32." Rogers was the sister-in-law of Henry Lewis Stimson (1867-1950). Elizabeth S. Rogers (Mrs. John Rogers, Jr.), of New York City, was the wife of a prominent thyroid specialist and a descendent of Roger Sherman, signer of the Declaration of Independence. She was a civic reformer working to improve New York public schools and win suffrage in the state of New York before joining the national suffrage movement. She was chairman of the Advisory Council of the NWP and one of the most forceful speakers in the "Prison Special" tour of the country, during which suffragists spoke of experience in jail. She was arrested July 14, 1917 picketing the White House and was sentenced to 60 days in Occoquan Workhouse, but was pardoned by President Woodrow Wilson after three days. Source: Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1920), 367.
Buck (Photographer)
Mrs. Jane Norman Smith
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Head-and-shoulder portrait of Jane Norman Smith, facing left, wearing fur collar and brooch.
E. F. Foley (Photographer)
Mrs. John Rogers
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Photograph of Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage Advisory Council leaving the Peg Woffington Coffee House in New York City. Left to right (front row): Elizabeth Colt, Elizabeth Kent, Mrs. John Rogers, Mrs. Olive Halladay Hasbrouck, Hazel M[a]cKay[e] (far right, holds a copy of The Suffragist); (second row): Mrs. George A. Armes, Lucy Burns (center), Mrs. Oscar F. Davisson. Photograph published in The Suffragist, 3, no. 15 (Apr. 10, 1915): cover.
John Brisben Walker
Title transcribed from item. Summary: Formal portrait, head and shoulders, Iris Calderhead (daughter of former Representative Calderhead and wife of John Brisban Walker of Colorado), facing right with head turned toward camera, with braided hair, wearing v-necked blouse with decorative trim, against dark background. Similar image from same photo shoot published in The Suffragist, 5, (Feb. 24, 1917): 9 and The Suffragist, 5, no. 61 (Mar. 24, 1917): 9. Iris Calderhead (Mrs. John Brisban Walker], of Marysville, Kans., and later Denver, Colo., was a graduate of the Univ. of Kansas and student at Bryn Mawr. She abandoned school teaching to work for suffrage, and became an organizer and speaker for the NWP. She was arrested July 4, 1917, for picketing and served three days in District Jail. Source: Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1920), 369.