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Miss Sybil Jane Moore
Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Half length portrait of Mrs. Otis Floyd Lamson, turned right, facing camera, off-the-shoulder dress. Cropped version of the photograph published in The Suffragist, 4, no. 37 (Sept. 9, 1916): 9. Caption: "Mrs. Otis Floyd Lamson, Washington Chairman of the National Woman's Party." Illustration for story "Party in the Suffrage States."
Harris & Ewing, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
Mrs. Agnes H. Morey
Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Half length portrait of Edna S. Latimer, facing camera, in hat, with brooch.
Jeanne E. Bennett, 5 E. Hamilton St., Baltimore, Md. (Photographer)
Katherine Morey
Title derived by Library of Congress staff. Summary: Photograph of National Woman's Party members demonstrating, with banners, in front of the Lafayette Statue. Jessie Benton MacKaye speaking (second from left, no banner, wearing sash). Cropped version of the photograph published in The Suffragist, 6, no. 36 (Sept. 28, 1918): 6. Participating in the pageant were Lucy G. Branham, Julia Emory, Bertha Arnold, Katherine Morey, Elizabeth Kalb, and Jessie Benton MacKaye.
Harris & Ewing (Photographer)
Miss Katharine Morey
Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Formal portrait, head and chest, Katherine Morey, facing left with head turned toward camera, wearing wide-brimmed hat. Photograph published in The Suffragist, 4, no. 40 (Sept. 30, 1916): 8, and The Suffragist, 4, no. 47 (Nov. 18, 1916): 8. Katharine A. Morey of Brookline, Mass., was an officer of the Massachusetts State Branch of the NWP. She was the daughter of NWP organizer and state suffrage activist Agnes H. Morey. Katharine Morey worked as an organizer in the election campaign of 1916 in Kansas and frequently assisted at NWP national headquarters in Washington, D.C. She was one in the first group of pickets arrested in picketing at the White House, and she served three days in June 1917. In February 1919 she was arrested again in Boston demonstration against President Woodrow Wilson and was sentenced to eight days in the Charles St. Jail. Source: Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1920), 365.
Harris & Ewing, Washington, D.C. (Photographer)
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