Lizzie Crozier French Scrapbook, p. 07 h. Newspaper clipping: 'Mrs. L. Crozier French Edits Paper.' Mrs. French has
begun the publication of a monthly journal, "The People," a journal of inquiry, protest and an exponent of the people.
Lizzie Crozier French Scrapbook, p. 14 b. Newspaper clipping: With 71 Candles On Birthday Cake Mrs. L. Crozier French Reminiscences On The Past. Knoxville Sentinel. May 28, 1922.
Lizzie Crozier French Scrapbook, p. 14 d. Newspaper clipping: Mrs. L.C. French Dies In Washington, D.C. Prominent Club Woman And Civic Worker Succumbs Following Heart Attack. By Russell Kent, Journal Washington Bureau. May 14, [1926].
Lizzie Crozier French Scrapbook, p. 14 f. Newspaper clipping: Funeral For Mrs. L. French. Service For Nationally Known Woman, Native of Knoxville, to Be Held Monday. Knoxville Sentinel. May 16, 1926.
Lizzie Crozier French Scrapbook, p. 26 a. Newspaper clipping: Mrs. L. Crozier French's Views on Equal Suffrage. Local Suffragist Is Interviewed in Birmingham and Expresses Herself Freely on the National and State Phases of the Issue. Interview by...
Lizzie Crozier French Scrapbook, p. 28 a. Newspaper clipping: Mrs. French, President of the Tennessee Equal Suffrage Association Talks of Conditions In That State. August 18, 1914. By Dolly Dalrymple. Includes photograph of Mrs. L. Crozier French.
Promotional materials; Business people; Portraits; Biographies;
Men of Affairs in Knoxville, 1921. Issued by Journal and Tribune Publishing Co. Knoxville, Tenn. 1921. Russell W. Hanlon, Editor and Publisher. W.L. Warters Co., Printers.
Men of Affairs in Knoxville. Published by Joe L. Baker and Stuart Towe. Knoxville, Tenn. 1917. Printed and Bound by Knoxville Lithographing Company, Knoxville, Tennessee.
The scrapbook includes newspaper clippings and ephemera concerning women's groups involved in the fight for suffrage at the Knoxville and state levels, as well as other women's issues such as temperance. Each of the fragile items in this scrapbook...