Letter from Mrs. John M. Kenny (Catherine?), Press Correspondent, Nashville Equal Suffrage League, Nashville, Tenn., to Mrs. Crozier French, Knoxville. May 28, 1915. Page 2 of 4. Re: Mrs. French's resignation as president .
Letter from Mrs. John M. Kenny (Catherine?), Press Correspondent, Nashville Equal Suffrage League, Nashville, Tenn., to Mrs. Crozier French, Knoxville. May 28, 1915. Page 3 of 4. Re: Mrs. French's resignation as president .
Letter from Mrs. John M. Kenny (Catherine?), Press Correspondent, Nashville Equal Suffrage League, Nashville, Tenn., to Mrs. Crozier French, Knoxville. May 28, 1915. Page 4 of 4. Re: Mrs. French's resignation as president .
Letter from William C. Houston, U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Territories, Washington, D.C., to Mrs. Crozier French, Knoxville, Tenn. January 5, 1915. Page 1 of 2. Re: his position on suffrage.
Letter from William C. Houston, U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Territories, Washington, D.C., to Mrs. Crozier French, Knoxville, Tenn. January 5, 1915. Page 1 of 2. Re: his position on suffrage.
Letter from Mary A. Smith, Office Secretary, Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association, Hartford, CT, to Mrs. Crozier French, Knoxville, Tenn. January 8, 1914. 1 page. Re: payment for Pankhurst's "Plain Facts About A Great Evil."
Great Liberty Parade on Gay Street, Knoxville, TN. 6,000 march in line forty city blocks long with crowd of 25,000. Largest parade staged in Knoxville with 150 banners and floats. Marking the anniversary of the entry into the War (World War One,...
Baptist churches; Religious groups; Group portraits; Women;
Bell Avenue Baptist Church, "Amoma Blameless Life" women's group, posing in front of the old, pre-fire (1912) church. Mrs. Nannie J. Wilds identified on back as teacher, Rev. J.H. Sharp (not shown) as pastor (Sept. 3, 1905-April 1912). Knoxville,...