UNTOLD STORIES OF THE WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT
Woman's SuffrageMovement
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- Tour Summary
- Reviews
What's included
History
Learn how Nashville women including Anne Dallas Dudley marched, organized, held parades and marches which led to the passage of the 19th Amendment giving 27 million women the right to vote.
Landmarks
Tour features information on Susan B. Anthony’s 1897 visit, the national 1914 Woman’s Suffrage Convention in Nashville, famous Hermitage Hotel and how the women passed the amendment by one vote. Ewing is an expert on the 19th Amendment and has helped the Nashville Public Library Votes for Women Room and Hermitage Hotel with their displays. In 2014 he started the campaign to successfully rename the street in front of the State Capitol for Anne Dallas Dudley. David Ewing will take you through the new Votes for Women room in the Downtown Library where you can see the image of his great great grandmother’s voter registration cards who was one of the first African American women to vote. From March 2020-2021 Ewing will take you through the Tennessee State Museum special exhibit of the Suffrage movement featuring over 75 items from this personal collection.
- Tour 2 - Woman’s Suffrage Movement
Discover the untold stories of the suffragists behind the movement for women's voting rights
Learn how Nashville women including Anne Dallas Dudley marched, organized, held parades and marches which led to the passage of the 19th Amendment giving 27 million women the right to vote. Tour features information on Susan B. Anthony’s 1897 visit, the national 1914 Woman’s Suffrage Convention in Nashville, famous Hermitage Hotel and how the women passed the amendment by one vote. Ewing is an expert on the 19th Amendment and has helped the Nashville Public Library Votes for Women Room and Hermitage Hotel with their displays. In 2014 he started the campaign to successfully rename the street in front of the State Capitol for Anne Dallas Dudley. David Ewing will take you through the new Votes for Women room in the Downtown Library where you can see the image of his great great grandmother’s voter registration cards who was one of the first African American women to vote. From March 2020-2021 Ewing will take you through the Tennessee State Museum special exhibit of the Suffrage movement featuring over 75 items from this personal collection.
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