Florence Brooks Whitehouse was a novelist, painter, vocalist, and mother of three sons when she first joined the suffrage movement in 1914. This talk explores Florence’s life up to 1914 and her leadership in moving suffrage forward in Maine, joining forces with national leader Alice Paul in a desperate, last-ditch effort to ensure that the Maine legislature ratified the 19th Amendment that would give women voting rights. Slides of historic photos accompany this lively talk, which lasts about 45 minutes. The speaker, Anne B. Gass, is Whitehouse's great-granddaughter.
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Earlier Event: April 27
Voting Down the Rose: Florence Brooks Whitehouse and Maine's Fight for Woman Suffrage
Later Event: May 14
Bicentennial Virtual Lecture on Maine's Fight for Woman Suffrage with Anne Gass