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THE HERALDS OF INTELLECTUAL WOMANHOOD. Mrs. Pankhurst and her brilliant daughter Christabel, who inaugurated the militant tactics which have in two years succeeded in making “Votes for Women" a burning question in British politics when twenty years of resolutions and petitions to Parliament had previously failed.

MISS INEX MULHOLLAND. The well-known Vassar suffragist, who has been transferring her suffrage energies to British centres. She is shown in the picture addressing a big open-air demonstration in London.

MISS ELISABETH FREEMAN. An enthusiastic American girl who is assisting the British suffragettes. She is seen selling their journal “Votes for Women" in Hyde Park.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP19101019.2.47.1

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Graphic, Volume XLV, Issue 16, 19 October 1910, Page 33

Word Count
101

THE HERALDS OF INTELLECTUAL WOMANHOOD. Mrs. Pankhurst and her brilliant daughter Christabel, who inaugurated the militant tactics which have in two years succeeded in making “Votes for Women" a burning question in British politics when twenty years of resolutions and petitions to Parliament had previously failed. MISS INEX MULHOLLAND. The well-known Vassar suffragist, who has been transferring her suffrage energies to British centres. She is shown in the picture addressing a big open-air demonstration in London. MISS ELISABETH FREEMAN. An enthusiastic American girl who is assisting the British suffragettes. She is seen selling their journal “Votes for Women" in Hyde Park. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XLV, Issue 16, 19 October 1910, Page 33

THE HERALDS OF INTELLECTUAL WOMANHOOD. Mrs. Pankhurst and her brilliant daughter Christabel, who inaugurated the militant tactics which have in two years succeeded in making “Votes for Women" a burning question in British politics when twenty years of resolutions and petitions to Parliament had previously failed. MISS INEX MULHOLLAND. The well-known Vassar suffragist, who has been transferring her suffrage energies to British centres. She is shown in the picture addressing a big open-air demonstration in London. MISS ELISABETH FREEMAN. An enthusiastic American girl who is assisting the British suffragettes. She is seen selling their journal “Votes for Women" in Hyde Park. New Zealand Graphic, Volume XLV, Issue 16, 19 October 1910, Page 33

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