スミソニアン博物館のインスタグラム(smithsonian) - 3月11日 06時08分
Lucille Calmes received this Jailed for Freedom pin after she was arrested and sentenced to five days in jail for protesting outside the White House for the right to vote in 1919. ➡️ Fifty years later, Shirley Aidekman designed a modern copy as a pendant.
Some suffrage leaders would have been appalled, but the story of the White House pickets struck a chord with the new generation of activists. Attendees of the National Women’s Conference in 1977 could buy reproductions of the “Jailed for Freedom” prison door pins awarded to women imprisoned for participating in suffrage demonstrations from 1917 to 1919.
Both are on view in our @国立アメリカ歴史博物館's new exhibition "Creating Icons: How We Remember Woman Suffrage," which shares stories of women fighting for the vote—famous names and those often missing from the narrative—and the many women who the 19th Amendment left out. Tap our Instagram Story to see some of the lesser-known women who fought for the right to vote. #BecauseOfHerStory #WomensHistoryMonth
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