Walker County Messenger

‘Votes for Women’ exhibit comes to 6th Cavalry Museum

Celebrate the centennial of women’s suffrage in the U.S. with ‘Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistenc­e!’ starting Aug. 18.

- From 6th Cavalry Museum

The 6th Cavalry Museum in Fort Oglethorpe is excited to announce a new exhibit coming to the museum and opening on Aug. 18, the centennial of the ratificati­on of the 19th Amendment.

The story of women’s suffrage is a story of voting rights, of inclusion in and exclusion from the franchise, and of our civic developmen­t as a nation. “Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistenc­e,” a poster exhibition from the Smithsonia­n, celebrates the 100th anniversar­y of the 19th Amendment and explores the complexity of the women’s suffrage movement and the relevance of this history to Americans’ lives today.

The crusade for women’s suffrage is one of the longest reform movements in American history. Between 1832 and 1920, women citizens organized for the right to vote, agitating first in their states or territorie­s and then, simultaneo­usly, through petitionin­g for a federal amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on.

Based on the National Portrait Gallery exhibition of the same name, Votes for Women seeks to expand visitors’ understand­ing of the suffrage movement in the United States. The poster exhibition addresses women’s political activism, explores the racism that challenged universal suffrage, and documents the ratificati­on of the Nineteenth Amendment which prohibits the government from denying U.S. citizens the right to vote on the basis of sex. It also touches upon the suffrage movement’s relevance to current conversati­ons on voting and voting rights across America.

Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistenc­e is organized by the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n Traveling Exhibition Service in collaborat­ion with the National Portrait Gallery. This project received sup

port from the Smithsonia­n American Women’s History Initiative.

The Smithsonia­n American Women’s History Initiative, Because of Her Story is one of the country’s most ambitious undertakin­gs to research, collect,

document display and share the compelling story of women. It will deepen our understand­ing of women’s contributi­ons to the nation and the world. More informatio­n about the initiative is available at womenshist­ory.si.edu.

 ?? Gelatin silver print Courtesy of National Woman’s Party, Washington, D.C. ?? In the first such protest in history, women picket the White House every day from January 1917 until the 19th Amendment was ratified in August 1920. On this day, college-educated women worked the picket line.
Gelatin silver print Courtesy of National Woman’s Party, Washington, D.C. In the first such protest in history, women picket the White House every day from January 1917 until the 19th Amendment was ratified in August 1920. On this day, college-educated women worked the picket line.

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