This awesome post has been circulating all over the place. Many LWVWV members have received it a few times by email, but I am not sure where it originated from. I am linking the images for this post from Deborah Tutnauer’s Blog.
This is the story of our Mothers and Grandmothers who lived only 90 years ago.

Remember, it was not until 1920 that women were granted the right to go to the polls and vote.

The women were innocent and defenseless, but they were jailed nonetheless for picketing the White House, carrying signs asking for the vote.

And by the end of the night, they were barely alive. Forty prison guards wielding clubs and their warden’s blessing went on a rampage against the 33 women wrongly convicted of ‘obstructing sidewalk traffic’.
They beat Lucy Burns, chained her hands to the cell bars above her head and left her hanging for the night, bleeding and gasping for air.

(Dora Lewis)
They hurled Dora Lewis into a dark cell, smashed her head  against an  iron bed and knocked her out cold. Her cellmate, Alice  Cosu, thought  Lewis was dead and suffered a heart  attack. Additional affidavits describe the guards grabbing,  dragging, beating, choking, slamming, pinching, twisting and kicking the  women.
Thus unfolded the ‘Night of Terror’ on Nov. 15, 1917, when the warden at the Occoquan Workhouse in Virginia ordered his guards to teach a lesson to the suffragists imprisoned there because they dared to picket Woodrow Wilson’s White House for the right to vote. For weeks, the women’s only water came from an open pail.
Their food–all of it colorless slop–was infested  with terrible vermin.

(Alice Paul)
When one of the leaders, Alice Paul, embarked on a hunger  strike, they  tied her to a chair, forced a tube down her throat and poured  liquid  into her until she vomited. She was tortured like this for  weeks until  word was smuggled out to the press.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/suffrage/nwp/prisoners.pdf
So, refresh my memory. Some women won’t vote this year because — -why, exactly? We have carpool duties? We have to get to work? Ourvote doesn’t matter? It’s raining?

(Mrs. Pauline Adams in the prison garb she wore while serving a sixty-day sentence.)
Last week, a friend of mine went to a sparsely attended screening of HBO’s new movie ‘Iron Jawed Angels.’ It is a graphic depiction of the battle these women waged so that I could pull the curtain at the polling booth and have my say. I am ashamed to say I needed the reminder.

(Miss Edith Ainge, of Jamestown, New York)
‘One thought kept coming back to my friend as she watched that movie,’ she said. ‘What would those women think of the way I use, or don’t use, my right to vote? All of us take it for granted now, not just younger women, but those of us who did seek to learn.’ The right to vote, she said, had become valuable to her ‘all over again.’
HBO released the movie on video and DVD . I wish all history, social studies and government teachers would include the movie in their curriculum. I want it shown on Bunco night, too, and anywhere else women gather. I realize this isn’t our usual idea of socializing, but we are not voting in the numbers that we should be, and I think a little shock therapy is in order.

(Conferring over  ratification [of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution] at [National  Woman’s Party]
headquarters, Jackson Pl[ace] [Washington, D.C.].  L-R Mrs. Lawrence  Lewis, Mrs. Abby Scott Baker, Anita Pollitzer, Alice  Paul, Florence  Boeckel, Mabel Vernon (standing, right))
It is jarring  to watch Woodrow Wilson  and his cronies try to persuade a psychiatrist to  declare Alice Paul  insane so that she could be  permanently institutionalized. And it is inspiring to  watch the doctor refuse.  Alice Paul was strong, he said, and brave. That  didn’t make her crazy.  The doctor admonished the men: ‘Courage in women is  often mistaken for  insanity.’

(Helena Hill Weed, Norwalk, Conn. Serving 3 day sentence in D.C. prison for carrying banner, ‘Governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.’)
