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| View Record | Name | Notes | Author | View Images |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Mrs. Charles de Loosey Oelrichs | Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Oval portrait of Mrs. Charles Deloosey Oelrichs [and daughter?] in formal gowns. | Edmonston, Washington, D.C. (Photographer) | ||
Amalia E Mallen de Ostalaza | Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Head-and-shoulders portrait of Amalia E. de Ostalaza, wearing lace mantilla and necklace. | |||
Madame J. C. De Veyra | Title and information transcribed from item. Summary: Head-and-shoulders portrait of Madame J. C. DeVeyra, wearing fur hat and fur coat. Explanatory (typed) caption included with image, headlined: "WORLD PROMINENT WOMEN TO FIGURE IN WOMAN'S CONVENTION" with following text: "As this may be the last of the annual meetings of the Woman's Party, February 15-19, the convention will take the form of a grand reunion of all women who have been interested in the struggle for the vote for women since its infancy. Besides women of national importance including Mrs. Warren G. Harding, a group of prominent foreign women will be in Washington for the presentation of a suffrage memorial statue to the Capitol and the subsequent meetings of the convention." | Underwood & Underwood, Washington, D.C. (Photographer) | ||
Dr. Cornelia De Bey | Summary: Formal portrait of Chicago physician Cornelia De Bey, seated with right arm resting on back of chair propping up head, wearing skirt, jacket, tie, and eye glasses. Title and name of photo bureau transcribed from item. This photograph was likely distributed in connection with the June 5, 6, and 7, 1916, convention of women voters organized by the Congressional Union at Chicago's Blackstone Theatre for the purposes of forming a National Woman's Party, the goal of which was to remain independent of the existing political parties and campaign on a platform consisting of one plank, immediate passage of the Anthony amendment. The 1916 Woman's Party Convention received significant press coverage since it was intentionally scheduled a few days before the start of the Republican and Progressive Party conventions for which the press had begun to arrive in Chicago. | Chicago Tribune Photo Bureau (Photographer) |
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