Cover
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Contents
Introduction: A Lost Opportunity
Chapter 1: City Hall—DId She or Didn't She? 500 West Markham Street
Chapter 2: Liberty Hall—Dr. Anna Howard Shaw Speaks, Spring and Second Streets (southwest corner)
Chapter 3: Suffragists Meet—but Where? West Markham Street (1889)
Chapter 4: Equal Suffrage State Central Committee Offices 1917, 221 West Second Street
Chapter 5: The Old State House, 300 West Markham Street
Chapter 6: Capital Theater—Susan B. Anthony Speaks, 200 Block, West Markham Street (south side)
Chapter 7: Marion Hotel, 200 Block, West Markham Street (north side)
Chapter 8: The Suffragists "At Home" at the Capital Hotel, 113–123 West Markham Street
Chapter 9: The Woman's Chronicle, 122 West Second Street
Chapter 10: Old City Hall, 120–122 West Markham Street
Chapter 11: Woman's Christian Temperance Union, 106 East Markham Street
Chapter 12: Votes for Women at the Board of Trade, Second and Scott Streets
Chapter 13: Kempner Theatre—Carrie Chapman Catt Speaks in 1916, 500 Block, South Louisiana Street (1916)
Chapter 14: Carnegie Library, Seventh and South Louisiana Streets (1911–1963)
Chapter 15: The National Woman's Party at Royal Arcanum Hall, 105 West Eighth Street
Chapter 16: Mary W. Loughborough and the Arkansas Ladies' Journal, 723 South Main Street
Chapter 17: YMCA—Carrie Chapman Catt in 1900, 717–719 South Main Street (1900)
Chapter 18: Suffrage Organization 1.0—An 1888 Arkansas Mystery, Turner Studio, 814 Main Street
Chapter 19: The Radical Suffragists and Adolphine Fletcher Terry's Home, 411 East Seventh Street
Chapter 20: Where Women Marched—Parades, Meetings, and Other Activities
Chapter 21: The McDiarmid House, 1424 Center Street
Chapter 22: Suffrage Organization 2.0—Lulu Markwell's Home, 1911, 1422 Rock Street
Chapter 23: The New State Capitol
Chapter 24: Memorials to the Suffragists
Endnotes
Appendix I
Appendix II
Acknowledgements and Call to Action
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
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