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Stonehurst, the Robert Treat Paine Estate

Home
Visit
House & Grounds
Woodland Trails
Western Greenway
For Kids and Families
Waltham Public Library at Stonehurst
Directions
Rent
Events/Programs
The Story
Family Home
Robert Treat Paine
American Masterwork
Henry Hobson Richardson
Frederick Law Olmsted
Craftsmen
Open-Air Therapy
Worker Advocates
Associated Sites
Partners in Protest Pop-Up Exhibit
The Site
Virtual Walk with Olmsted
Virtual Visit
Structures Lost and Found
Woodland plants
Reports and Resources
Photo Gallery
Restoration Projects
Collections
Furnishings
Architectural Drawing Gallery
Education
Anxious to Vote, 8th-grade civics program
School Field Trips
Waltham 3rd-grade Program
3rd-grade Remote Learning
Children's booklet
Clues to Growing Up at Stonehurst
Tour with Great Grandchildren
On the Grounds with Kids
Nature Prints
News
Support/Friends
About the Friends
Advocacy
Shop
Donate
Join
Stay Informed
Laws prevented women from holding important government positions.

Laws prevented women from holding important government positions.

A local law in Waltham, Mass., stated that “the Inspector of Buildings and his assistants shall be competent men.”
The Boston Globe, Jan 7, 1913, p. 1.

Year after year, Waltham lawyer Amy Acton and others tirelessly presented bill after bill to the Massachusetts state legislature.

Year after year, Waltham lawyer Amy Acton and others tirelessly presented bill after bill to the Massachusetts state legislature.

“Legislators listen to voters. Women must become voters.” Leaflet drafted by Florence Luscomb, ca. 1912. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.

Generations of women worked to secure the right to vote in state elections and learned to show their progress through persuasive maps.

Generations of women worked to secure the right to vote in state elections and learned to show their progress through persuasive maps.

Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College

Work at the state level paid off when it came time for the men in the U.S. House and Senate to ratify the constitutional amendment.

Work at the state level paid off when it came time for the men in the U.S. House and Senate to ratify the constitutional amendment.

Here, Florence Luscomb paints in Tennessee, the 36th and final state needed to pass the 19th Amendment. Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.

In 1919, Massachusetts and 35 others ratified the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution thanks to a dramatic change in strategy.

In 1919, Massachusetts and 35 others ratified the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution thanks to a dramatic change in strategy.

Just a few years earlier, suffragists switched from the slow strategy of changing voting laws in every state to focus instead on changing federal law.
Courtesy of the Massachusetts Archives.

1920—the year women won the vote—marks a major milestone in American democracy. But there is a long, long road ahead.

1920—the year women won the vote—marks a major milestone in American democracy. But there is a long, long road ahead.

1920

  Library of Congress

Library of Congress

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Laws prevented women from holding important government positions.
Year after year, Waltham lawyer Amy Acton and others tirelessly presented bill after bill to the Massachusetts state legislature.
Generations of women worked to secure the right to vote in state elections and learned to show their progress through persuasive maps.
Work at the state level paid off when it came time for the men in the U.S. House and Senate to ratify the constitutional amendment.
In 1919, Massachusetts and 35 others ratified the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution thanks to a dramatic change in strategy.
1920—the year women won the vote—marks a major milestone in American democracy. But there is a long, long road ahead.
  Library of Congress
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Stonehurst, 100 Robert Treat Paine Drive, Waltham, MA, 02452781 314-3290

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