List of Delaware suffragists
This is a list of Delaware suffragists, suffrage groups and others associated with the cause of women's suffrage in Delaware.
Groups
    

Delaware Equal Suffrage Association letterhead, 1916
- Arden Equal Suffrage Association, formed in 1912.[1]
 - Congressional Union (CU).[2]
 - Delaware Equal Suffrage Association (DESA), formed in 1895.[3][4]
 - Delaware Suffrage Association, formed in 1869.[2]
 - Equal Suffrage Study Club.[5]
 - New Castle Equal Suffrage Association.[6]
 - Newport Equal Suffrage Association.[6]
 - National Women's Party (NWP).[2]
 - Wilmington Equal Suffrage Club (or Association), formed in 1895.[2]
 - Wilmington Equal Suffrage Suffrage Study Club (WESSC).[7]
 - Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) of Delaware.[2]
 
Suffragists
    

Catherine Boyle c. 1910-1920
- Helen Wormley Anderson .[8]
 - Annie Arniel (Wilmington).[9]
 - Rachel Foster Avery (Wilmington).[10]
 - Anna Cootsman Bach.[8]
 - Alice Gertrude Baldwin (Wilmington).[2]
 - Ida Perkins Ball.[8]
 - Mary Richardson Bancroft.[8]
 - Naomi Barrett (Wilmington).[9]
 - Catherine Boyle (New Castle).[9]
 - Mary Clare Brassington.[2]
 - Mary E. Brown (Wilmington).[11]
 - Eleanor Morris Burnet.[8]
 - Emma Jester Burnett.[8]
 - Mary Ann Shadd Cary (Wilmington).[9]
 - Martha Churchman Cranston.[2]
 - Mary R. De Vou (Wilmington).[12]
 - Mabel F. Donahoe.[8]
 - Bessie Spence Dorrell.[5]
 - Agnes Y. Downey (Wilmington).[13]
 - Rose Lippincott Hizar Duggin.[8]
 - Josephine Anderson du Pont.[8]
 - Mary Seward Pillips Eskridge.[8]
 - Sallie Topkis Ginns (Wilmington).[8]
 - Susie Estella Palmer Hamilton.[8]
 - Rosewell Hammond.[8]
 - Florence Hilles (New Castle).[9]
 - Robert G. Houston (Georgetown).[14]
 - Margaret W. Houston.[3]
 - Caroline Taylor Hughes.[8]
 - Ella W. Johnson.[8]
 - Etta Gray Jones (Bridgeville).[15]
 - Margaret Harrigon Kent.[8]
 - Marie T. Lockwood (Middletown).[16]
 - Emma Maria Lore (Wilmington).[17]
 - Annie J. Magee (Wilmington).[18]
 - Mary H. Askew Mather.[8]
 - Mary E. Marchand Milligan.[8]
 - Winifred Morris.[8]
 - Anna Fisher Morse.[8]
 - Alice Dunbar Nelson (Wilmington).[5]
 - Nellie B. Nicholson (Wilmington).[19]
 - Gertrude Fulton Nields.[8]
 - Mary Ospina (Wilmington).[2][20]
 - Jane White Pennewill.[8]
 - Mary Price Phillips.[8]
 - Adelina Piunti (New Castle).[21]
 - Mabel Lloyd Ridgely (Dover).[2]
 - Eva Halpern Robin.[2]
 - Elizabeth G. Robinson.[3]
 - Willabelle Shurter.[8]
 - Frank Stephens (Arden).[22]
 - Mary Ann Sorden Stuart (Greenwood).[2]
 - Blanche Williams Stubbs (Wilmington).[5]
 - Emma Gibson Sykes (Wilmington).[5]
 - Mabel Vernon (Wilmington).[9]
 - Elizabeth Walling.[3]
 - Emalea Pusey Warner.[2]
 - Sadie Monroe Waters (Greenwood).[23]
 - Anna Beauchamp Reynolds Wedler.[8]
 - Caroline B. Williams (Wilmington).[19]
 - Mary J. Johnson Woodlen (Wilmington).[2]
 - Emma Worrell.[2]
 
Politicians in support of women's suffrage
    
Places
    
- Hotel DuPont (Wilmington).[13]
 - New Castle County Courthouse (New Castle).[25]
 
Suffragists who campaigned in Delaware
    
- Lida Stokes Adams.[22]
 - Lucy E. Anthony.[26]
 - Susan B. Anthony.[2]
 - Mary C. C. Bradford.[3]
 - Carrie Chapman Catt.[9]
 - Mary Ware Dennett.[1]
 - Susan S. Fessenden.[26]
 - Helen Hoy Greeley.[27]
 - Laura A. Gregg.[3]
 - Beatrice Forbes Robertson Hale.[6]
 - Florence Jaffray Harriman.[6]
 - Mary Garrett Hay.[10]
 - Elsie Hill.[2]
 - Diana Hirschler.[3]
 - Anna Maxwell Jones.[27]
 - Rosalie Jones.[1]
 - Belva Lockwood.[2]
 - Maria McMahon.[24]
 - Harriet May Mills.[6]
 - Henrietta G. Moore.[10]
 - Emmeline Pankhurst.[2]
 - Maud Wood Park.[6]
 - Jeannette Rankin.[2]
 - Anna Howard Shaw.[3]
 - Elizabeth Cady Stanton.[2]
 - Mary Church Terrell.[2]
 - Lola Trax.[13]
 - Harriet Taylor Upton.[1]
 - Narcissa Cox Vanderlip.[6]
 - Mary Heald Way.[3]
 - Mary Winsor.[26]
 
Anti-suffragists
    
Groups
- Delaware Association Opposed to Woman Suffrage (DAOWS), formed in 1914.[2][28]
 
People
- Elizabeth du Pont Bayard.[28]
 - Amy du Pont.[28]
 - Emily Bissell (Wilmington).[2]
 - May du Pont Saulsbury.[28]
 - Mary Wilson Thompson (Greenville).[2][28]
 
Politicians
- Henry P. Scott.[19]
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- Harper 1922, p. 89.
 - Boylan, Anne M. (Summer 2019). "Delaware Women's Suffrage Timeline" (PDF). Delaware Historical Society. League of Women Voters. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
 - Anthony 1902, p. 564.
 - Hoffecker 1983, p. 150.
 - Stopyra, Diane (17 August 2020). "African American suffragists". UDaily. Retrieved 2020-11-18.
 - Harper 1922, p. 86.
 - "Delaware and the 19th Amendment". U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved 2020-11-20.
 - Boylan, Anne M. (September 2019). "Delaware Suffrage Leaders" (PDF). Women's Vote Delaware. Retrieved 24 November 2020.
 - "Suffragists in Delaware". Turning Point Suffragist Memorial. Retrieved 2020-11-18.
 - Anthony 1902, p. 563.
 - Cantoran-Torres, Veronica; Miles, Cameron. "Biographical Sketch of Mary E. Brown". Biographical Database of Militant Woman Suffragists, 1913-1920 – via Alexander Street.
 - Boylan 2020, p. 22.
 - Harper 1922, p. 91.
 - Harper 1922, p. 98-99.
 - Bramhall, Sue (17 March 2020). "Local suffragists deserve recognition and thanks". Cape Gazette. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
 - "The Suffrage Shebang: Middletown and Women's Suffrage -". Middletown, Delaware History. Retrieved 2020-11-24.
 - Turrell, Kate. "Biographical Sketch of Emma Maria Lore". Biographical Database of NAWSA Suffragists, 1890-1920 – via Alexander Street.
 - DiMarco, Gabriella; Shields, Maeve. "Biographical Sketch of Annie J. Magee [or McGee]". Biographical Database of Militant Woman Suffragists, 1913-1920 – via Alexander Street.
 - Englehart, Lora Bilton (2020-07-24). "We Look Back at Delaware's Integral Role in the Fight for Women's Voting Rights". Delaware Today. Retrieved 2020-11-22.
 - Boylan, Anne M. "Biographical Sketch of Mary A. Ospina". Biographical Database of NAWSA Suffragists, 1890-1920 – via Alexander Street.
 - Hall, Colleen. "Biographical Sketch of Adelina Piunti (DiSabatino)". Biographical Database of Militant Woman Suffragists, 1913-1920 – via Alexander Street.
 - Harper 1922, p. 88.
 - Boylan, Anne M. (20 October 2020). "Bridgeville's Sadie Waters and the 19th Amendment". Cape Gazette. Retrieved 2020-11-19.
 - Harper 1922, p. 92.
 - Hoffecker 1983, p. 155.
 - Harper 1922, p. 87.
 - Harper 1922, p. 90.
 - "The Anti-suffragists". Votes for Delaware Women. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
 
Sources
    
- Anthony, Susan B. (1902). Anthony, Susan B.; Harper, Ida Husted (eds.). The History of Woman Suffrage. Vol. 4. Indianapolis: The Hollenbeck Press.
 - Boylan, Anne M. (2020). "Delaware Suffragist Biographies" (PDF). Women's Vote.
 - Harper, Ida Husted (1922). The History of Woman Suffrage. New York: J.J. Little & Ives Company.
 - Hoffecker, Carol E. (Spring 1983). "Delaware's Woman Suffrage Campaign" (PDF). Delaware History. 20 (3): 149–167.
 
External links
    
    
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