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Lucy Burns

Lucy Burns (July 28, 1879 – December 22, 1966) was an American suffragist and women's rights advocate.[1] She was a passionate activist in the United States and the United Kingdom, who joined the militant suffragettes. Burns was a close friend of Alice Paul, and together they ultimately formed the National Woman's Party.[2]

Lucy Burns
Burns in 1913
Born(1879-07-28)July 28, 1879
DiedDecember 22, 1966(1966-12-22) (aged 87)
Brooklyn, New York City, U.S.
EducationPacker Collegiate Institute
Alma mater
Occupation(s)Suffragist, women's rights activist
Known forCo-founding the National Woman's Party with Alice Paul

Early life and education

Burns was born in New York to an Irish Catholic family.[3] She was described by fellow National Woman's Party member Inez Haynes Irwin as "a woman of twofold ability. She speaks and writes with equal eloquence and elegance. [...] Mentally and emotionally, she is quick and warm. [...] She has intellectuality of a high order; but she overruns with a winning Irishness which supplements that intellectuality with grace and charm; a social mobility of extreme sensitiveness and swiftness."[4]

She was a gifted student and first attended Packer Collegiate Institute, or what was originally known as the Brooklyn Female Academy, for second preparatory school in 1890.[5] Packer Collegiate Institute prided itself on "teaching girls to be ladies", and they emphasized religious education while advocating more liberal ideals such as educating "the mind to habits of thinking with clearness and force."[5]

Burns also met one of her lifelong role models, Laura Wylie, while attending Packer Collegiate Institute. Wylie was one of the first women to go to Yale University Graduate School.[5] Burns also attended Columbia University, Vassar College, and Yale University before becoming an English teacher.[6]

Burns taught at Erasmus High School in Brooklyn for two years. While Burns enjoyed the educational field, she generally found the experience to be frustrating and wanted to continue her own studies.[7] In 1906, at age twenty-seven, she moved to Germany to resume her studies in language.[8]

In Germany, Burns studied at the Universities of Bonn and Berlin from 1906 to 1909.[3] Burns later moved to the United Kingdom, where she enrolled at Oxford University to study English. Burns was fortunate enough to have a very extensive educational background as her father, Edwards Burns, supported her and financed her international education.[7]

Early on activism

Burns's first major experiences with activism were with the Pankhursts in the United Kingdom from 1909 to 1912.[9] While attending graduate school in Germany, Lucy Burns traveled to England where she met Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters, Christabel and Sylvia.[10] She was so inspired by their activism and charisma that she dropped her graduate studies to stay with them and work in the Women's Social and Political Union, an organization dedicated to fighting for women's rights in the United Kingdom.[11] She started selling their newsletter Votes for Women, and joined a protest on June 29, 1909, where she was arrested.[12]

Burns was later employed by the Women's Social and Political Union as a salaried organizer from 1910 to 1912.[9] While working with the Pankhursts in the United Kingdom, Lucy Burns became increasingly passionate about activism and participated in numerous campaigns with the WSPU. She amazed a young Grace Roe, for coming from America to support the movement,[13] even saying she had come to London to be arrested and that it "was a very grave honour."[12] One of her first major contributions was organizing a parade in Edinburgh as part of the campaign in Scotland in 1909.[9] She was the WSPU Edinburgh organiser for two years.[12]

Burns was an active supporter of the campaign to boycott the 1911 census; she invited suffragettes from residents and non-residents of Edinburgh to a large gathering in the city's Vegetaria Cafe on the night of the census, so that they could not be officially registered.[14][15]

Prison in Britain

 
Suffragette being force fed in prison

Burns was with Jennie Baines, Mary Leigh, Alice Paul, Emily Davison and Mabel Capper trying to stop a Limehouse meeting on the Budget by Lloyd George. In a fracas with a senior police officer led to Burns being described by the magistrate as "setting an extremely bad example" and getting a harsher sentence.[12] While Burns is not a widely known speaker from the woman's rights movement, she did make a variety of speeches in marketplaces and on street corners while in Europe.[9] Her activism resulted in numerous court appearances and reports of "disorderly conduct" in the newspapers.[9] In August 1909, she hid with Adela Pankhurst, Alice Paul and Margaret Smith [12] on the roof of the St Andrew's Hall in Glasgow she planned to break through the roof and disrupt a political speech by the Earl of Crewe in front of an all-male audience.[16] Burns was again with Alice Paul and Edith New and other suffragettes in Dundee trying to enter a political meeting of Herbert Samuel, MP, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, unable to gain access Burns then broke police station windows and got a ten-day sentence, where she and others went on hunger strike, damaged the cells and refused to do prison work.[12] Burns and Paul were involved in a stunt at the London Lord Mayor's Ball, mingling with guests then approaching Winston Churchill with a hidden banner shouting "How can you dine here while women are starving in prison?" Again this resulted in prison, self-starving and force feeding.[12]

Burns had been given a Hunger Strike Medal 'for Valour' by WSPU.

Relationship with Alice Paul

While working with the WSPU, Burns first met Alice Paul at a London police station.[1] Both women had been arrested for demonstrating, and Paul introduced herself when she noticed that Burns was wearing an American flag pin on her lapel.[17] The women discussed their suffrage experiences in the United Kingdom and the American women's movement.[18]

Burns and Paul bonded over their frustration with what they considered the inactivity and ineffective leadership of the American suffrage movement by Anna Howard Shaw.[1] Their similar passions and fearlessness in the face of opposition made them quickly become good friends.[18] Both women were passionate about activism, and the feminist struggle for equality in the UK inspired Burns and Paul to continue the fight in the United States in 1912.[1]

Suffrage historian Eleanor Clift compares the partnership of Paul and Burns to that of Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.[19] She notes that they "were opposites in appearance and temperament... [w]hereas Paul appeared fragile, Burns was tall and curvaceous, the picture of vigorous health...unlike Paul, who was uncompromising and hard to get along with, Burns was pliable and willing to negotiate. Paul was the militant; Burns, the diplomat."[20]

Despite their stark differences, Paul and Burns worked together so effectively that followers would often describe them as having "one mind and spirit.".[21] However Paul described Burns as "always more valiant than I was, about a thousand times more valiant by nature."[12]

National American Women Suffrage Association

Upon returning to the United States, Paul and Burns joined the National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA) as leaders of its Congressional Committee.[22] Both women felt it was critical to hold the political party in power responsible for a federal suffrage amendment.[22] By holding an entire party accountable, Paul and Burns believed that congressmen would be forced to take action or risk losing their seats.[22] This militant tactic was presented by Paul and Burns at the 1912 NAWSA convention in Philadelphia to Anna Howard Shaw and other NAWSA leaders.[22] NAWSA leaders rejected their proposal because they felt any action against the Democratic Party, which had just won the presidential election, was premature at that point.[22] Not willing to back down without a fight, Burns and Paul enlisted the help of Jane Addams, a well-respected and more unorthodox NAWSA leader, to petition their cause to her fellow NAWSA leaders.[22] While the women were forced to tone down their proposal NAWSA leaders did authorize a suffrage parade, which Burns, Paul, and other activists organized as the Woman Suffrage Procession of 1913, occurring the day before Woodrow Wilson's first inauguration.[22] NAWSA's one stipulation was that Paul and Burns' Congressional Committee would receive no further funding from NAWSA.[23] While Burns and Paul readily agreed to this stipulation, this event marked the beginning of their divide with NAWSA.[23]

Congressional Union

Because of the arguments over tactics and funding, Burns and Paul felt it would be best if they added to NAWSA's Congressional Committee and formed a group still associated with NAWSA, but one with its own governing body. This new committee was called the Congressional Union of the National American Women Suffrage Association.[24] Burns was elected unanimously as an executive member of the Congressional Union of the National American Women Suffrage Association.[25] In April 1913, NAWSA decided they wanted to distance themselves from the more radical group and no longer allowed their name to be used in the title, so the Congressional Union of the National American Women Suffrage Association was renamed just the Congressional Union.[24] Despite this, Burns and Paul still wanted the Congressional Union to be associated with NAWSA, so they applied for it to be considered a NAWSA auxiliary.[26] The Congressional Union was granted auxiliary membership, but the relationship remained tenuous.[27]

Adding to the growing tensions between the Congressional Union and NAWSA, Burns made a radical proposal once again at the 1913 NAWSA convention in Washington, D.C. Because Democrats controlled the White House and both houses of Congress at the time, Burns wanted to give them an ultimatum—support our bill for suffrage or we will make sure you don't get reelected.[28] Burns stated "Inaction establishes just as clear a record as does a policy of open hostility."[28] She was no longer going to stand for the apathy from the Democratic Party. Burns was particularly infuriated with President Wilson because he had told them he would support the Committee on Suffrage, but then never mentioned his promise in his address to Congress.[28] When a delegation of women from NAWSA tried to meet with him to address this incident and register their protest, Wilson claimed to be ill.[29] A few days later, Wilson reneged his vow to support suffrage and said he would not impose his private views on Congress.[29]

NAWSA felt they could no longer tolerate the radical tactics employed and advocated by the Congressional Union, and they wanted to officially sever their ties.[27] Paul and Burns did not want to start a completely separate organization that could potentially rival NAWSA and hinder progress in the movement, so they tried on numerous occasions to initiate negotiations with NAWSA leaders.[30] Despite their efforts, the Congressional Union officially split from NAWSA on February 12, 1914.[30]

Many predicted that this split would do irreparable harm to women's campaign for suffrage; the cynics did not discourage Paul and Burns, and they began planning their campaign against the Democrats in the summer of 1914.[30] In addition to confronting the Democratic Party, Burns and Paul had to address displeased members within their own organization; some women were complaining that the Congressional Union was elitist, authoritarian, and undemocratic.[31] Paul believed centralized authority was critical to accomplishing their goals and operating effectively, so they did not make any drastic changes; to appease their members they solicited suggestions and stated "We would be most grateful for any constructive plan which you can lay before us."[31]

While trying to address both internal and external attacks, the Congressional Union worked to keep the Anthony amendment afloat in 1914.[32] The Anthony amendment, or Mondell Resolution, was a federal amendment for woman's suffrage and what would ultimately become the nineteenth amendment.[33] Since their split from NAWSA, Ruth Hanna McCormick had become the chairwoman of NAWSA's Congressional Committee.[34] Without consulting the NAWSA Board, she had endorsed the alternative Shafroth-Palmer amendment on their behalf.[34] This posed a huge threat to the work of Burns and Paul because the Shafroth amendment, if passed, would make suffrage a states' rights only issue.[34] While Burns, Paul, and other women from both the Congressional Union and NAWSA met to address this issue, NAWSA ultimately remained in support of the Shafroth amendment, and the Congressional Union continued its campaign for federal suffrage.[35]

Burns was the first woman to speak before the Congressional delegates in 1914, when the Anthony amendment finally made it out of committee and into the House.[36] While her speech was primarily intended to set the stage for Alice Paul, she also outlined the accomplishments of the Congressional Union.[36] The fact that she was the first to speak at such a critical time for federal suffrage shows not only her courage in the face of opposition, but how well respected she was by her fellow leaders and suffragists. The speeches of Burns and Paul were incredibly important at that time in the movement because they showed politicians that women would unite as a voting bloc.[37]

Following this, the Congressional Union sent two organizers to each of the nine states where women had the right to vote.[38] Burns went to San Francisco, California with suffragist Rose Winslow.[39] Organizing women in these states was not an easy task, and raising adequate funds was found to be particularly troublesome; Burns is quoted as saying "If the women here, however, would only give me the money they are willing to spend on luncheons and dinners I will get along admirably."[40] Burns spread the message about suffrage in theaters, on the streets, by going door-to-door, and by circulating cartoons and pamphlets.[41] By election time in 1914 the Democratic Party had become an extremely vocal critic of the Congressional Union, and ultimately the Congressional Union claimed responsibility for five Democratic losses.[42]

 
Lucy Burns working with the Congressional Union

In 1915 the Congressional Union decided to put its efforts into organizing in every state that did not already have a branch.[43] The goal of this plan was to continue what their 1914 state-by-state campaign had started and make suffrage a national issue with demand in every state.[43] In 1915 Burns also became the editor of the Congressional Union's newspaper The Suffragist.[44] During this time period, NAWSA was experiencing a lot of internal strife. After their convention in 1915, Anna Howard Shaw stepped down as president, and many believed this would be a time for potential reconciliation between the Congressional Union and NAWSA.[45]

Burns and Paul met with NAWSA officials and other women from the Congressional Union at the Willard Hotel in Washington, D.C. on December 17, 1915.[46] NAWSA wanted the Congressional Union to become an affiliate but they had numerous demands—the Congressional Union was to end its anti-Democratic Party campaign and never wage any political campaigns in the future.[47] These demands were viewed as completely unreasonable, and the meeting ended without any reconciliation or possibility of future attempts.[47]

National Woman's Party

After all of the turmoil of the past few years, Alice Paul announced a radical new plan for 1916—she wanted to organize a woman's political party.[48] Burns adamantly supported this plan and on June 5, 6 and 7, 1916 at the Blackstone Theater in Chicago, delegates and female voters met to organize the National Woman's Party (NWP).[49] Burns and Paul were committed to direct action in fighting for women's rights and particularly their right to vote. They were opposed by more conservative suffragists who advocated less militant tactics.[27] NAWSA leaders thought the tactics of the National Woman's Party were futile and would alienate Democrats that were sympathetic to suffrage.[50] Membership in the NWP was limited to only enfranchised women, and their sole goal was promoting a federal amendment for woman's suffrage.[51]

Burns played a large role in the National Woman's Party. She worked in virtually every aspect of the organization at one time or another.[52] Specifically, she was a chief organizer, lobby head, newspaper editor, suffrage educator, teacher, orator, architect of the banner campaign, rallying force, and symbol of the NWP.[52] In Burns 'suffrage schools', she taught women how to conduct automobile campaigns, lobby, and work with the press,[53] which they continued during the war.[12] She was savvy with working with the media and supplied two hundred news correspondents with frequent news bulletins.[54]

The National Woman's Party led dozens of women to picket the White House in Washington, D.C. as Silent Sentinels beginning in January 1917.[55] A bi-partisan organization, it directed its attacks at the office of the President of the United States, in this case, Woodrow Wilson.[56] Burns also opposed World War I, seeing it as a war led by powerful men that resulted in young men being drafted and giving their lives with little free will.[57] Throughout her career with the National Woman's Party, Burns was known to have a bitter sense of injustice and become angry because of the actions of the President or apathetic Americans.[21]

Life in American jail

 
Burns in Occoquan Workhouse, Washington, D.C.

Burns was arrested in 1917 while picketing the White House and was sent to Occoquan Workhouse.[58] In jail, Burns joined Alice Paul and many other women in hunger strikes to demonstrate their commitment to their cause, asserting that they were political prisoners.[59][60] Burns was prepared for the hunger strikes since she had previously participated in this and been force-fed in prison in Britain with the WSPU.[9][12] Being imprisoned did not stop Burns' activism. From within the workhouse she organized protests with other prisoners.[59]

Burns also helped organize and circulate one of the first documents that defined the status of political prisoners.[59] This document described the rights of political prisoners and listed their demands for an attorney, family visits, reading and writing materials, and food from outside the prison.[59] It was circulated through holes in the walls until every suffrage prisoner had signed it.[61] Once prison officials realized what Burns was doing, they had her transferred to a district jail and put in solitary confinement.[59]

After Burns was released, she was quickly rearrested for continuing protests, picketing, and marching at the White House.[62] Upon her third arrest in 1917, the judge aimed to make an example of Burns, and she was given the maximum sentence.[59] Once again a prisoner at Occoquan Workhouse, Lucy Burns endured what is remembered as the "Night of Terror."[62] The women were treated brutally and were refused medical attention.[63] To unite the women, Burns tried to call roll and refused to stop despite numerous threats by the guards.[63] When they realized Lucy Burns's spirit was not going to be easily broken, they handcuffed her hands above her head to her cell door and left her that way for the entire night.[63] Burns was so loved and respected by her fellow suffragists that the women in the cell across from her held their hands above their head and stood in the same position.[63] Despite her courage and extraordinary leadership skills, the burden of working so diligently did bother Burns at times; she once told Alice Paul, "I am so nervous I cannot eat or sleep. I am such a coward I ought to be a village seamstress, instead of a Woman's Party organizer."[44]

After enduring the torture of the "Night of Terror," the women refused to eat for three days.[63] The guards tried to tempt the women with fried chicken, but this was only viewed as an insult; Burns told the other women "I think this riotous feast which has just passed our doors is the last effort of the institution to dislodge all of us who can be dislodged. They think there is nothing in our souls above fried chicken."[64]

Realizing something urgent needed to be done or he would potentially have dead prisoners on his hands, the warden moved Burns to another jail and told the remaining women that the strike was over.[64] He also ordered Burns to be force fed. Historian Eleanor Clift recounts that the force feeding of Lucy Burns required "five people to hold her down, and when she refused to open her mouth, they shoved the feeding tube up her nostril." This treatment was extremely painful and dangerous, causing Burns to have severe nosebleeds.[64] Of the well-known suffragists of the era, Burns spent the most time in jail.[11]

Final push for American suffrage

Burns and other suffragists had been told by the chairman of the House Committee on Suffrage that the House would not pass a suffrage amendment before 1920.[65] To their surprise, it was announced in late 1917 that the House would make a decision on January 10, 1918.[66] The amendment passed in the House by a vote of 274 to 136, and the women of the NWP, including Burns, began working on the 11 additional votes they would need for the amendment to pass in the Senate.[67] Unfortunately on June 27, 1918, the Senate narrowly failed to pass the amendment.[67]

Burns and Paul were utterly enraged, but after coming so close there was no chance that they were going to give up now. They resumed their protests at the White House on August 6, 1918.[68] Once again the women were jailed, exposed to horrendous conditions, and released shortly thereafter.[69] Their focus then was moved to helping pro-suffrage candidates get elected in November.[70] For the first time, the NWP did not give allegiance to one party over another; they supported anyone who was willing to support suffrage, and this cost the Democrats their majority in Congress.[70]

As tensions grew between the suffragists and President Wilson, he realized something had to be done quickly to end the highly publicized protests and clashes between the police and suffragists.[71] He requested that Congress convene for a special session in May 1919.[71] On May 21 the House of Representatives passed the Susan B. Anthony amendment 304 to 89, and on June 4, the Senate passed it 66 to 30.[72] Surprisingly, the suffragists were very subdued at the announcement of this victory.[73] The suffragists battle was not yet over; they still had to make sure three quarters supermajority of the states – which then numbered 48 – ratified the amendment. Finally, on August 18, 1920, Tennessee became the thirty-sixth state to ratify the Anthony amendment, and Burns' quest for federal suffrage was finally over.[74]

 
The entrance to the Lucy Burns Museum at the Occoquan Workhouse in Virginia
 
The Lucy Burns Museum

At this point Burns was completely exhausted and quoted as saying "I don't want to do anything more. I think we have done all this for women, and we have sacrificed everything we possessed for them, and now let them fight for it now. I am not going to fight anymore."[75] All of her time spent in jail and experiences as a suffragist had left her bitter towards married women and others who didn't take action during the suffrage movement.[76] After the women of the United States gained the right to vote, Burns retired from political life and devoted herself to the Catholic Church and her orphaned niece.[57][77] She died on December 22, 1966, in Brooklyn, New York.[78]

Legacy

Burns was posthumously named an honoree by the National Women's History Alliance in 2020.[79]

Iron Jawed Angels

In 2004, HBO Films broadcast Iron Jawed Angels, chronicling the voting rights movement of Lucy Burns, Alice Paul, and other suffragists. Burns was portrayed by Australian actress Frances O'Connor.[80]

Lucy Burns Institute

The Lucy Burns Institute, a nonprofit educational organization located in Madison, Wisconsin, is named after Burns.[81]

Lucy Burns Museum

The Lucy Burns Museum *[1] opened to the public on January 25, 2020, with a gala opening on May 9, 2020, in Lorton, Virginia, on the former site of the Occoquan Workhouse, also called the Lorton Reformatory, where the "Night of Terror" took place. The exhibits commemorate the activism and sacrifices of suffragists, also called Silent Sentinels.[82][83][84]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Bland, 1981 (p. 8)
  2. ^ Bland, 1981 (p. 8), Lunardini, 1986 (p. 9)
  3. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 14)
  4. ^ Irwin, 1921 (p. 16)
  5. ^ a b c Bland, 1981 (p. 5)
  6. ^ Bland, 1981 (p. 6), Lunardini, 1986 (p. 14)
  7. ^ a b Bland, 1981 (p. 6)
  8. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 8, 14)
  9. ^ a b c d e f Bland, 1981 (p. 7)
  10. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (pp. 8-9), Barker-Benfield & Clinton, 1991 (p. 456)
  11. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 9)
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Atkinson, Diane (2018). Rise up, women! : the remarkable lives of the suffragettes. London: Bloomsbury. pp. 151, 153, 159, 162, 166, 180, 530. ISBN 9781408844045. OCLC 1016848621.
  13. ^ "Woman's Hour – Grace Roe". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved August 2, 2019.
  14. ^ "1911 Suffrage evaders: Cafe Vegetaria Edinburgh". National Records of Scotland. Retrieved June 8, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ "Suffragists and the census". The Scotsman. April 4, 1911. p. 9.
  16. ^ "Glasgow Herald". August 21, 1909.
  17. ^ Irwin, 1921 (p. 9); Lunardini, 1986 (p. 15)
  18. ^ a b Barker-Benfield and Clinton, 1991 (p. 457)
  19. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 96)
  20. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 97); Lunardini, 1986 (p. 15)
  21. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 16)
  22. ^ a b c d e f g Lunardini, 1986 (p. 21)
  23. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 22)
  24. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 34)
  25. ^ Stevens, 1920
  26. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 36)
  27. ^ a b c Lunardini, 1986 (p. 44-49)
  28. ^ a b c Clift, 2003 (p. 99)
  29. ^ a b Clift, 2003 (p. 100)
  30. ^ a b c Lunardini, 1986 (p. 49)
  31. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 51)
  32. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 56)
  33. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 225)
  34. ^ a b c Lunardini, 1986 (p. 55)
  35. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 55, 59)
  36. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 61)
  37. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 62)
  38. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 63)
  39. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 63); Bland, 1981
  40. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 65)
  41. ^ Bland, 1981 (p. 11)
  42. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 67)
  43. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 71)
  44. ^ a b Bland, 1981 (p. 12)
  45. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 81-82)
  46. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 83)
  47. ^ a b Lunardini, 1986 (p. 84)
  48. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 85)
  49. ^ Barker-Benfield & Clinton, 1991 (p. 449); Lunardini, 1986 (p. 87)
  50. ^ Becker, 1981 (p. 5)
  51. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 87)
  52. ^ a b Bland, 1981 (p. 4)
  53. ^ Bland, 1981 (p. 9)
  54. ^ Bland, 1981 (p. 13)
  55. ^ Barker-Benfield & Clinton, 1991 (p. 449)
  56. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 91)
  57. ^ a b . Archived from the original on March 7, 2010. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  58. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 138)
  59. ^ a b c d e f Clift, 2003 (p. 142)
  60. ^ "Visionaries: Lucy Burns (1879–1966)". Profiles: Selected Leaders of the National Woman's Party. Library of Congress. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  61. ^ Stevens, 1920; Clift, 2003 (p. 142)
  62. ^ a b Clift, 2003 (p. 150)
  63. ^ a b c d e Clift, 2003 (p. 151)
  64. ^ a b c Clift, 2003 (p. 152)
  65. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 157)
  66. ^ Becker, 1981 (p. 5); Clift, 2003 (p. 157)
  67. ^ a b Clift, 2003 (p. 158)
  68. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 162)
  69. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 164)
  70. ^ a b Clift, 2003 (p. 167)
  71. ^ a b Clift, 2003 (p. 178)
  72. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 178-179)
  73. ^ Clift, 2003 (p. 180)
  74. ^ Becker, 1981 (p. 5); Clift, 2003
  75. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 152)
  76. ^ Lunardini, 1986 (p. 153)
  77. ^ "Profiles: Selected Leaders of the National Woman's Party". Library of congress. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  78. ^ Sicherman, Barbara; Green, Carol Hurd (1993). Notable American Women: The Modern Period : a Biographical Dictionary, Volume 4. Cambridge, Mass [u.a.]: Belknap Press of Harvard Univ. Press. pp. 124–125. ISBN 978-0674627338.
  79. ^ . National Women's History Alliance. Archived from the original on January 15, 2020. Retrieved January 8, 2020.
  80. ^ Katja von Garnier (January 16, 2005). . Archived from the original on February 2, 2011. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  81. ^ "Our Story". Lucy Burns Institute. Lucy Burns Institute. Retrieved October 22, 2013.
  82. ^ Noe Kennedy, Barbara (February 20, 2018). "New Virginia museum will honor the sacrifices of suffragists". Lonely Planet.
  83. ^ Hamm, Catherine (November 12, 2017). "In 1917, the 'Night of Terror' at a Virginia prison changed history. Now it's a site of beauty". Los Angeles Times.
  84. ^ "Lucy Burns Museum". Lucy Burns Museum. Retrieved December 28, 2019.

Bibliography

  • Barker-Benfield, G.J., & Clinton, C. (1991). Portraits of American Women from Settlement to the Present (pp. 437–439). New York, NY: Oxford University Press, Inc.
  • Becker, S.D. (1981). The origins of the Equal Rights Amendment: American feminism between the wars. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press.
  • Bland, S.R. (1981). 'Never Quite as Committed as We'd Like': The Suffrage Militancy of Lucy Burns (Vol. 17, Issue 2, pp. 4–23). Journal of Long Island History, 1981.
  • Clift, E. (2003). Founding Sisters and the Nineteenth Amendment. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons.
  • Iron Jawed Angels Website. http://iron-jawed-angels.com/
  • Irwin, I. H. (1921). The Story of The Woman's Party. Retrieved from https://books.google.com/books (Original work published 1921 by New York, NY: Harcourt, Brace & Company, Inc.)
  • "Lucy Burns (1879–1966)". In National Women's History Museum Presents Rights for Women: The Suffrage Movement and Its Leaders. Retrieved from
  • Lunardini, C.A. (1941). From equal suffrage to equal rights: Alice Paul and the National Woman's Party, 1912–1928. New York, NY: New York University Press.
  • "National Woman's Party (NWP)". In History.com from Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved from
  • Stevens, D. (1920). Jailed for Freedom. New York, NY: Liverright. Retrieved from https://books.google.com/books
  • Visionaries. In Profiles: Selected Leaders of the National Woman's Party from The Library of Congress American Memory. Retrieved from http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/collections/suffrage/nwp/profiles.html

External links

  • Lucy Burns Institute
  • Lucy Burns Museum
  • R. Digati (October 18, 2004). "Lucy Burns". Social reformer, Suffragette. Find a Grave. Retrieved August 17, 2011.

lucy, burns, july, 1879, december, 1966, american, suffragist, women, rights, advocate, passionate, activist, united, states, united, kingdom, joined, militant, suffragettes, burns, close, friend, alice, paul, together, they, ultimately, formed, national, woma. Lucy Burns July 28 1879 December 22 1966 was an American suffragist and women s rights advocate 1 She was a passionate activist in the United States and the United Kingdom who joined the militant suffragettes Burns was a close friend of Alice Paul and together they ultimately formed the National Woman s Party 2 Lucy BurnsBurns in 1913Born 1879 07 28 July 28 1879Kings County New York now Brooklyn New York City DiedDecember 22 1966 1966 12 22 aged 87 Brooklyn New York City U S EducationPacker Collegiate InstituteAlma materColumbia UniversityVassar CollegeYale UniversityOxford UniversityOccupation s Suffragist women s rights activistKnown forCo founding the National Woman s Party with Alice Paul Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early on activism 3 Prison in Britain 4 Relationship with Alice Paul 5 National American Women Suffrage Association 6 Congressional Union 7 National Woman s Party 8 Life in American jail 9 Final push for American suffrage 10 Legacy 10 1 Iron Jawed Angels 10 2 Lucy Burns Institute 10 3 Lucy Burns Museum 11 See also 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksEarly life and education EditBurns was born in New York to an Irish Catholic family 3 She was described by fellow National Woman s Party member Inez Haynes Irwin as a woman of twofold ability She speaks and writes with equal eloquence and elegance Mentally and emotionally she is quick and warm She has intellectuality of a high order but she overruns with a winning Irishness which supplements that intellectuality with grace and charm a social mobility of extreme sensitiveness and swiftness 4 She was a gifted student and first attended Packer Collegiate Institute or what was originally known as the Brooklyn Female Academy for second preparatory school in 1890 5 Packer Collegiate Institute prided itself on teaching girls to be ladies and they emphasized religious education while advocating more liberal ideals such as educating the mind to habits of thinking with clearness and force 5 Burns also met one of her lifelong role models Laura Wylie while attending Packer Collegiate Institute Wylie was one of the first women to go to Yale University Graduate School 5 Burns also attended Columbia University Vassar College and Yale University before becoming an English teacher 6 Burns taught at Erasmus High School in Brooklyn for two years While Burns enjoyed the educational field she generally found the experience to be frustrating and wanted to continue her own studies 7 In 1906 at age twenty seven she moved to Germany to resume her studies in language 8 In Germany Burns studied at the Universities of Bonn and Berlin from 1906 to 1909 3 Burns later moved to the United Kingdom where she enrolled at Oxford University to study English Burns was fortunate enough to have a very extensive educational background as her father Edwards Burns supported her and financed her international education 7 Early on activism EditBurns s first major experiences with activism were with the Pankhursts in the United Kingdom from 1909 to 1912 9 While attending graduate school in Germany Lucy Burns traveled to England where she met Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters Christabel and Sylvia 10 She was so inspired by their activism and charisma that she dropped her graduate studies to stay with them and work in the Women s Social and Political Union an organization dedicated to fighting for women s rights in the United Kingdom 11 She started selling their newsletter Votes for Women and joined a protest on June 29 1909 where she was arrested 12 Burns was later employed by the Women s Social and Political Union as a salaried organizer from 1910 to 1912 9 While working with the Pankhursts in the United Kingdom Lucy Burns became increasingly passionate about activism and participated in numerous campaigns with the WSPU She amazed a young Grace Roe for coming from America to support the movement 13 even saying she had come to London to be arrested and that it was a very grave honour 12 One of her first major contributions was organizing a parade in Edinburgh as part of the campaign in Scotland in 1909 9 She was the WSPU Edinburgh organiser for two years 12 Burns was an active supporter of the campaign to boycott the 1911 census she invited suffragettes from residents and non residents of Edinburgh to a large gathering in the city s Vegetaria Cafe on the night of the census so that they could not be officially registered 14 15 Prison in Britain Edit Suffragette being force fed in prison Burns was with Jennie Baines Mary Leigh Alice Paul Emily Davison and Mabel Capper trying to stop a Limehouse meeting on the Budget by Lloyd George In a fracas with a senior police officer led to Burns being described by the magistrate as setting an extremely bad example and getting a harsher sentence 12 While Burns is not a widely known speaker from the woman s rights movement she did make a variety of speeches in marketplaces and on street corners while in Europe 9 Her activism resulted in numerous court appearances and reports of disorderly conduct in the newspapers 9 In August 1909 she hid with Adela Pankhurst Alice Paul and Margaret Smith 12 on the roof of the St Andrew s Hall in Glasgow she planned to break through the roof and disrupt a political speech by the Earl of Crewe in front of an all male audience 16 Burns was again with Alice Paul and Edith New and other suffragettes in Dundee trying to enter a political meeting of Herbert Samuel MP Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster unable to gain access Burns then broke police station windows and got a ten day sentence where she and others went on hunger strike damaged the cells and refused to do prison work 12 Burns and Paul were involved in a stunt at the London Lord Mayor s Ball mingling with guests then approaching Winston Churchill with a hidden banner shouting How can you dine here while women are starving in prison Again this resulted in prison self starving and force feeding 12 Burns had been given a Hunger Strike Medal for Valour by WSPU Relationship with Alice Paul EditWhile working with the WSPU Burns first met Alice Paul at a London police station 1 Both women had been arrested for demonstrating and Paul introduced herself when she noticed that Burns was wearing an American flag pin on her lapel 17 The women discussed their suffrage experiences in the United Kingdom and the American women s movement 18 Burns and Paul bonded over their frustration with what they considered the inactivity and ineffective leadership of the American suffrage movement by Anna Howard Shaw 1 Their similar passions and fearlessness in the face of opposition made them quickly become good friends 18 Both women were passionate about activism and the feminist struggle for equality in the UK inspired Burns and Paul to continue the fight in the United States in 1912 1 Suffrage historian Eleanor Clift compares the partnership of Paul and Burns to that of Susan B Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton 19 She notes that they were opposites in appearance and temperament w hereas Paul appeared fragile Burns was tall and curvaceous the picture of vigorous health unlike Paul who was uncompromising and hard to get along with Burns was pliable and willing to negotiate Paul was the militant Burns the diplomat 20 Despite their stark differences Paul and Burns worked together so effectively that followers would often describe them as having one mind and spirit 21 However Paul described Burns as always more valiant than I was about a thousand times more valiant by nature 12 National American Women Suffrage Association EditUpon returning to the United States Paul and Burns joined the National American Women Suffrage Association NAWSA as leaders of its Congressional Committee 22 Both women felt it was critical to hold the political party in power responsible for a federal suffrage amendment 22 By holding an entire party accountable Paul and Burns believed that congressmen would be forced to take action or risk losing their seats 22 This militant tactic was presented by Paul and Burns at the 1912 NAWSA convention in Philadelphia to Anna Howard Shaw and other NAWSA leaders 22 NAWSA leaders rejected their proposal because they felt any action against the Democratic Party which had just won the presidential election was premature at that point 22 Not willing to back down without a fight Burns and Paul enlisted the help of Jane Addams a well respected and more unorthodox NAWSA leader to petition their cause to her fellow NAWSA leaders 22 While the women were forced to tone down their proposal NAWSA leaders did authorize a suffrage parade which Burns Paul and other activists organized as the Woman Suffrage Procession of 1913 occurring the day before Woodrow Wilson s first inauguration 22 NAWSA s one stipulation was that Paul and Burns Congressional Committee would receive no further funding from NAWSA 23 While Burns and Paul readily agreed to this stipulation this event marked the beginning of their divide with NAWSA 23 Congressional Union EditMain article Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage Because of the arguments over tactics and funding Burns and Paul felt it would be best if they added to NAWSA s Congressional Committee and formed a group still associated with NAWSA but one with its own governing body This new committee was called the Congressional Union of the National American Women Suffrage Association 24 Burns was elected unanimously as an executive member of the Congressional Union of the National American Women Suffrage Association 25 In April 1913 NAWSA decided they wanted to distance themselves from the more radical group and no longer allowed their name to be used in the title so the Congressional Union of the National American Women Suffrage Association was renamed just the Congressional Union 24 Despite this Burns and Paul still wanted the Congressional Union to be associated with NAWSA so they applied for it to be considered a NAWSA auxiliary 26 The Congressional Union was granted auxiliary membership but the relationship remained tenuous 27 Adding to the growing tensions between the Congressional Union and NAWSA Burns made a radical proposal once again at the 1913 NAWSA convention in Washington D C Because Democrats controlled the White House and both houses of Congress at the time Burns wanted to give them an ultimatum support our bill for suffrage or we will make sure you don t get reelected 28 Burns stated Inaction establishes just as clear a record as does a policy of open hostility 28 She was no longer going to stand for the apathy from the Democratic Party Burns was particularly infuriated with President Wilson because he had told them he would support the Committee on Suffrage but then never mentioned his promise in his address to Congress 28 When a delegation of women from NAWSA tried to meet with him to address this incident and register their protest Wilson claimed to be ill 29 A few days later Wilson reneged his vow to support suffrage and said he would not impose his private views on Congress 29 NAWSA felt they could no longer tolerate the radical tactics employed and advocated by the Congressional Union and they wanted to officially sever their ties 27 Paul and Burns did not want to start a completely separate organization that could potentially rival NAWSA and hinder progress in the movement so they tried on numerous occasions to initiate negotiations with NAWSA leaders 30 Despite their efforts the Congressional Union officially split from NAWSA on February 12 1914 30 Many predicted that this split would do irreparable harm to women s campaign for suffrage the cynics did not discourage Paul and Burns and they began planning their campaign against the Democrats in the summer of 1914 30 In addition to confronting the Democratic Party Burns and Paul had to address displeased members within their own organization some women were complaining that the Congressional Union was elitist authoritarian and undemocratic 31 Paul believed centralized authority was critical to accomplishing their goals and operating effectively so they did not make any drastic changes to appease their members they solicited suggestions and stated We would be most grateful for any constructive plan which you can lay before us 31 While trying to address both internal and external attacks the Congressional Union worked to keep the Anthony amendment afloat in 1914 32 The Anthony amendment or Mondell Resolution was a federal amendment for woman s suffrage and what would ultimately become the nineteenth amendment 33 Since their split from NAWSA Ruth Hanna McCormick had become the chairwoman of NAWSA s Congressional Committee 34 Without consulting the NAWSA Board she had endorsed the alternative Shafroth Palmer amendment on their behalf 34 This posed a huge threat to the work of Burns and Paul because the Shafroth amendment if passed would make suffrage a states rights only issue 34 While Burns Paul and other women from both the Congressional Union and NAWSA met to address this issue NAWSA ultimately remained in support of the Shafroth amendment and the Congressional Union continued its campaign for federal suffrage 35 Burns was the first woman to speak before the Congressional delegates in 1914 when the Anthony amendment finally made it out of committee and into the House 36 While her speech was primarily intended to set the stage for Alice Paul she also outlined the accomplishments of the Congressional Union 36 The fact that she was the first to speak at such a critical time for federal suffrage shows not only her courage in the face of opposition but how well respected she was by her fellow leaders and suffragists The speeches of Burns and Paul were incredibly important at that time in the movement because they showed politicians that women would unite as a voting bloc 37 Following this the Congressional Union sent two organizers to each of the nine states where women had the right to vote 38 Burns went to San Francisco California with suffragist Rose Winslow 39 Organizing women in these states was not an easy task and raising adequate funds was found to be particularly troublesome Burns is quoted as saying If the women here however would only give me the money they are willing to spend on luncheons and dinners I will get along admirably 40 Burns spread the message about suffrage in theaters on the streets by going door to door and by circulating cartoons and pamphlets 41 By election time in 1914 the Democratic Party had become an extremely vocal critic of the Congressional Union and ultimately the Congressional Union claimed responsibility for five Democratic losses 42 Lucy Burns working with the Congressional Union In 1915 the Congressional Union decided to put its efforts into organizing in every state that did not already have a branch 43 The goal of this plan was to continue what their 1914 state by state campaign had started and make suffrage a national issue with demand in every state 43 In 1915 Burns also became the editor of the Congressional Union s newspaper The Suffragist 44 During this time period NAWSA was experiencing a lot of internal strife After their convention in 1915 Anna Howard Shaw stepped down as president and many believed this would be a time for potential reconciliation between the Congressional Union and NAWSA 45 Burns and Paul met with NAWSA officials and other women from the Congressional Union at the Willard Hotel in Washington D C on December 17 1915 46 NAWSA wanted the Congressional Union to become an affiliate but they had numerous demands the Congressional Union was to end its anti Democratic Party campaign and never wage any political campaigns in the future 47 These demands were viewed as completely unreasonable and the meeting ended without any reconciliation or possibility of future attempts 47 National Woman s Party EditMain article National Woman s Party After all of the turmoil of the past few years Alice Paul announced a radical new plan for 1916 she wanted to organize a woman s political party 48 Burns adamantly supported this plan and on June 5 6 and 7 1916 at the Blackstone Theater in Chicago delegates and female voters met to organize the National Woman s Party NWP 49 Burns and Paul were committed to direct action in fighting for women s rights and particularly their right to vote They were opposed by more conservative suffragists who advocated less militant tactics 27 NAWSA leaders thought the tactics of the National Woman s Party were futile and would alienate Democrats that were sympathetic to suffrage 50 Membership in the NWP was limited to only enfranchised women and their sole goal was promoting a federal amendment for woman s suffrage 51 Burns played a large role in the National Woman s Party She worked in virtually every aspect of the organization at one time or another 52 Specifically she was a chief organizer lobby head newspaper editor suffrage educator teacher orator architect of the banner campaign rallying force and symbol of the NWP 52 In Burns suffrage schools she taught women how to conduct automobile campaigns lobby and work with the press 53 which they continued during the war 12 She was savvy with working with the media and supplied two hundred news correspondents with frequent news bulletins 54 The National Woman s Party led dozens of women to picket the White House in Washington D C as Silent Sentinels beginning in January 1917 55 A bi partisan organization it directed its attacks at the office of the President of the United States in this case Woodrow Wilson 56 Burns also opposed World War I seeing it as a war led by powerful men that resulted in young men being drafted and giving their lives with little free will 57 Throughout her career with the National Woman s Party Burns was known to have a bitter sense of injustice and become angry because of the actions of the President or apathetic Americans 21 Life in American jail Edit Burns in Occoquan Workhouse Washington D C Burns was arrested in 1917 while picketing the White House and was sent to Occoquan Workhouse 58 In jail Burns joined Alice Paul and many other women in hunger strikes to demonstrate their commitment to their cause asserting that they were political prisoners 59 60 Burns was prepared for the hunger strikes since she had previously participated in this and been force fed in prison in Britain with the WSPU 9 12 Being imprisoned did not stop Burns activism From within the workhouse she organized protests with other prisoners 59 Burns also helped organize and circulate one of the first documents that defined the status of political prisoners 59 This document described the rights of political prisoners and listed their demands for an attorney family visits reading and writing materials and food from outside the prison 59 It was circulated through holes in the walls until every suffrage prisoner had signed it 61 Once prison officials realized what Burns was doing they had her transferred to a district jail and put in solitary confinement 59 After Burns was released she was quickly rearrested for continuing protests picketing and marching at the White House 62 Upon her third arrest in 1917 the judge aimed to make an example of Burns and she was given the maximum sentence 59 Once again a prisoner at Occoquan Workhouse Lucy Burns endured what is remembered as the Night of Terror 62 The women were treated brutally and were refused medical attention 63 To unite the women Burns tried to call roll and refused to stop despite numerous threats by the guards 63 When they realized Lucy Burns s spirit was not going to be easily broken they handcuffed her hands above her head to her cell door and left her that way for the entire night 63 Burns was so loved and respected by her fellow suffragists that the women in the cell across from her held their hands above their head and stood in the same position 63 Despite her courage and extraordinary leadership skills the burden of working so diligently did bother Burns at times she once told Alice Paul I am so nervous I cannot eat or sleep I am such a coward I ought to be a village seamstress instead of a Woman s Party organizer 44 After enduring the torture of the Night of Terror the women refused to eat for three days 63 The guards tried to tempt the women with fried chicken but this was only viewed as an insult Burns told the other women I think this riotous feast which has just passed our doors is the last effort of the institution to dislodge all of us who can be dislodged They think there is nothing in our souls above fried chicken 64 Realizing something urgent needed to be done or he would potentially have dead prisoners on his hands the warden moved Burns to another jail and told the remaining women that the strike was over 64 He also ordered Burns to be force fed Historian Eleanor Clift recounts that the force feeding of Lucy Burns required five people to hold her down and when she refused to open her mouth they shoved the feeding tube up her nostril This treatment was extremely painful and dangerous causing Burns to have severe nosebleeds 64 Of the well known suffragists of the era Burns spent the most time in jail 11 Final push for American suffrage EditBurns and other suffragists had been told by the chairman of the House Committee on Suffrage that the House would not pass a suffrage amendment before 1920 65 To their surprise it was announced in late 1917 that the House would make a decision on January 10 1918 66 The amendment passed in the House by a vote of 274 to 136 and the women of the NWP including Burns began working on the 11 additional votes they would need for the amendment to pass in the Senate 67 Unfortunately on June 27 1918 the Senate narrowly failed to pass the amendment 67 Burns and Paul were utterly enraged but after coming so close there was no chance that they were going to give up now They resumed their protests at the White House on August 6 1918 68 Once again the women were jailed exposed to horrendous conditions and released shortly thereafter 69 Their focus then was moved to helping pro suffrage candidates get elected in November 70 For the first time the NWP did not give allegiance to one party over another they supported anyone who was willing to support suffrage and this cost the Democrats their majority in Congress 70 As tensions grew between the suffragists and President Wilson he realized something had to be done quickly to end the highly publicized protests and clashes between the police and suffragists 71 He requested that Congress convene for a special session in May 1919 71 On May 21 the House of Representatives passed the Susan B Anthony amendment 304 to 89 and on June 4 the Senate passed it 66 to 30 72 Surprisingly the suffragists were very subdued at the announcement of this victory 73 The suffragists battle was not yet over they still had to make sure three quarters supermajority of the states which then numbered 48 ratified the amendment Finally on August 18 1920 Tennessee became the thirty sixth state to ratify the Anthony amendment and Burns quest for federal suffrage was finally over 74 The entrance to the Lucy Burns Museum at the Occoquan Workhouse in Virginia The Lucy Burns Museum At this point Burns was completely exhausted and quoted as saying I don t want to do anything more I think we have done all this for women and we have sacrificed everything we possessed for them and now let them fight for it now I am not going to fight anymore 75 All of her time spent in jail and experiences as a suffragist had left her bitter towards married women and others who didn t take action during the suffrage movement 76 After the women of the United States gained the right to vote Burns retired from political life and devoted herself to the Catholic Church and her orphaned niece 57 77 She died on December 22 1966 in Brooklyn New York 78 Legacy EditBurns was posthumously named an honoree by the National Women s History Alliance in 2020 79 Iron Jawed Angels Edit In 2004 HBO Films broadcast Iron Jawed Angels chronicling the voting rights movement of Lucy Burns Alice Paul and other suffragists Burns was portrayed by Australian actress Frances O Connor 80 Lucy Burns Institute Edit The Lucy Burns Institute a nonprofit educational organization located in Madison Wisconsin is named after Burns 81 Lucy Burns Museum Edit The Lucy Burns Museum 1 opened to the public on January 25 2020 with a gala opening on May 9 2020 in Lorton Virginia on the former site of the Occoquan Workhouse also called the Lorton Reformatory where the Night of Terror took place The exhibits commemorate the activism and sacrifices of suffragists also called Silent Sentinels 82 83 84 See also EditList of civil rights leaders List of suffragists and suffragettes List of women s rights activists Timeline of women s rights other than voting Timeline of women s suffrageReferences Edit a b c d Bland 1981 p 8 Bland 1981 p 8 Lunardini 1986 p 9 a b Lunardini 1986 p 14 Irwin 1921 p 16 a b c Bland 1981 p 5 Bland 1981 p 6 Lunardini 1986 p 14 a b Bland 1981 p 6 Lunardini 1986 p 8 14 a b c d e f Bland 1981 p 7 Lunardini 1986 pp 8 9 Barker Benfield amp Clinton 1991 p 456 a b Lunardini 1986 p 9 a b c d e f g h i j Atkinson Diane 2018 Rise up women the remarkable lives of the suffragettes London Bloomsbury pp 151 153 159 162 166 180 530 ISBN 9781408844045 OCLC 1016848621 Woman s Hour Grace Roe www bbc co uk Retrieved August 2 2019 1911 Suffrage evaders Cafe Vegetaria Edinburgh National Records of Scotland Retrieved June 8 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Suffragists and the census The Scotsman April 4 1911 p 9 Glasgow Herald August 21 1909 Irwin 1921 p 9 Lunardini 1986 p 15 a b Barker Benfield and Clinton 1991 p 457 Clift 2003 p 96 Clift 2003 p 97 Lunardini 1986 p 15 a b Lunardini 1986 p 16 a b c d e f g Lunardini 1986 p 21 a b Lunardini 1986 p 22 a b Lunardini 1986 p 34 Stevens 1920 Lunardini 1986 p 36 a b c Lunardini 1986 p 44 49 a b c Clift 2003 p 99 a b Clift 2003 p 100 a b c Lunardini 1986 p 49 a b Lunardini 1986 p 51 Lunardini 1986 p 56 Lunardini 1986 p 225 a b c Lunardini 1986 p 55 Lunardini 1986 p 55 59 a b Lunardini 1986 p 61 Lunardini 1986 p 62 Lunardini 1986 p 63 Lunardini 1986 p 63 Bland 1981 Lunardini 1986 p 65 Bland 1981 p 11 Lunardini 1986 p 67 a b Lunardini 1986 p 71 a b Bland 1981 p 12 Lunardini 1986 p 81 82 Lunardini 1986 p 83 a b Lunardini 1986 p 84 Lunardini 1986 p 85 Barker Benfield amp Clinton 1991 p 449 Lunardini 1986 p 87 Becker 1981 p 5 Lunardini 1986 p 87 a b Bland 1981 p 4 Bland 1981 p 9 Bland 1981 p 13 Barker Benfield amp Clinton 1991 p 449 Clift 2003 p 91 a b National Woman s Party NWP Archived from the original on March 7 2010 Retrieved September 3 2010 Clift 2003 p 138 a b c d e f Clift 2003 p 142 Visionaries Lucy Burns 1879 1966 Profiles Selected Leaders of the National Woman s Party Library of Congress Retrieved September 3 2010 Stevens 1920 Clift 2003 p 142 a b Clift 2003 p 150 a b c d e Clift 2003 p 151 a b c Clift 2003 p 152 Clift 2003 p 157 Becker 1981 p 5 Clift 2003 p 157 a b Clift 2003 p 158 Clift 2003 p 162 Clift 2003 p 164 a b Clift 2003 p 167 a b Clift 2003 p 178 Clift 2003 p 178 179 Clift 2003 p 180 Becker 1981 p 5 Clift 2003 Lunardini 1986 p 152 Lunardini 1986 p 153 Profiles Selected Leaders of the National Woman s Party Library of congress Retrieved September 3 2010 Sicherman Barbara Green Carol Hurd 1993 Notable American Women The Modern Period a Biographical Dictionary Volume 4 Cambridge Mass u a Belknap Press of Harvard Univ Press pp 124 125 ISBN 978 0674627338 2020 Honorees National Women s History Alliance Archived from the original on January 15 2020 Retrieved January 8 2020 Katja von Garnier January 16 2005 Iron Jawed Angels Archived from the original on February 2 2011 Retrieved September 3 2010 Our Story Lucy Burns Institute Lucy Burns Institute Retrieved October 22 2013 Noe Kennedy Barbara February 20 2018 New Virginia museum will honor the sacrifices of suffragists Lonely Planet Hamm Catherine November 12 2017 In 1917 the Night of Terror at a Virginia prison changed history Now it s a site of beauty Los Angeles Times Lucy Burns Museum Lucy Burns Museum Retrieved December 28 2019 Bibliography EditBarker Benfield G J amp Clinton C 1991 Portraits of American Women from Settlement to the Present pp 437 439 New York NY Oxford University Press Inc Becker S D 1981 The origins of the Equal Rights Amendment American feminism between the wars Westport CT Greenwood Press Bland S R 1981 Never Quite as Committed as We d Like The Suffrage Militancy of Lucy Burns Vol 17 Issue 2 pp 4 23 Journal of Long Island History 1981 Clift E 2003 Founding Sisters and the Nineteenth Amendment Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons Iron Jawed Angels Website http iron jawed angels com Irwin I H 1921 The Story of The Woman s Party Retrieved from https books google com books Original work published 1921 by New York NY Harcourt Brace amp Company Inc Lucy Burns 1879 1966 In National Women s History Museum Presents Rights for Women The Suffrage Movement and Its Leaders Retrieved from https web archive org web 20100410091449 http www nwhm org rightsforwomen Burns html Lunardini C A 1941 From equal suffrage to equal rights Alice Paul and the National Woman s Party 1912 1928 New York NY New York University Press National Woman s Party NWP In History com from Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved from https web archive org web 20100307182835 http www history com topics national womans party nwp Stevens D 1920 Jailed for Freedom New York NY Liverright Retrieved from https books google com books Visionaries In Profiles Selected Leaders of the National Woman s Party from The Library of Congress American Memory Retrieved from http memory loc gov ammem collections suffrage nwp profiles htmlExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lucy Burns Lucy Burns Institute Lucy Burns Museum R Digati October 18 2004 Lucy Burns Social reformer Suffragette Find a Grave Retrieved August 17 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lucy Burns amp oldid 1131291029, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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