Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://www.loc.gov/loc/lcib/9803/suffrage.html> ?p ?o }
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- suffrage.html accessdate "2008-12-15".
- suffrage.html accessdate "2009-07-30".
- suffrage.html isCitedBy Elisabeth_Freeman.
- suffrage.html isCitedBy Suffrage_Hikes.
- suffrage.html publisher Library_of_Congress.
- suffrage.html quote "One of the New York group, Elisabeth Freeman, dressed as a gypsy and drove a yellow, horse-drawn wagon decorated with Votes for Women symbols and filled with pro-suffrage literature, a sure way to attract publicity.".
- suffrage.html quote "This call was answered. On Feb. 12, with cameras clicking, 16 "suffrage pilgrims" left New York City to walk to Washington for the parade. Many other people joined the original hikers at various stages, and the New York State Woman Suffrage Association's journal crowed that "no propaganda work undertaken by the State Association and Party has ever achieved such publicity." One of the New York group, Elizabeth Freeman, dressed as a gypsy and drove a yellow, horse-drawn wagon decorated with Votes for Women symbols and filled with pro-suffrage literature, a sure way to attract publicity. Two weeks after the procession five New York suffragists, including Elizabeth Freeman, reported to the Bronx motion picture studio of the Thomas A. Edison Co. to make a talking picture known as a Kinetophone, which included a cylinder recording of one-minute speeches by each of the women. This film with synchronized sound was shown in vaudeville houses where it was "hooted, jeered and hissed" by audiences.".
- suffrage.html title "Marching for the Vote".
- suffrage.html url suffrage.html.