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A combative and outspoken leader in the women's suffrage movement, Alice Paul broke away from the National American Woman Suffrage Association to form the more radical National Woman's Party.
Force-feeding and imprisonment could not stop suffragist Alice Paul’s march forward. A new park site would tell her story. Horse-drawn floats, trumpeters, banners, and thousands of marchers.
Her work has previously appeared in USA Today and Washington Life Magazine. Alice Paul dedicated her life to fighting for women's rights, making sure that no woman was denied her voice in the ...
For the rest of her life, Alice Paul continued her work for the equality of women around the world. At age 37, she earned a law degree and wrote the first version of the Equal Rights Amendment in ...
A New Jersey elementary school canceled a second-grade field trip to a center named for women’s rights icon Alice Paul after a barrage of online bullying created a security risk, the school ...
At the Alice Paul Center for Gender Justice, children flipped through the pages of history during a special reading of The ABCs of Women's History on Saturday. The book's author, Rio Cortez ...
This national monument, formerly known as the Sewall-Belmont House and Museum, was once the home of suffragist Alice Paul and headquarters for the National Woman's Party. Paul founded the National ...
Alice Paul, who drafted the original version of the Equal Rights Amendment, referred to abortion as "the ultimate exploitation of women." Some feminists still oppose abortion on these and other ...