The photo comes from Marjorie Shuler Charles, my great-great Aunt. She is pictured to the left of the man’s shoulder in the right of the photo. Signing the amendment is Speaker of the House Frederick H Gillett.
4 thoughts on “In Honor of International Women’s Day: Marjorie Shuler Charles at the Signing of the 19th Amendment”
Edward P Dibblesaid:
My name is Edward Dibble from Buffalo, New York. For the last ten years I have been researching a women’s literary club called The Scribblers which Marjorie belonged to. Marjorie and her mother are two very interesting people and I thank you for posting these pictures. I also wonder if more information could be posted about her life in later years. Thank you for this web site.
Hi Edward, I will follow up with my father and uncle about her later years – I personally don’t have much information about that period of time. Thanks! Would love to see whatever you have uncovered!
Also – have you seen her correspondence with Eleanor Roosevelt, Sumner Welles, and A.M Warren?
Ellen Carol DuBoissaid:
I too am writing for more information on Marjorie Shuler Charles, so that she can figure in the comprehensive history of the woman suffrage movement that I am writing in time for teh 2020 centennial. I cannot even tell when she was born –or died. Can you help me? Sincerely, Ellen DuBois, Professor of History, UCLA
My name is Edward Dibble from Buffalo, New York. For the last ten years I have been researching a women’s literary club called The Scribblers which Marjorie belonged to. Marjorie and her mother are two very interesting people and I thank you for posting these pictures. I also wonder if more information could be posted about her life in later years. Thank you for this web site.
Hi Edward, I will follow up with my father and uncle about her later years – I personally don’t have much information about that period of time. Thanks! Would love to see whatever you have uncovered!
Also – have you seen her correspondence with Eleanor Roosevelt, Sumner Welles, and A.M Warren?
I too am writing for more information on Marjorie Shuler Charles, so that she can figure in the comprehensive history of the woman suffrage movement that I am writing in time for teh 2020 centennial. I cannot even tell when she was born –or died. Can you help me? Sincerely, Ellen DuBois, Professor of History, UCLA