Information: The first column shows data points from Milholland, Belle. in red. The third column shows data points from Milholland, Inez, 1886-1916 in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
Inez Milholland Boissevain (August 6, 1886 – November 25, 1916) was a suffragist, labor lawyer, socialist, World War I correspondent, and public speaker who greatly influenced the women's movement in America. She was active in the National Woman's Party and a key participant in the 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession.
Born to a wealthy family in Brooklyn, New York, Milholland grew up in New York City and London. While in England, she met the militant suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst and became a political radical. After graduating from Vassar in 1909, Milholland started working as a suffrage orator in New York City. She also advocated for women’s labor rights. She was arrested picketing alongside female shirtwaist and laundry workers during strikes in 1909 and 1910. She also used her resources as a member of an upper-class family to pay bail for other strikers and organize fundraisers. After being rejected from several law schools because she was a woman, Milholland earned a law degree from New York University in 1912.
On March 3, 1913, Milholland achieved wide fame when she served as the herald of the Woman Suffrage Procession in Washington, D.C. Astride a horse named “Grey Dawn” and dramatically dressed in white to represent the “New Woman” of the twentieth century, she led thousands of women down Pennsylvania Avenue in the first organized march on Washington. Her work for women’s rights continued after the parade. She gave numerous suffrage speeches in the United States and England. She also campaigned for pacifism as World War I brewed in Europe.
During an Atlantic Ocean crossing to England in 1913, Milholland met a Dutch coffee importer named Eugen Jan Boissevain. She proposed to him while they were still aboard the ship. They were married shortly after they landed. Boissevain supported and encouraged his wife’s work.
Over the next few years Milholland began to experience poor health from pernicious anemia. She refused to stop her activism. In 1916, she started a suffrage tour of the Western United States. On October 22, she collapsed while giving a speech in Los Angeles. Audience members reported that the last words she said before collapsing were addressed to Woodrow Wilson: “Mr. President, how long must women wait for liberty?” Despite repeated blood transfusions, she died at Los Angeles' Good Samaritan Hospital on November 25.
Wikipedia article, Inez Milholland, accessed August 6, 2020
<p>Inez Milholland Boissevain (August 6, 1886 – November 25, 1916) was a suffragist, labor lawyer, socialist, World War I correspondent, and public speaker who greatly influenced the women's movement in America. She was active in the National Woman's Party and a key participant in the 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession.</p>
<p>Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Inez Milholland grew up in a wealthy family. Known as Nan, she was the eldest daughter of John Elmer Milholland and Jean Milholland née’ Torrey. She had one sister, Vida, and one brother, John (Jack). Her father was a New York Tribune reporter and editorial writer who eventually headed a pneumatic tubes business that afforded his family a privileged life in both New York and London. In London she met and was impressed by the English suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst. Milholland’s father supported many reforms, among them world peace, civil rights, and women's suffrage. Her mother exposed her children to cultural and intellectual stimulation. Milholland spent summers on her family's land in Lewis, Essex County, New York; the property is now the Meadowmount School of Music.</p>
<p>Inez Milholland received her early education at the Comstock School in New York and Kensington Secondary School in London. After finishing school, she decided to attend Vassar but when the college wouldn't accept her graduation certificate she attended Willard School for Girls in Berlin.</p>
<p>During her attendance at Vassar College she was once suspended for organizing a women's rights meeting. The president of Vassar had forbidden suffrage meetings, but Milholland and others held regular "classes" on the issue, along with large protests and petitions. As a student she was known as an active radical. Defying the campus suffrage meeting ban, she convened one in a cemetery across the road. She started the suffrage movement at Vassar, enrolled two-thirds of the students, and taught them the principles of socialism. Milholland was president of the campus Intercollegiate Socialist Society, which was dominated by women at the time and reflected their identification with the oppressed. For Milholland, socialism was "a vital means to correct the monster evils under the sun."</p>
<p>With the radical group she had gathered about her, she attended socialist meetings in Poughkeepsie which were under the ban of the faculty. An athletic young woman, she was the captain of the hockey team and a member of the 1909 track team; she also set a record in the basketball throw. Milholland was also involved in student productions, the Current Topics Club, the German Club, and the debating team.</p>
<p>After graduating from Vassar in 1909, she tried for admission at Yale University, Harvard University, and Cambridge University with the purpose of studying law, but was denied due to gender. Milholland was finally matriculated at the New York University School of Law, from which she took her LL.B. degree in 1912.</p>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inez_Milholland
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inez_Milholland
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National Park Service biography, Inez Milholland, accessed August 6, 2020
<p>Inez Milholland Boissevain was an American suffragist and labor lawyer. She is best known for leading the 1913 women's suffrage parade in Washington, D.C., dressed in a flowing white cloak and crown and riding a white horse. Though she took advantage of her reputation as “the most beautiful suffragette,” her commitment to social change was far from symbolic. She was a talented speaker and a passionate advocate for women’s rights, socialism, and pacifism.</p>
<p>Inez Milholland was born to a wealthy family in Brooklyn, New York. She grew up in New York City and London. While in England, she met the militant suffragist Emmeline Pankhurst and became a political radical. As a student at Vassar College, Milholland challenged a rule that banned discussion of suffrage on campus by holding meetings in a nearby cemetery. This defiant spirit would animate her life’s work.</p>
<p>After graduating from Vassar in 1909, Milholland started working as a suffrage orator in New York City. She also advocated for women’s labor rights. She was arrested picketing alongside female shirtwaist and laundry workers during strikes in 1909 and 1910. She also used her resources as a member of an upper-class family to pay bail for other strikers and organize fundraisers. After being rejected from several law schools because she was a woman, Milholland earned a law degree from New York University in 1912.</p>
<p>On March 3, 1913, Milholland achieved wide fame when she served as the herald of the Woman Suffrage Procession in Washington, D.C. Astride a horse named “Grey Dawn” and dramatically dressed in white to represent the “New Woman” of the twentieth century, she led thousands of women down Pennsylvania Avenue in the first organized march on Washington. Her work for women’s rights continued after the parade. She gave numerous suffrage speeches in the United States and England. She also campaigned for pacifism as World War I brewed in Europe.</p>
<p>During an Atlantic Ocean crossing to England in 1913, Milholland met a Dutch coffee importer named Eugen Jan Boissevain. She proposed to him while they were still aboard the ship. They were married shortly after they landed. Boissevain supported and encouraged his wife’s work.</p>
<p>Over the next few years Milholland began to experience poor health from pernicious anemia. She refused to stop her activism. In 1916, she started a suffrage tour of the Western United States. On October 22, she collapsed while giving a speech in Los Angeles. Audience members reported that the last words she said before collapsing were addressed to Woodrow Wilson: “Mr. President, how long must women wait for liberty?” Inez Milholland died a few weeks later at the age of thirty.</p>
https://www.nps.gov/people/inez-milholland.htm
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https://www.nps.gov/people/inez-milholland.htm
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Milholland, Belle.
creatorOf
Quotes from the diary of Belle Milholland : kept during trip from Indiana to Florida from Sept. 19, 1876.
Milholland, Belle. Quotes from the diary of Belle Milholland : kept during trip from Indiana to Florida from Sept. 19, 1876.
Title:
Quotes from the diary of Belle Milholland : kept during trip from Indiana to Florida from Sept. 19, 1876.
Milholland, Belle. Quotes from the diary of Belle Milholland : kept during trip from Indiana to Florida from Sept. 19, 1876.
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Milholland, Inez, 1886-1916
referencedIn
Papers of Alice Paul, 1785-1985 (inclusive), 1805-1985 (bulk)
Papers of Alice Paul, 1785-1985 (inclusive), 1805-1985 (bulk)
Title:
Papers of Alice Paul, 1785-1985 (inclusive), 1805-1985 (bulk)
Series I, Personal and family, contains biographical and genealogical information; a journal (1901) from AP's freshman year at Swarthmore; datebooks; legal and financial documents, including material about her estate and other property; family papers and correspondence, including letters AP wrote to her mother from England; correspondence with friends and with organizations, most of which she was a member; photographs; home movies; and videotapes of television specials with interviews of AP. Series II, Suffrage, documents AP's activities in the movement until 1920 and the passage of the 19th Amendment. It includes a summons and judgment, and pamphlets, leaflets, and clippings from the British campaign; and from the Congressional Union and NWP, general and financial correspondence, reports from field representatives, photographs, pamphlets, leaflets, and clippings.
Brief account of Dorothy Gruening's experience at Vassar College, when the president and trustees refused to allow undergraduates to hold a suffrage parade. Gruening also mentions that she was present in 1918 when Congress passed the 19th Amendment.
Portraits of women suffragists from the Anne Henrietta Martin papers [graphic]. ca. 1840-ca. 1920, bulk 1900-1920
Martin, Anne, 1875-1951. Portraits of women suffragists from the Anne Henrietta Martin papers [graphic].
Title:
Portraits of women suffragists from the Anne Henrietta Martin papers [graphic]. ca. 1840-ca. 1920, bulk 1900-1920
Chiefly early-to-mid 20th century copy photographs of studio portraits of various women suffragists, many of whom were prominent in the movement. Includes some original snapshots of prominent individuals taken in Brighton, England, in 1910. Some original photographic portraits also present.
ArchivalResource:
ca. 70 photographic prints : b&w ; various sizes.
Martin, Anne, 1875-1951. Portraits of women suffragists from the Anne Henrietta Martin papers [graphic].
0
Milholland, Inez, 1886-1916
referencedIn
Records of the U.S. Information Agency. 1900 - 2003. Master File Photographs of U.S. and Foreign Personalities, World Events, and American Economic, Social, and Cultural Life
Records of the U.S. Information Agency. 1900 - 2003. Master File Photographs of U.S. and Foreign Personalities, World Events, and American Economic, Social, and Cultural Life
Title:
Records of the U.S. Information Agency. 1900 - 2003. Master File Photographs of U.S. and Foreign Personalities, World Events, and American Economic, Social, and Cultural Life
Records of the National Park Service, 1785 - 2006. National Register of Historic Places and National Historic Landmarks Program Records, 2013 - 2017
Records of the National Park Service, 1785 - 2006. National Register of Historic Places and National Historic Landmarks Program Records, 2013 - 2017
Title:
Records of the National Park Service, 1785 - 2006. National Register of Historic Places and National Historic Landmarks Program Records, 2013 - 2017
This series contains records documenting the building, architectural, and cultural aspects of places officially designated as worthy of historic preservation. The records capture the nomination process, the evaluation of the properties and the steps involved in the listing of the property. The series includes properties from every one of the United States, the District of Columbia, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands. Properties appear in one of three areas: Multiple Property Submission, Single Property Listings, and National Historic Landmarks.
Each registered place is designated within one of three categories: multiple property, single property, or national historic landmark. Among the attributes provided about each property are: name, address, list date, period of significance, theme or historic context, and architectural classification. When known or important additional descriptive elements about properties include architect or builder, significant person, and major changes.
ArchivalResource:
94,373 Portable Document Format files (PDF), 158 electronic documentation files in Portable Document Format, 334 electronic documentation files in Excel, and 1 linear foot, 8 linear inches of paper documentation
Personal and professional correspondence, speeches, articles, class notes and clippings. The personal letters illuminate, often in intimate detail, Milholland's marriage to Boissevain and her friendships with Max Eastman, Upton Sinclair, Irving E. Robertson, and other artists and radicals in Greenwich Village. The remainder of the collection reflects her work as a lawyer and her involvement in various reform causes: the citizenship question, the abolition of capital punishment, the related issues of prison reform and legal aid, and women's suffrage.
Edna St. Vincent Millay Papers, 1832-1992, (bulk 1900-1950)
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Milholland, Inez, 1886-1916
referencedIn
Papers, 1879-1926.
Papers, 1879-1926.
Title:
Papers, 1879-1926.
Clippings, letters, photographs, telegrams, programs, articles, pamphlets, obituaries, and memorial addresses of John E. Milholland, his wife Jean, and their daughters Inez Milholland and Vida Milholland; subjects include politics, race relations, immigration, woman's suffrage, the pneumatic tube, and the deaths of Inez in 1916 and John in 1925.
Presents the oral histories of eight women who participated in the woman's suffrage movement in the period from 1890s to final ratification of the suffrage amendment in 1920. Their activities ranged from holding luncheons and tea parties in St. Paul, Minnesota, to organizing campus suffrage clubs at Cornell and, to marching in New York suffrage parades, to soap-boxing on street corners in Boston, to stumping in upstate New York for the Women's Social and Political Union from the back of a car, to participating in the National Women's Party picketing outside the White House, and finally to campaigning for ratification with Carrie Chapman Catt. These life history interviews provide insights into the background and the political beliefs that motivated White middle class women to participate in the suffrage movement, and reveal how their early activism and beliefs impacted their post-suffrage lives and activities. Narrators include: Jessie Haver Butler, Katherine Tolls Chamberlain, Miriam Allen DeFord, May Goldman, Ernestine Hara Kettler, Laura Ellsworth Seiler, Sylvie Thygeson, Eva Marshall Totah.
ArchivalResource:
compact discs (approx. 33 hr.) ; 3/4 in.
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