Caroline Katzenstein for broadcast Friday, August 26, 1955, over WMAL, Washington D.C.

Image
Date created 1955-08-05
Creator Katzenstein, Caroline
Description

Caroline Katzenstein, born in 1888, was a leader in the Pennsylvania suffrage movement. She served in official positions for the Equal Franchise Society of Philadelphia, the National American Woman Suffrage Association, and the National Woman’s Party. After the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified, Katzenstein wrote about her experiences in the women's suffrage movement and continued to promote the Equal Rights Amendment until her death in 1968.

These notes were drafted in preparation for a broadcast over WMAL in Washington D.C. The questions relate to Katzenstein's motives for supporting women's suffrage and the process of ratifying the Nineteenth Amendment.

Size 2 pages
Type text
Subjects Katzenstein, Caroline | Philadelphia (Pa.) | Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association | Women--Suffrage | Women--Suffrage--United States | Women--History--19th century | Women--History--20th century | United States. Constitution. 19th Amendment | Equal right amendment
Geographical location Philadelphia (Pa.)
Language English
View full item https://omeka.hsp.org/s/digitalcollections/document/17311
Local identifier 17311
Collection

Caroline Katzenstein papers (Am.8996) (explore contents)

Contributing institution Historical Society of Pennsylvania
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