| HOW OUR MOTHERS, GRANDMOTHERS AND GREAT GRANDMOTHERS FOUGHT FOR OUR RIGHT TO VOTE |
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Information disseminated via email through League of Women Voters, Prince William Unit, Prince William County, VA. (With thanks to Katherine Mercurio Gotthardt.) This is the story of our Grandmothers and Great-grandmothers; they lived only 90 years ago.
![]() The women were innocent and defenseless, but they were jailed nonetheless for picketing the White House, carrying signs asking for the vote.
Lucy Burns
Dora Lewis
Thus unfolded the 'Night of Terror' on Nov. 15, 1917, when the warden at the Occoquan Workhouse in Virginia ordered his guards to teach a lesson to the suffragists imprisoned there because they dared to picket Woodrow Wilson's White House for the right to vote. For weeks, the women's only water came from an open pail. Their food--all of it colorless slop--was infested with worms. When one of the leaders, Alice Paul, embarked on a hunger strike, they tied her to a chair, forced a tube down her throat and poured liquid into her until she vomited. She was tortured like this for weeks until word was smuggled out to the press. Woodrow Wilson and his cronies tried to persuade a psychiatrist to declare Alice Paul insane so that she could be permanently institutionalized. The doctor refused. Alice Paul was strong, he said, and brave. That didn't make her crazy. The doctor admonished the men: 'Courage in women is often mistaken for insanity.' Some women won't vote this year because--why, exactly? We have carpool duties? We have to get to work? Our vote doesn't matter? It's raining? If for no other reason, vote out of respect for ANY of those who have suffered for our rights to do so. ___________________________ |




