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@kokowitthelocs 🙋🏾♀️ E here from @summerheiress.
We appreciate your support in the form of a like, a share or a purchase from our Black female owned small biz for women’s clothing, accessories and lippies. Shop our August Birthday sale
🛍🛒https://t.co/eJ7JoQ06gS
Jeannette Rankin asserted her support of women’s rights. Rankin became the first woman elected to US Congress in 1916. While in office, she advocated for the 19th Amendment’s passage. @Khallion #WomensVote100 https://t.co/qk7EIOhD6e
@breezyy_26 🙋🏾♀️ E here from @summerheiress.
We appreciate your support in the form of a like, a share or a purchase from our Black female owned small biz for women’s clothing, accessories and lippies. Shop our August Birthday sale
🛍🛒https://t.co/eJ7JoQ06gS
@keilanadezignz Hello! E here from @summerheiress.
We appreciate your support in the form of a like, a share or a purchase from our small business providing women’s clothing, accessories and lipgloss. Shop our August Birthday sale
🛍🛒https://t.co/eJ7JoQ06gS
First two in my “Women’s Wrestlers as American Traditional Pinup” series
@ShotziWWE
And a commission for @diabeticpeach of @RealPaigeWWE
Who should I do next?🤔
Today we celebrate the 100th anniversary of the 19th amendment and women’s right to vote in the United States! We especially want to acknowledge the incredible women that made it happen! Check out our blog post for some of the best books about these women! https://t.co/mXNkUswdXv
Elizabeth Shippen Green (1871 - 1954) was an American illustrator. To help overcome the stereotype that artworks made by women are inferior she became increasingly vocal in promoting women’s work.
“The Suspected Suffragette”
“Gisele,” 1908.
See more: https://t.co/vI9ugDTsqA
Click to RSVP.
Tonight (4PM ET / 7 PM PT) a free virtual play is being hosted by @nytimes about five incredibly brave women who changed the course of women’s suffrage. Please check out this powerfully written piece.
https://t.co/r4Y6oBUilF
1880s women’s fashion was defined by the rigidly structured bustle and an abundance of decoration. Dress reformers, influenced by artistic movements, protested the trends, but nonetheless these styles reigned supreme.
#fashionhistory #19thcentury
https://t.co/aFOZzfQIKD
New podcast series charting women’s fight for equal pay to launch this week
Rebel Women’s latest series marks the 50th anniversary of the 1970 Equal Pay Act and aims to raise awareness of the ongoing fight for parity
https://t.co/GTvxia1N5G
#Hackney #EqualPay #history
This month is the 100th Anniversary of Women’s Suffrage in the US.
Rose O’Neill was an American cartoonist, illustrator, and artist. She was the creator of #Kewpie, one of the most widely known cartoons.
“Kewpie Votes for Women,” 1914.
See more here: https://t.co/vV7HYrPZR0
An important and very rare December 1919 handbill with a persuasive map favoring the ratification by Virginia of the 19th Amendment and attempting to assuage local concerns that women’s suffrage would put an end to “White Supremacy” in the #19thAmendment https://t.co/Ig7R20BHxC
Comics scholar Michael Campochario (@EarthTwoMike) writes that “Women’s bodies and their choices regarding them are simultaneously admired, objectified, and legislated by men. I think Rogue can be seen as a metaphor for all of that.” 2/8
Jane Addams led reform movements for women’s votes, peace & the support of immigrants. She founded the Hull House in Chicago in 1889, and became a leader in the National American Woman Suffrage Association & helped found the NAACP. @Khallion #WomensVote100 https://t.co/hg1v2LCYNc
Not twitter imploding over Uzaki chan challenging their personal standards for women’s bodies! So not gucci ):
I’m excited to announce the first Women’s Tournament! Women from all over the world are welcome to take part in a VGC tournament, taking place September 5
More information to come, along with the discord link. RTs appreciated🙂
@itstatywassup 🙋🏾♀️ E here from @summerheiress.
We appreciate your support in the form of a like, a share or a purchase from our Black female owned small biz for women’s clothing, accessories and lippies. Shop our August Birthday sale
🛍🛒https://t.co/eJ7JoPIuSi
Mary Ann Shadd Cary dared to fight for civil & women's rights through her lectures & articles. She founded the Colored Women’s Progressive Franchise Association, which paved the way for Black women’s clubs founded in the 1890s. @Khallion #WomensVote100
Susan B. Anthony agitated for change all her life. She started as an antislavery activist & became a suffrage leader. Anthony worked with Elizabeth Cady Stanton to found the first national women’s suffrage organization. @Khallion #WomensVote100
Harriet Tubman is most famous for leading enslaved people to freedom, but she also fought for civil rights & women’s rights. In 1896, she helped found the National Association of Colored Women, which fought against racial violence and for suffrage. @Khallion #womensvote100