Background/Early Training
D.C Parade
National Women's Party/Protest at White House
Prison/Press
19th Amendment
100

Alice Paul's family belonged to this religious group, which influenced her lifelong work for women's rights.

 The Quaker religion


100

This was the main goal of the D.C. parade.

To dominate the newspaper over President Wilson's inauguration.  

100

These two women founded the National Woman's Party.

Alice Paul and Lucy Burns

100

This was the reason the Silent Sentinels were arrested. 

Obstruction of traffic

100

These were the number of states needed to ratify the 19th Amendment.

36

200

Alice Paul received multiple degrees, including biology, from this Quaker college in Pennsylvania.

Swarthmore College

200

These two women led the D.C. parade.

Alice Paul and Carrie Chapman Catt

200

This group worked to change the Constitution so that women would have the right to vote.

National Woman's Party

200

This strategy is why the women wouldn't pay the fines and chose to go to jail instead.

To show civil disobedience

200

This was the last state to say yes to ratifying the 19th Amendment. 

Tennessee 

300

While in England, Alice joined the Women's Social and Political Union. She met this mother and daughter, who inspired Alice tremendously.

 Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst

300

These two women worked for the 19th Amendment, but they didn’t agree on how to do it. One wanted to focus nationally, and the other wanted to go state by state.


Alice Paul and Carrie Chapman Catt

300

These women stood outside the White House for years, holding signs in the freezing cold to fight for women’s right to vote.

Silent Sentinels 

300

The women started this in prison to show resentment toward the inhumane treatment.

Hunger Strike

300

This is why Tennessee State Representative Harry Burn changed his vote in support of women's suffrage.

He received a letter from his mother telling him to support suffrage.

400

While in England, Alice Paul and Lucy Burns learned two new ways to protest from the women's voting group.

 Picketing and hunger strikes

400

The 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession included these items.

Floats, banners, chariots, bands, costumes

400

This explains how people felt about the Silent Sentinels' signs and protests against President Wilson.

Unpatriotic and disruptive

400

These were the tactics that the guards used in response to the women's hunger strikes.

force-fed and a psychiatric ward

400

This amendment gave women the right to vote and said that states could not take away that right based on gender.

19th Amendment

500

When Alice came back to America, she joined NAWSA. She helped set up these outdoor events. 


 Open air events and lectures

500

This is the number of suffragists injured during the 1913 Woman Suffrage Procession.

Over 300

500

This is how many women, including Alice Paul, were arrested and put in jail for protesting outside the White House.

Around 150 women

500

This is what happened when the women gained public sympathy and put pressure on President Wilson.

The release of the Silent Sentinels

500

This was the date for the final ratification of the 19th Amendment, which was passed. (Only need month and year)

August 1920