This wooden ballot box was used in Piscataway, New Jersey. There are three key holes at the top as well as a small hole for paper to be slipped in. Ballot boxes like this one were often found around different local establishments as there were no…
This photograph depicts the Black abolitionist, activist and educator Charles H. Thompson while at Oberlin College. Black suffragist Mary Church Terrell, co-founder of the National Association of Colored Women, graduated from Oberlin too. Both…
This flag contains 26 stars circling an image of 1844 Whig party presidential candidate, Henry Clay. Presidential campaign flags were popular in the nineteenth and early-twentieth century and were often designed to look like the American flag. Clay…
New Jersey’s first published cookbook, Economical Cookery: Designed to Assist the Housekeeper in Retrenching Her Expenses, by the Exclusion of Spiritous Liquors from Her Cookery (ca. 1839), was written by an anonymous author who urged women to take…
The race for Democratic Party nomination of New Jersey governor election heated up in 1989 when Assemblyman Alan J. Karcher devised a creative marketing plan. He custom-made and mailed fake cereal boxes called “Florio's, the Breakfast of Special…
As important as the 15th and 19th Amendments were to expanding suffrage, formal discrimination concerning who could become a citizen and vote remained a feature of American law until 1952. That year, Congress passed the Immigration and Nationality…
The fight for women’s suffrage engaged women from all walks of life. Sarah Evans Selover, a local physician, was one of the leaders of South River’s Equal Suffrage League. While many affluent women were often involved in suffrage groups, working…
This letter from New Jersey Woman Suffrage Association (NJWSA) President Lillian Feickert to the organization's Vice President Florence P. Eagleton shows that New Jersey women were astute lobbyists during the suffrage campaign. In September 1918, the…
Somerset Messenger advertisement for a November 2, 1864 talk by prominent New Jersey Democrat Benjamin Williamson. This event was presented by the Bridgewater Club, one of many social clubs in the state that flourished as a space for political…
A sash, a long piece of fabric that drapes from one shoulder to the opposing hip, was the accessory of choice of women in suffrage movement. It enhanced the femininity of women activists and served to reassure detractors and critics who expressed…
The women’s suffrage movement needed support from different groups in order to achieve its goal. This broadside published by the New Jersey Woman Suffrage Association during the campaign for a state suffrage amendment in October 1915, expresses…
This small paper New Jersey Democratic ticket from the 1839 election shows the slate of candidates and the different offices in which the Democratic party was contesting. Tickets like this one listed the candidates endorsed by the party and since…
The limited voting rights New Jersey women had been granted in the state’s 1776 constitution were revoked by the State legislators in 1807. The subsequent campaign for women’s suffrage in New Jersey was long and unsuccessful until the ratification of…
Much like political buttons, political bumper stickers are used to show support for a candidate or movement. Political bumper stickers date back to the 1950s. Futher reading about bumper stickers. Questions to consider: Do you believe that the rise…
Political buttons and pins have a long history of use, with pins being worn by supporters of George Washington. Buttons can show support for a candidate or a movement. The mass production of buttons and pins began in 1896 with the patenting of…
These paper "party glasses" were a promotional tool created by the Richard Nixon campaign for the 1968 U.S. presidential election. They were found in the papers of former New Jersey Congressman Rush Holt.
Shirley Chisholm was the first African American woman elected to the United States Congress. In 1972, Chisholm became the first African American candidate for a major party's nomination for President of the United States, and the first woman to run…
The New Jersey Woman Suffrage Association ingratiate itself with politicians and citizens alike by actively supporting the troops during the First World War. In October 1917, the organization began its major war-related project, a soldiers' club at…
In the October 1838 congressional elections, the New Jersey Governor and his Privy Council (the equivalent to a modern cabinet) had the obligation of totaling the votes received from the county clerks and issuing certificates stamped with the “broad…
In early 20th century, different women’s groups in support of suffrage competed for membership. This broadside calls for women to join the Women’s Political Union, founded by Harriot Stanton Blatch, daughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Blatch extended…
This broadside published by the Women's Political Union of New Jersey gives ten reasons why women should vote equally with men. It appeared in conjunction with the 1915 referendum on the state women's suffrage amendment. The Newark-based Women's…
As the tension in the United States grew prior to the Civil War, the Democratic Party began to split. This 1860 broadside is an invitation for the Hightstown Zouaves Parade as well as "some good Democratic Talk." It is believed that the term "green"…
Program for the Women's Political Union’s Votes for Women Ball held at the Palace Hall Room in Newark, New Jersey, on November 30, 1914. For more information about the Women's Political Union, please see "The Woman's Reason" broadside in this…