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Suffragist Behind Bars

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Harris & Ewing, Inc.

Suffragist Behind Bars (Washington, DC, 1917)

Fighting for a woman's right to vote, activist Lucy Burns spent more time in jail than any other suffragist in the U.S. She was picketing the White House when the police arrested her and other protestors and took them to the Occoquan Workhouse prison. She was one of 32 women brutalized in the Night of Terror. The suffragists went on a hunger strike. Burns was violently force fed, generating bad press about this treatment. Despite her many prison stays, Burns, along with fellow suffragist Alice Paul, organized and fought hard for the vote, paving the way for women's enfranchisement. Now, on the former site of the Occuquan prison stands the Lucy Burns Museum. The photo was taken by the DC-based Harris & Ewing, Inc., one of the largest photography studios of its era.

Certificate of Authenticity attached as secondary image.

Digital Inkjet Photograph, printed 2020
Lexjet Premium Pro Archival Fine Art paper
Sheet size: 11 x 14 inches (unframed)


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