Johanna, from the site you linked:
Belva Ann Lockwood also ran for U.S. president on the Equal Rights Party ticket, in 1884 and 1888.
Which makes your statement false by four years. But, other than that…
I got nothin’. Sorry.
Johanna, from the site you linked:
Belva Ann Lockwood also ran for U.S. president on the Equal Rights Party ticket, in 1884 and 1888.
Which makes your statement false by four years. But, other than that…
I got nothin’. Sorry.
I meant 1888, having quickly glanced at both dates, my brain expelled the earlier one for no known reason.
The real date that caught my imagination was 1893, the year that Colorado women got the vote, and the year that John Bell of the Colorado Populist Party took his seat in the House. I wondered about women’s participation in his election and term of office, since it seemed likely that Colorado women would be drawn to the Populist Party, and I’d like to know how much Bell supported woman suffrage in Colorado and then nationally. There were woman suffrage bills being introduced practically every year in those days, and getting nowhere…
And as a trusted media personality, would be helpful in rounding up men to serve in their underground sex caves.