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= Silent Sentinels (Women's Suffrage and the NWP) =

Book Publications
Basch, F. (2003). Women's Rights and Suffrage In The United States, 1848–1920. Political and Historical Encyclopedia of Women, 443.

Boyle-Baise, M., & Zevin, J. (2013). FOUR History Mystery: Rediscovering our Past. In Young Citizens of the World (pp. 95-118). Routledge.

Bozonelis, H. K. (2008). A Look at the Nineteenth Amendment: Women Win the Right to Vote. Enslow Publishers, Inc..

Cahill, B. (2015). Alice Paul, the National Woman's Party and the Vote: The First Civil Rights Struggle of the 20th Century. McFarland.

Crocker, R. (2012). Belinda a. Stillion Southard. Militant Citizenship: Rhetorical Strategies of the National Woman's Party, 1913–1920.(Presidential Rhetoric Series, number 21.) College Station: Texas A&M University Press. 2011

DuBois, E. C. (1999). Feminism and suffrage: The emergence of an independent women's movement in America, 1848-1869. Cornell University Press.

Durnford, S. L. (2005). " We shall fight for the things we have always held nearest our hearts": Rhetorical strategies in the US woman suffrage movement.

Florey, K. (2013). Women’s Suffrage Memorabilia: An Illustrated Historical Study. McFarland.

Gibson, K. L., & Heyse, A. L. (2011). When the woman suffragettes of the National Woman’s Party (NWP) picketed the White House from 1917 to 1919, they carried ban-ners that asked President Woodrow Wilson what he would do to support women’s democratic rights and if he would endorse their push for suffrage. Silencing the Opposition: Ho w the US Government Suppressed Freedom of Expression During Major Crises, 151.

Grant, N. P. C. (1914). Women’s Rights: The Struggle Continues (Doctoral dissertation, SUNY New Paltz).

Gray, S. (2012). Silent Citizenship in Democratic Theory and Practice: The Problems and Power of Silence in Democracy.

Gray, S. W. (2014). On the Problems and Power of Silence in Democratic Theory and Practice.

Horning, N. (2018). The Women’s Movement and the Rise of Feminism. Greenhaven Publishing LLC.

Nord, Jason. (2015). The Silent Sentinels (Liberty and Justice). Equality Press.

Marsico, Katie. Women's right to vote : America's suffrage movement. New York : Marshall Cavendish Benchmark, 2011.

Mountjoy, S., & McNeese, T. (2007). The Women's Rights Movement: Moving Toward Equality. Infobase Publishing.

Roberts, E. L. (2000). Free Speech, Free Press, Free Society. Unfettered Expression: Freedom in American Intellectual Life.

Slagell, A. R. (2013). Militant Citizenship: Rhetorical Strategies of the National Woman's Party, 1913-1920

Walton, Mary. (2010). A Women's Crusade: Alice Paul and the Battle for the Ballot. St. Martin's Press.

Wood, S. V. (1998). Jailed for Freedom: American Women Win the Vote.

Journal Publications
Bosmajian, H. A. (1974). The abrogation of the suffragists' first amendment rights. Western Speech, 38(4), 218-232.

Callaway, H. (1986). Survival and support: Women’s forms of political action. In Caught up in Conflict (pp. 214-230). Palgrave, London.

Carr, J. (2016). Making Noise, Making News: Suffrage Print Culture and US Modernism by Mary Chapman. American Periodicals: A Journal of History & Criticism, 26(1), 108-111.

Casey, P. F. (1995). Final Battle, The. Tenn. BJ, 31, 20.

Chapman, M. (2006). “Are Women People?”: Alice Duer Miller’s Poetry and Politics. American Literary History, 18(1), 59-85.

Collins, K. A. (2012). Representing Injustice: Justice as an Icon of Woman Suffrage. Yale JL & Human., 24, 191.

Costain, A. N., & Costain, W. D. (2017). Protest Events and Direct Action. The Oxford Handbook of US Women's Social Movement Activism, 398.

Dolton, P. F. (2015). The Alert Collector: Women's Suffrage Movement. Reference & User Services Quarterly, 54(2), 31-36.

Kelly, K. F. (2011). Performing prison: Dress, modernity, and the radical suffrage body. Fashion Theory, 15(3), 299-321.

Kenneally, J. J. (2017). " I Want to Go to Jail": The Woman's Party Reception for President Wilson in Boston, 1919. Historical Journal of Massachusetts, 45(1), 102.

McMahon, L. (2016). A Woman's Crusade: Alice Paul and the Battle for the Ballot. New Jersey Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2(1), 243-245.

Neuman, J. (2017). The Faux Debate in North American Suffrage History. Women's History Review, 26(6), 1013-1020.

Noble, G. (2012). The rise and fall of the Equal Rights Amendment. History Review, (72), 30.

Palczewski, C. H. (2016). The 1919 Prison Special: Constituting white women's citizenship. Quarterly Journal of Speech, 102(2), 107-132.

Southard, B. A. S. (2007). Militancy, power, and identity: The Silent Sentinels as women fighting for political voice. Rhetoric and Public Affairs, 399-417.

Stillion Southard, B. A. (2008). The National Woman's Party's Militant Campaign for Woman Suffrage: Asserting Citizenship Rights through Political Mimesis (Doctoral dissertation)

Ware, S. (2012). The Book I Couldn't Write: Alice Paul and the Challenge of Feminist Biography. Journal of Women's History, 24(2), 13-36.

Ziebarth, M. (1971). MHS Collections: Woman's Rights Movement. Minnesota History, 42(6), 225-230.

Websites
Becoming a Detective: Historical Case File #3—Silent Sentinels:

Bryn Mawr on the Picket Lines - The Radicals and Activists:

Historical Overview of the National Woman's Party:

National Woman's Party Protest During World War I-

100 Years Ago, A Different March For Women's Rights

Picketing and Protest: Testing the First Amendment:

Suffrage Voiceless Speeches-

The Silent Sentinels (Boundary Stones):

Videos and Multimedia
Footage from 1913 Women's Suffrage Parade March- "Silent Sentinel" (2017) Video:

"Silent Sentinels Picket for Women's Suffrage" (1917-1919) Videos:

Women of Protest: Photographs from the Records of the National Woman's Party-