Browse Items (62 total)

  • Collection: Evanston Women and Suffrage

Speech, CM, 181908, EHC 214.1.3.7.pdf
A speech by Catharine Waugh McCulloch delivered before the Michigan Constitutional Convention on January 8, 1908.

Speech, CM, 1907-1913, 59.1.6.2.pdf
Speech given by McCulloch at a ladies' dinner banquet of the Forties Club at the Blackstone Hotel in Chicago. At the time, McCulloch was serving as Evanston's Justice of the Peace.

Portrait, EBH, EHC Electronic Files.jpg
A portrait of Elizabeth Boynton Harbert in her later years.

Portrait 2, EBH, EHC Electronic Files.jpg
Photograph of Elizabeth Boynton Harbert in her later years.

Play, CM, 1911, EHC 59.1.6.6.pdf
McCulloch loosely based this play on the life and experiences of Myra Bradwell, another Evanstonian woman. The play's introduction describes the incident that Mrs. Bradwell faced which portrayed the problems that married women faced regarding their…

Photo, EBH, EHC Electronic Files.jpg
A photograph of Elizabeth Boynton Harbert in her earlier years.

Photo, CM, EHC Electronic Files.jpg
A photograph of Catharine Waugh McCulloch posed inside her home.

Photo, CM Master in Chancery, EHC 59.1.7.3.pdf
A photograph of Catharine Waugh McCulloch and the judge who appointed her Master-in-Chancery. They met in Rome, where this photograph was taken, in 1922.

Photo 2, CM, EHC Electronic Files.jpg
Photograph of Catharine Waugh McCulloch at work in her home.

Pamphlet, CM, January 1909, EHC 214.1.3.2.pdf
In January 1909, women could vote in Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado. McCulloch uses this pamphlet to show that in these states where woman can vote, there are a number of other positive laws in place, such as equal pay for equal work, and a…
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