Browse Items (62 total)

  • Collection: Evanston Women and Suffrage

Pamphlet, CM, 3271907, EHC 59.1.6.3.pdf
Elected by an all-male electorate in Evanston, McCulloch became one of the first, if not the first, female Justice of the Peace in the country in 1907. She conducted court in her own home, and she was reelected, serving until 1913. In this pamphlet,…

Thesis, CM, 1888, EHC 59.1.6.4.pdf
McCulloch's Master's thesis entitled "Woman's Wages." Outlines the excuses for wage inequality between men and women, the real reasons for wage inequality, and the solutions, the last of which is the right to vote.

Suffrage Amendment Alliance Women Suffrage Coll 214 Folder 7 edited.jpg
An article about the Evanston and Chicago women who argued for a women's suffrage amendment before the Illinois senate, and the amendment's passage in the senate.

The Other Side Women Suffrage Coll 214 Folder 4 edited.jpg
A letter to the editor objecting to the contents of an editorial on the "suffragette question."

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.

Solicitation info Women Suffrage Coll 214 Folder 3 edited.jpg
A solicitation of household members' opinions on the extension of women's suffrage.

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.

Pamphlet, CM, 1913-14, EHC 214.1.3.4.pdf
In this pamphlet, McCulloch discusses the laws that have led to some degree of women's suffrage in Illinois, and she also discusses what remains in terms of women gaining full suffrage in the state.

CWM undated Photo Coll McCulloch family Folder 2.jpg
A photograph of Catharine Waugh McCulloch.
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