LOCWO2_190619_499
Existing comment:
"The Colored Women of the South Will be Shamefully Treated"

Despite ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment, obstacles to voting remained, especially for African American women. In this October 1920 letter, educator and civil rights activist Mary Church Terrell, one of the founders of the National Association of Colored Women in 1896, declared herself "the first victim" of post-ratification voter suppression "north of the Mason & Dixon Line." She described to NAACP president Moorfield Storey how a train ticket agent sought to arrest her after she inquired about an African American Republican Party organizer in Delaware.
Proposed user comment: