Mary Winsor | 1917 | Suffragist | Print for 8"x10" Frame

$35.00

Mary Winsor of Pennsylvania was a Quaker and a prominent suffragist who founded the Limited Suffrage Society. Educated at Drexel Institute, she was arrested in 1917 while picketing at the White House as she stood silently with a protest banner. Sentenced to 60 days in the Occoquan Workhouse, she and her fellow suffragists fiercely protested the brutal and dehumanizing conditions from within their jail cells.

Printed on acid-free archival paper, black mat board, ready for 8”x10” frame (frame not included)

Ell McEvory

Artist Statement

The Rise of the Divine Feminine Collection

 Between 1917 and 1920, the suffragists rose up in an act of powerful defiance, embodying the divine feminine—a courageous energy of creation and change. Now, in 2025, it's time for us to rise again. We face new injustices that threaten the lives of our brown, Black, and LGBTQ neighbors. We had heroines—women just like us. This collection, The Rise of the Divine Feminine, serves as a tribute to these heroines and a reminder that the fight for freedom and equality is paved by those who dare to stand up.

Mary Winsor of Pennsylvania was a Quaker and a prominent suffragist who founded the Limited Suffrage Society. Educated at Drexel Institute, she was arrested in 1917 while picketing at the White House as she stood silently with a protest banner. Sentenced to 60 days in the Occoquan Workhouse, she and her fellow suffragists fiercely protested the brutal and dehumanizing conditions from within their jail cells.

Printed on acid-free archival paper, black mat board, ready for 8”x10” frame (frame not included)

Ell McEvory

Artist Statement

The Rise of the Divine Feminine Collection

 Between 1917 and 1920, the suffragists rose up in an act of powerful defiance, embodying the divine feminine—a courageous energy of creation and change. Now, in 2025, it's time for us to rise again. We face new injustices that threaten the lives of our brown, Black, and LGBTQ neighbors. We had heroines—women just like us. This collection, The Rise of the Divine Feminine, serves as a tribute to these heroines and a reminder that the fight for freedom and equality is paved by those who dare to stand up.

Records of the National Woman's Party

Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C.

ID: hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mnwp.160035