Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 6.djvu/417

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HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

NEW HAMPSHIRE 403 first vote in the Senate on the Federal Suffrage Amendment. Both were lifelong friends of the cause. In 1908 prizes were offered in the State Granges for the best essays in favor of Woman Suffrage and excellent ones were sent in. A lecture bureau had been organized and eighteen men and women were speaking at public meetings. On October 23 Mrs. Alary Hutchinson Page of Boston addressed a meeting at the home of Agnes M. (Mrs. Barton P.) Jenks, president of the Concord society. The State convention was held in Portsmouth November n, 12, where Dr. Shaw as usual made the principal address and Miss Aina Johanssen, a visitor from Finland, gave an interesting account of woman suffrage there. By 1909 there was considerable advance in favorable sentiment and people of influence were seeing the justice of the cause. Governor Henry B. Quinby and his wife gave their support. The Rev. Henry G. Ives (Unitarian) of Andover and his wife were strong advocates. Intensive work had been done in the 275 Granges, their State lecturer sending out instructions to discuss woman suffrage at April meetings. Fifty-four Grange essays were submitted for the prizes by the State association. Resolu- tions in favor of woman suffrage were passed by the State Woman's Christian Temperance Union and! the Universalist State Convention. The annual convention was held in Manches- ter November 1 1 , addressed by Mrs. Fernald and the Rev. Ida C. Hultin (Unitarian), Sudbury, Mass. In February, 1910, Miss Ethel M. Arnold of England lectured for the Concord society in the Parish House (Episcopalian). The annual meeting was held in the Free Baptist Church at

klin November 15, 16. Among the speakers was the Rev.

Florence Kollock Crooker (Universalist) of Roslindale, Mass. Mi>s Chase had given addresses in thirty-one towns and cities and organized nine new committees. In 1911 an attractive booth at the Rochester Agricultural fair, made possible by Miss Martha S. Kimball of Portsmouth, drew ds and 10,000 leaflets were distributed and hundreds of buttons and pennants sold. The l ; ree Baptist convention passed a resolution favoring suffrage. Mrs. Jenks attended the congress of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance at Stockholm,