55 results

  • Subject is exactly "Progressive Party, platform"
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Lindsey writes Addams that Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Party platform will stand for woman suffrage.
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A call for women workers in the Progressive Party campaign and the suffrage movement.
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The article offers a sharp critique of Theodore Roosevelt and the Progressive Party for failing to endorse rights for African Americans.
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An eight-page pamphlet summarizing Roosevelt's political record on labor.
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A promotional postcard urging women to vote for the Progressive Party because it stands for woman suffrage.
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A postcard summarizing the Progressive Party stand on labor reform.
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A postcard summarizing the Progressive Party stance on establishing minimum wage commissions to ensure that people can earn a living wage.
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Produced to appeal to woman voters, this Progressive Party pamphlet includes Jane Addams' nomination speech, a letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Addams, the party plank on equal suffrage, and the party's plans for democratic rule and social and industrial justice.
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Woods congratulates Addams on her role at the Progressive Party Convention and offers his opinion on the situation of African-Americans and why he feels Theodore Roosevelt has a good solution for their problems.
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Addams seconds the nomination of Theodore Roosevelt as the Progressive Party candidate for the presidency.
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Addams talks to a New York Sun reporter about her decision to support Theodore Roosevelt and the new party in the presidential election.
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Hulet blesses Addams for her work on the Progressive Party Platform.
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Pidgin asks Addams if the new Progressive Party has a stance on Mormon polygamy.
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Roosevelt clarifies that the Progressive Party Platform is strongly in favor on woman suffrage.
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Roosevelt verifies that he and the Progressive Party supports woman suffrage and asks her to make that stance known.
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Addams thanks Roosevelt for his clear statement on woman suffrage.
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Gordon refuses Addams' request to help the Progressive Party, because she believes Theodore Roosevelt in not genuine in his support of woman suffrage.
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The writer criticizes Theodore Roosevelt's platform and admonishes Addams for supporting it.
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McDowell compliments Addams' influence on the Progressive Party platform.
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Meyer writes Addams to share her disapproval of Theodore Roosevelt, whom she believes is an immoral man and the wrong candidate for the betterment of the country.
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Kellor calls for women to join the Progressive Party.
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Addams discusses the process by which the government and politicians have taken up philanthropic work and argues that the Progressive Party is taking on many of the reforms philanthropists have been working on for years.
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Addams discusses the labor situation in Chicago and argues that the Progressive Party will support the work of trade unions. This is one of a series of articles she prepared for the Central Press Association as part of the Progressive Party campaign in 1912.
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Bok informs Addams that she cannot have an article published before the November election, but he would like her to write one essay per month about new issues women are facing for the Ladies' Home Journal.
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Upton is surprised that the leader of the Progressive Party is against suffrage while those who head the Republicans are for it.