Green iday no 25h. Bu mns le im the d ie sbad. We o tv. Wer on ap fridayye aoo thksvi di i hun outtiles i cantel t y ytng. Sninstagram. The yo. I labelles house. Whatid you do . 13 of my family members came over. I caninal f host thasgiving beus weinly a dining room table. So, yeah. Thats important. Just ate aat on the co my favitol bwag s been ecsethere n expectations. Like christmas, you are looking for gifts, did i get the wrong thing. My family is ias and because i h toorteay cha that means christmas i have to do a redo thanksgiving. Theres nothing wrong with that. A thanksmas. You are such a big cook but you dont normally cook . I used to. But since we lost my parents and sorry. Thank you very much. The suspense. Back wash. I just a little stuffing. We started going out about five years ago. Chef daniel invited us to his restaurant. Weve eaten there. It is like, wow, im not exhausted after dinner. You cook every day pretty much for your family. Most days for your family. Then to g
National womens party. The National Party was hounded by a woman named alice paul in 1913 as the Congressional Union for womens suffrage. The Congressional Union for womens suffrage became the National Womens party in 1916. This group of women spent seven years actively lobbying the president and congress for a federal suffrage amendment. At which time, once the received the amendment in 1920, they began, they wrote and began lobbying for the equal rights amendment. During the period where they were lottery lobbying for suffrage, they were working all over the country actively garnering support from western women voters and bringing the fight directly to the president s doorstep. They had headquarters over on on Lafayette Square where they could walk out their door and be right at the president s doorstep in a matter of minutes. And they began picketing the white house, one of the first groups to do so, when the United States entered world war i in 1917. At that pit at that time, the p
How they work and how theyre made. I love American History tv. The presidency. American artifacts, fantastic shows. I had no idea they did history. Thats probably something i would really enjoy. And with American History tv, it gives you that perspective. Im a cspan fan. Nina allender was the political cartoonist for the National Womens party from 1914 until 1927, contributing over 150 cartoons supporting the campaign for womens suffrage. Next we visit the National Monument to see her work. My name is Jennifer Krafcik and i am the Deputy Director at the belmont paul National Monument which was formerly the Belmont House and museum on capitol hill in washington, d. C. This house was the fifth and final headquarters of the National Womens party. The National Womens party was founded by a woman named alice paul in 1913, as the Congressional Union for womens suffrage. And the Congressional Union for womens suffrage became the National Womens party in 1916. This group of women spent seven y
But you know, it brings life to these bones. And jason cerf lumen, professor of history at Brigham Young university, talks about 33 mormon families establish the settlement of provo in 1849. This weekend, whats the cspan cities tour of provo, utah, at 2 p. M. , on the cspan cities tour on cspan3. The cspan cities tour, working with our cable affiliates and visiting cities across the country. Announcer Nina Allender was the political cartoonist for the National Womens party from 1914 until 1927, contributing over 150 cartoons supporting the campaign for womens suffrage. Next, we visit the belmont paul National Womens equality monument to see her work. Jennifer my name is jennifer krafchik. I am Deputy Director and director of Strategic Initiatives at the belmont paul womens Equality National ument, which was formally formerly a museum on capitol hill in washington, d. C. This house was the fifth and final headquarters of the National Womens party. The National Party was hounded by a wom
Party in 1916. This group of women spent seven years actively lobbying the president and congress for a federal suffrage amendment. When they received the amendment in 1920, they wrote and began lobbying for the equal rights amendment. When they were lawyering for suffrage, they were working all over the country actively garnering support from western women voters and bringing the fight directly to the president s doorstep. They had headquarters on Lafayette Square where they could all caps edgar and be right at the president s doorstep in a matter of minutes. They began picketing the white house, one of the first groups to do so, when the United States entered world war i in 1917. At that time, it was quite peaceful but they turned ugly when crowds watching the women picket the white house believes there behavior to be unpatriotic, so crowds would throw things at the women, converge on them and tear the banners from their hands. In june of 1917, the women began being arrested on charg