A 100 Year Legacy: The Aftermath of the 19th Amendment
- All levels
- 18 and older
- $15
- 1220 5th Ave , New York, NY
- 90 minutes
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As we approach the 2020 presidential election, questions of access and voter disenfranchisement are rising to the top of conversation. On the cusp of this politically charged moment, we take a look back 100 years to the ratification of the 19th amendment which granted many women the right to vote.
Although its passage was monumental, the law still had profound limitations, particularly for women of color. Historians Ellen Carol Dubois and Allison Lange sit down with writer and cultural critic Tamara Winfrey-Harris for a conversation about the “aftermath” of the 19th Amendment’s ratification, its impact both in New York and nationally, and how it relates to voting practices today.
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The Museum of the City of New York was founded in 1923 by Henry Collins Brown, a Scottish-born writer with a vision for a populist approach to the city. The Museum was originally housed in Gracie Mansion, the future residence of the Mayor of New York. Hardinge Scholle succeeded Henry Brown in 1926 and...
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Museum of the City of New York - Public
East Harlem, Manhattan
1220 5th Ave
Btwn E 103rd & E 104th Streets
New York, New York 10029 East Harlem, Manhattan
1220 5th Ave
Btwn E 103rd & E 104th Streets
New York, New York 10029
By Bus: M1, M2, M3, M4 or M106 to 103rd Street By Subway: #6 to 103rd Street, walk three blocks west; #2 or #3 to Central Park North/110th Street, walk one block east to Fifth Avenue, then south to 103rd Street.
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