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USE OF TRI-COLORS: BRITISH & AMERICAN
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Broadside
from the British suffrage movement printed in the colors
purple, white, and green.
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A second color theme widely employed in
the American movement was the use of the tricolors purple, white,
and green and, later, the use of purple, white, and gold. Purple,
white, and green originated with the Women's Social and Political
Union in the British suffrage movement to symbolize loyalty,
purity, and hope. The use of these colors was transferred to
the American scene by Harriot Stanton Blatch (daughter of Elizabeth
Cady Stanton) and others returning from their work with Emmeline,
Christabel, and Sylvia Pankhurst, leaders of the militant suffrage
movement in England.
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Suffrage
ribbons from the United States demonstrating the transfer
of the colors purple, white, and green to the American
suffrage movement.
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The use of the colors purple, white, and
green was concentrated primarily in New York, where Blatch set
up her suffrage association, and in the neighboring states of
New Jersey and Connecticut. As these states had strong suffrage
organizations, these colors also became symbolic along with
the more traditional American color, gold. Suffrage parades
and demonstrations in New York often featured the use and intermingling
of both color themes.
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Suffrage
button in purple, white, and green from the American movement.
This button was probably circulated in New York, New Jersey,
or Connecticut, states influenced by Mrs. Blatch's organization.
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In 1913, Alice
Paul and Lucy Burns, who had both demonstrated for suffrage
in Britain, set up the congressional Union in Washington, DC
as a branch of the NAWSA. The group's tactics became so militant,
they parted company with the more conservative NAWSA and formed
the National Women's Party in 1916. So strong was the American
traditional use of gold, it moved the Party to choose purple,
white, and gold for it's official colors, despite the organization's
British antecedents. [9]
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Indeed, so centrally symbolic was gold to
the American suffrage cause, that when passage of the 19th amendment
appeared imminent after so many years of struggle, the women
of the NAWSA ordered a pen specially made for the historic signing
ceremonies in the Senate - a pen of gold. [10]
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Gold
pen used in the suffrage signing ceremony when the Senate
passed the Amendment. The pen is housed in the Women's History
Collections, Political Collections of the Division of Social
History, National Museum of American History, Smithsonian
Institution. |
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