CSRNYC

Home

CSR Sites, Free Alerts

News December 2007

News November 2007

News October 2007

News September 2007

News April 2007

What Form of CSR Is Best?

Business Case for CSR

EssTee - Thailand

Environmental Strategy

3 Environmental Branding

Business and Ecology

Green Building - NYC

Ethical Base of CSR

Three Types of Ethics

Utilitarianism Today

Ethics in Business School

Finance

SRI

Shareholder Activism

Sharia-Shariat Finance

Human Rights Issues

Votes for Women 1920

Inez:Suffragist 1886-1916

Alice Paul and NWP

Industry Issues

Building and Construction

Food and Beverage Issues

Jewelry, Metals, Mining

Shopping for CSR

Alonovo

Workplace Strategy

4 Workplace Branding

China-Workplace Democracy

SAI 10th Anniv Conf NYC

Turkey

Contact

INEZ MILHOLLAND
 

INEZ MILHOLLAND - Short Bio

Inez Milholland was born in Brooklyn, New York
on 6th August, 1886. She attended Vassar and was suspended after organizing a women's suffrage meeting in a cemetery.

In 1913 Milholland led the women's suffrage demonstration in Washington on a white horse. Wearing white robes, the photograph of Milholland during the parade became one of the most memorable images of the struggle for women's rights in America.


Milholland lived in Greenwich Village and was associated with a group of socialists involved in the production of The Masses journal. This included Max Eastman, John Reed, Crystal Eastman, Inez Milholland, Louis Untermeyer, Randolf Bourne, Dorothy Day, Mabel Dodge, Floyd Dell and Louise Bryant.

Like most of the people involved with The Masses, Milholland was opposed to America's involvement in the First World War. In December, 1915, Milholland and other pacifists travelled on Henry Ford's Peace Ship to Europe.

On her return to the United States she became one of the leaders of the Congressional Union for Women Suffrage. The movement's most popular orator, Milholland was in demand as a speaker at public meetings all over the United States. Milholland, who suffered from pernicious anemia, and was warned by her doctor of the dangers of vigorous campaigning. However, she refused to heed this advice and on 22nd October, 1916, she collapsed in the middle of a speech in Los Angeles. She was rushed to hospital but despite repeated blood transfusions she died on 25th November, 1916.

 

 

 

New content (c) 2007 by CSRNYC. This site is managed by John Tepper Marlin, CityEconomist.

Website powered by Network Solutions®

CSR News, Ideas, History, Comments