Date/Time
Date(s) - November 12, 2020
6:00 pm - 7:00 pm
From 1776 to 1807, New Jersey allowed “inhabitants” with sufficient money to vote, regardless of citizenship, sex, or race. This virtual talk – held on Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s 105th birthday – will examine how historical memory of those years, when women in the state could vote, was transmitted across generations, embraced by a women’s rights movement, and incorporated into a political culture shared by the state’s suffragists. (This program was rescheduled from March 12.)
Free. Click here to register.
Co-sponsored by the Princeton Public Library.
