Skip to main content

Announcement Bar

Register now for a virtual educator workshop on Jan. 14, 2026. Explore strategies to integrate women’s history into lessons. Sign Up
Home National Women's History Museum

Main navigation

  • WOMEN’S HISTORY
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Biographies
      • Oral Histories
      • Oral Histories
    • Articles
    • Resources
      • Women on the Web: Links and Resources
      • Women on the Web: Links and Resources
    • Women's History Month
    • Chronicles of American Women: Your History Makers
    • Women Writing History: A Coronavirus Journaling Project
  • EXHIBITIONS
    • We Who Believe in Freedom: Black Feminist DC
    • Online Exhibitions
  • Students & Educators
    • Virtual Field Trips
    • Crusade for the Vote
      • Suffragist Biographies
      • Suffragist Biographies
    • Digital Classroom Resources
    • Explore by Topic
    • For Educators, By Educators
    • National History Day
    • Research Resources
    • Where are the Women? Curriculum Study
    • Virtual Workshops for Educators
    • Biographies
      National History Day
  • PUBLIC PROGRAMS & EVENTS
    • Request a Speaker
      • NWHM Speakers Bureau
      • Women's History 101 Virtual Talks
      • NWHM Speakers Bureau
      • Women's History 101 Virtual Talks
    • Events
    • America at 250
    • American Women Quarters™ Program
    • Glass Ceiling Breaker
    • Women Making History Awards
      • Past Honorees
      • Past Honorees
  • ABOUT US
    • Leadership
    • Newsroom
    • Scholars Advisory Council
    • National Coalition
    • History
    • Careers
    • Contact Us
    • Financials & Reports
    • Our Mission
      Supporters and Sponsors
  • SUPPORT US
    • Donate
    • Charter Membership
    • 1920 Society
    • Honor Roll
    • More Ways to Give
    • Email Signup
    • Shop
    • Charter Member Experience
      Shop Now!
SHOP
Donate

Before you go!

Your support helps keep women’s history free and accessible for learners of all ages. Please consider making a donation or find out about other ways you can support our organization.

DONATE MORE WAYS TO SUPPORT US

Timed Engagement

A new For Educators, By Educators lesson plan is out now!

Educator Maggie Dillow created From Letters to Laws: The Power of Friendship in Shaping America’s Legislation, a high school lesson that explores how collaboration and friendship among women influenced social justice and lawmaking in the United States. Through primary source analysis, gallery walks, and civic dialogue, students examine how personal connections can inspire collective action.

START LEARNING

Stay Connected!

Privacy notice: We do not share email addresses.
JOIN
SHOP
Donate

Chester Comix: The Seneca Falls Convention

Full Color
Full Color Comic PDF.pdf3.33 MB

 Check out our lesson plan Seneca Falls and Suffrage: Teaching Women's History with Comics

 

 

 

 

 

You Might Also Like

Biography

Mabel Ping Hua Lee

During the Progressive Era, Lee advocated for women’s voting rights even though discriminatory laws like the Chinese Exclusion Act barred her from voting, exposing systemic inequities in U.S. democracy.
READ MORE
Lesson Plan

From Letters to Laws: The Power of Friendship in Shaping America’s Legislation

Take a closer look at how intersectional identities and collaboration shape social justice movements.
READ MORE
Lesson Plan

We Are Still Here: Indigenous Women Resistance and Resilience in the American Present

Students will learn how Indigenous Women forged Indigenous Rights in America today and how Indigenous identity may be defined by their Civil Rights.
READ MORE
Biography

Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Author, lecturer, and chief philosopher of the woman’s rights and suffrage movements.
READ MORE
.
nwhm logo®

SUPPORT US

DONATE

STAY IN TOUCH

We’ll never share your email with anyone else
Terms of Use Privacy Policy
              GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY Supported by P.W.C.