Morgan, Anita A.Kalvaitis, Jennifer M.Monroe, Elizabeth Brand, 1947-Barrows, Robert G. (Robert Graham), 1946-2013-12-102013-12-102013https://hdl.handle.net/1805/3747http://dx.doi.org/10.7912/C2/175Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)In the fall of 1917, between 30,000 and 40,000 Indianapolis women registered to vote. The passage of the Maston-McKinley partial suffrage bill earlier that year gave women a significantly amplified voice in the public realm. This victory was achieved by a conservative group of Hoosier suffragists and reformers. However, the women lost their right to vote in the fall of 1917 due to two Indiana Supreme Court rulings.en-USWomen's HistorySuffrageIndiana HistoryWomen -- Suffrage -- Indiana -- Indianapolis -- HistoryWomen -- Political activity -- Indiana -- Indianapolis -- HistoryFirst-wave feminism -- Indiana -- Indianapolis -- HistoryVoting -- Indiana -- Indianapolis -- HistoryIndiana -- Politics and government -- HistoryVoter registration -- Indiana -- Indianapolis -- HistoryIndianapolis women working for the right to vote : the forgotten drama of 1917Thesis