LIBRARY OF CONGRESS INDEX TO CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT DOCUMENTS
Washington, D.C. Library of Congress Photoduplication
Service, 1978.
Location: PARKS LIBRARY Microforms Center
Call Number: HQ1413.C3 A3 1978
The first reel of this collection contains a more in-depth index of the non-speech and non-article document files.
Containers 1-3
Diaries, 1911-23. Typescript account in diary form of Mrs. Catt's
travels,
chronologically arranged. Includes duplicates.
Containers 4-9
General Correspondence, ca. 1890-1947. 6 containers.
Letters received and copies of letters sent, alphabetically arranged.
SPEECH AND ARTICLE FILE, 1892-1945
Container 10
Speeches:
"An Appeal for Liberty," 1915
"Be Joyful Today," Feb. 13, 1920
"A Call for Action," Apr. 13, 1921, and Mar. 25, 1943
"The Case for Woman Suffrage," undated
"The Enfranchisement of Women," undated
"Feminism," undated
"Gaps in the Machinery of Peace," Mar. 1, 1930
"Honor to Whom Honor is Due," radio address by Mrs. Herbert E. Ottenheimer,
Dec. 10, 1933, concerning Mrs. Catt
"The Hope of the Founders," Mar. 26 [no year]
"Is Our Foreign Policy at Fault?" Apr. 23, 1927
"The League of Women Voters," undated
"Looking Forward," undated
"Men, Women, and War," Apr. 1925
"A Message to the Home," undated
The Nation Calls: An Address to the Jubilee Convention of the National
American Woman
Suffrage Association ([New York, National
Woman Suffrage Pub. Co.] 1919. 23 p.)
"Nazis and Nazism," Mar. 30, 1938
"Neutrality," Nov. 11 [1935]
"On the Inside," Feb. 14, 1920
"Partisans or Non-Partisans," Jan. 1921
"Peace or War -- What Shall We Do ABout It?" [1923?]
"Political Parties and Women Voters," Feb. 14, 1920
"Poverty After War," undated
"The Price of peace," Feb. 14, 1935
"Scattered THoughts About After-War Reconstruction," undated
"Ten Suggestions to Young Workers for Peace," undated
"Then . . . and Now," Jan. 9, 1939
"They Shall Not Pass," undated {fragment)
"This Changing World," Dec. 3, 1930
"The Traffic in Women," 1899
"The Vote as a Safeguard of Democracy," May 1936
"War or Peace," Nov. 10, 1923
"What Have Women Done With the Suffrage?" undated
"What Is the Monroe Doctrine?" Jan. 1929 (reprinted from the Woman's
Journal, Mar. 1929)
"What Shall We Do About War?" Dec. 8, 1936
"Who Won Suffrage?" undated
"Woman Suffrage as a War Measure" [1918]
"Woman Suffrage Now Will Stimulate Patriotism," undated
"The Woman's Century, 1820-1920," June 9, 1936
"Women Voters at the Crossroads" [1919]
Untitled
1892 through 1933
Container 11
Speeches:
1934 through 1944
Fragments (4 folders)
Lists of
Notes for (2 folders)
Notes and quotations for
Container 12
Speeches:
Undated (2 folders)
Lecture notes (2 folders)
Articles:
"Anti-Feminism in South America," Current History Magazine, undated
"Are You a Normal?" [1924]
"Chang Sing--Another True Story," Woman Voter [Jan. 1914]
"College Women as Citizens," The Arrow, June 1922
"A Corset Problem Too?" ca. 1925
"An Eight-Hour Day for the Housewife--Why Not?" Pictorial Review,
Nov. 1928
"Fads and Fancies," Indiana Club Woman, undated
"The First Woman Voter," undated (fragment)
"Fourteen Points," May 8, 1925
Gaps in the Machinery of Peace," Christian Advocate, Nov. 6,
1930
"God and the People" [1915]
"How Far Have We Come in Suffrage?" Union Signal, May 5, 1946
"The Idea and the Hour," Woman's Press, Sept. 1928
"If Not Prohibition, What?" undated
"It Makes Sense," Aug. 25 [1940]
"Looking Forward," General Federation Clubwoman [Jan. 1945]
"More Votes for Women," Woman Voter, ca. 1909
"The Most Interesting Person I Ever Met," 1917
"Mrs. Catt on the Election," New York Times, Nov. 21, 1920
"Observance and Enforcement--Not Repeal," undated
"One Growing Menace" [1925?]
"Our Obvious Duty," Oct. 10, 1935, "for publication in the General
Federation paper"
"Our War Aims Demand a Pledge of Sincerity" [1918]
"The Outlawry of War" (reprinted from the Annals of the American
Academy
of Political and Social Science, June 1928)
"Page Horatio!" May 5, 1924
"The Parting of the Ways" [1903]
"The Present and Future of Disarmament" [1928]
"The Prohibition Referendum," July 26, 1926
"Ready for Citizenship," The Public, Aug. 24, 1917
"Republican Sins vs. Democratic Sins," ca. 1922
"The Right Side,' Oct. 9, 1931
"The States" [1920]
"The Status Today of War vs. Peace," undated
"Suffrage" [1903?]
Container 13
Articles:
"Ten Suggestions to Young workers for Peace" [1930]
"Their First Convention" [1920]
This Troubled World, introduction to, June 6, 1938
"The Three I's" [1924]
"A True Story," undated
"What Next?" [1919]
"What Right Has Woman to be Free From Political Duties?" Sept. 16,
1915
"What The Vote Will Do for the Woman" [1917]
"What Women Have Done With the Vote, The Independent, Oct. 17,
1924
"Whose Government is This?" undated
"Why I have Found Life Worth Living," Christian Century, Mar.
29, 1928
"Why Suffrage Took Fifty Years," Omaha Excelsior [1920]
Why Wars Must Cease, introduction and foreword, 1935
"The Widow's Mite," undated
"Woman Suffrage Only an Episode in Age-Old Movement," Current History
"Woman Suffrage: The First Ten Years," New York Times Magazine,
Aug. 24, 1930
"Women and the Presidency" [1916]
Articles and editorials for the Woman Citizens, 1919-27 (6 folders)
Articles for the Woman's Journal, 1928-30
Untitled, ca. 1927
Untitled and undated (5 folders)
Containers 14-28
Subject File, 1848-1950.
Correspondence, near-print and printed matter, newspaper clippings,
awards, and other
material, alphabetically arranged by subject. Container 18 contains
folders on Inter
American Commission of Women, International Alliance of Women, International
Council
of Women International Women's News, Iowa Suffrage Memorial,
League of Nations,
League of Women Voters, Library of Mrs. Catt, Memorial fund.
Container 19 contains
folders on the National Committee on the Cause and Cure of Wars
Containers 29-31
Miscellany, 3 containers.
Autographs, bookplates, photographs, printed matter, and other material,
alphabetically
arranged by type of materials, with oversize material (photographs
and a drawing) in
container 31.
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