
This series of small panels primarily depicts women with their horses as they worked toward suffrage.
Panels:
The following images and text are found on the wall panels inside the exhibition.

George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.
Madge Udall astride a horse in a Western saddle in the May 3rd, 1913, New York City Suffrage Parade, representing Arizona, which gave women the vote in 1912.

George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C.
Oldest Suffragette Mrs. Rhoda Glover drives her own horse in the May 26, 1913, suffrage pageant and parade from Mineola to Hempstead, Long Island, while a white-clad marcher keeps her hand on the trace for ready assistance.
The horses of these three mounted suffrage parade marshals show bodily needs of their own while they await further parade action: the horse on the left yawns, while the horse on the right urinates.
The final photo is unavailable for viewing, but the caption reads:
White leaders of the women’s suffrage movement campaigning aboard equines in Yosemite in 1895. Susan B. Anthony sits astride a mule in the center. Note that the two women farthest right, Dr. Elizabeth Sargent of San Francisco (on a mule), and Mrs. Fisher of Chicago (on a horse), sit sidesaddle. Panel photo from the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe, reprinted in Cooney, p. 76.