- Collection:
- Volunteer Voices
- Title:
- Government by Injunction
- Date of Original:
- 1890/1930
- Subject:
- Civil rights--Tennessee
African Americans
Civil rights movements - Location:
- United States, Tennessee, Davidson County, 36.17069, -86.77753
- Medium:
- editorials
- Type:
- Text
- Format:
- image/jp2
- Description:
- This editorial, from The Woman Citizen, describes the potential for abuse in the use of judicial injunctions. The author, listed only as A.S.B., claims that one "insignificant judge seeks to over-rule the Governor, a majority of the State Legislature and even the Secretary of State of the United States" and states that suffragists are "filled with indignation and disgust."
Women--Suffrage--Tennessee. -- Constitutional amendments--United States--Ratification. -- Injunctions. -- Women's Suffrage and Tennessee's pivotal role in passage of 19th Amendment . -- Women. -- Civil and Human Rights. -- Government and Politics.
The University of Tennessee Libraries (Knoxville, Tennessee) is the digital publisher. - Metadata URL:
- https://digital.lib.utk.edu/collections/islandora/object/volvoices%3A15665
- Language:
- eng
- Original Collection:
- Digital Collection: The Growth of Democracy in Tennessee: A Grassroots Approach to Volunteer Voices
- Contributing Institution:
- University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Special Collections
- Rights:
-