After graduating from Oberlin College in 1911, Doris Stevens joined Alice Paul at NAWSA’s Congressional Committee, later becoming a leader in the National Woman’s Party. Her 1920 book Jailed for Freedom, chronicling the White House protests of the “silent sentinels” and their arrests, harsh sentences, and abuse in prison, provides a vivid counterpoint to NAWSA’s History of Woman Suffrage. Stevens married Wilson administration official Dudley Field Malone in 1921; they divorced in 1929.

Source photograph: Library of Congress. Library of Congress Manuscript Division, National Woman’s Party Records.

Date: c. 1919

After graduating from Oberlin College in 1911, Doris Stevens joined Alice Paul at NAWSA’s Congressional Committee, later becoming a leader in the National Woman’s Party. Her 1920 book Jailed for Freedom, chronicling the White House protests of the “silent sentinels” and their arrests, harsh sentences, and abuse in prison, provides a vivid counterpoint to NAWSA’s History of Woman Suffrage. Stevens married Wilson administration official Dudley Field Malone in 1921; they divorced in 1929.

Source photograph: Library of Congress. Library of Congress Manuscript Division, National Woman’s Party Records.

Date: c. 1919

To view and download the images without a watermark, enter the password provided with your copy of Woodrow Wilson: The Light Withdrawn. In the print and ebook editions, the password appears beneath the QR code on the first page of the Notes (p. 501 in the print edition). In the audiobook, the password is provided in the Opening Credits.

The watermark doesn't bother me. Don't show this message again.

Buy the Book