Established in 1913, The National Woman’s Party worked tirelessly to secure the vote for American women - which was attained in 1920 with the Nineteenth Amendment. Flush with this victory, the organization pushed for an additional Constitutional amendment, one that would guarantee the equality of the sexes in the eyes of the law:
"The women of the united States
have recently been given the right to vote, but this is only a small part of the equality which still remains to be attained. The Constitution left women in the position in which the old English common law had always placed them-- non-existent as human beings, enslaved as the chattels of men. This condition, with little improvement, exists today in the various states...Having received the assurance of Senator Curtis of Kansas, Republican Whip, that he would present their amendment in the next Congress, a delegation of 200 women went to call on [President Coolidge]."
Pictured above is the party headquarters in Washington, D.C., as it appeared in 1923.