Named by historian Kevin Brownlow as “the first important suffrage film”, this melodrama follows suffragist May Fillmore in her fight to sway Senator Herman, whose vote could pass a key reform bill. After exposing him and his fiancée Jane Wadsworth to the dire living conditions of a motherless tenement family—unsanitary housing, child labor, and workplace exploitation—Jane turns against her negligent fiancé and joins the suffrage cause. Ultimately, both Herman and Jane’s father are persuaded to support reform, and the film ends with the characters proudly taking part in a suffrage parade. (Note: This silent narrative film is distinct from Edison’s Votes for Women (1913), a Kinetophone short that recorded real suffragist leaders delivering speeches.)
Edgena De Lespine
Gertrude Robinson
Sue Balfour
Pearl Egan
Gladys Egan
Charles Herman
Edward P. Sullivan
J.W. Backus
Jane Addams
Frances Maule Bjorkman
Florence Maule Cooley
Mary Ware Dennett
Harriet Laidlaw
Inez Millholland
Harriet May Mills
Mrs. L.H. Ozedam
Anna Howard Shaw
Mary Beard