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Suffrage History Honored in Shrine Show DVD

The 2010 November election, the Day of the Dead, and the 90th anniversary of U.S. women voting all converge with a shrine on display in the “Silver City Day of the Dead Shrine Show” now underway in Silver City, New Mexico. The exhibit, spread throughout Silver City in 14 businesses and galleries, showcases the shrines of 21 artists. The show runs through November 14, 2010.

“Five Generations and the Million Dollar Wagon” is an example of a contemporary shrine in the form of a 19-minute documentary honoring a New Mexico woman’s grandmother who campaigned  for woman’s suffrage in New York State. This shrine also acknowledges the thousands of American women who campaigned for the vote over more than a 70-year period, an effort which was launched in 1848 with the woman’s rights convention held in Seneca Falls, New York. The woman’s suffrage movement focused on state by state campaigns for many years before it became clear that only a national amendment would extend the franchise to women throughout the nation.

“Five Generations and the Million Dollar Wagon” highlights one woman’s journey to find out about her suffragist grandmother who died many years before she was born. The narrative by Marguerite Kearns focuses on a horse-drawn suffrage campaign wagon which her grandmother, Edna Kearns, used to campaign from town to town on Long Island when barnstorming for Votes for Women. The wagon, called the “Spirit of 1776,” not only energized the suffrage movement, but it had a profound impact on five generations in one family. The old wagon has been exhibited at the New York State Museum, and it is considered a prime artifact of the woman’s suffrage movement. The fifth generation in the extended Kearns family is represented by two boys living in New Mexico under the age of twelve who are now learning about their great-great grandmother and an important part of the nation’s history.

Marguerite Kearns says she made a short documentary in order to use a personal story to bring the suffrage movement to life. “The first time I heard about woman’s suffrage in school was when my eighth grade social studies teacher announced one day: ‘And then in 1920, women were given the vote.’ I sat up in my seat. That’s not how I heard the story. My mother told me women struggled for and earned the vote. It wasn’t handed to them. The issue became a hot potato when activist Alice Paul and other American women –including my grandmother– picketed the White House. Many even went to jail.

“Many people aren’t aware of the woman’s suffrage movement at all,” Kearns continued. “When they finally learn about it, their attitude about voting is shaken to its core. Voting is no longer something to be taken for granted.”

A preview of “Five Generations and the Million Dollar Wagon” is available online at: www.suffragewagon.org Marguerite Kearns writes a blog about the suffrage movement: www.suffragewagon.wordpress.com

“Five Generations and the Million Dollar Wagon” is exhibited at Artesanos Gallery, 211-B North Texas Street in Silver City through November 14th. A map is available identifying all of  the shrine locations.

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