banaszak: yeah. well, so, one legacy of the 19th amendment for african-american women as they still had the right to vote, so you see white women saying, we are done, we have the vote, now we are going to focus on other issues, but for african-american women, that was not true. so for the 1930's, 1940's, and 1950's, african-american women are still fighting for the right to vote, and many of them had been active in the women's suffrage movement, ida b wells. i was talking with a colleague before we came here about local women in pennsylvania, and one of the things we tend to focus on are people fighting for the right to vote. there was daisy elizabeth adams lampkin, who joined the new negro women's equal franchise federation, continued to fight for the right to vote through the 1920's, the 1930's, and the 1940's, all the way into the modern civil rights movement. and all around the country, there are stories like that of women who really have not seen, been recognized in our history books because the