8
8.0
Aug 25, 2024
08/24
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CSPAN3
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eye 8
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we are in the women's hallway of the laramie plains museum in the evanston mansion in. this hallway we begin to tell you the story of why wyoming was so granting women this right to vote, hold property and. our elected office, december 10th of 1869, our wyoming legislature dictate it this and it was signed by governor granting women this really so remarkable that we have a copy of this they have it at the capitol but we have this copy that is so extraordinary. see that writing that fanciful writing said what was happening in the west because of this act december 10th 1869. giving women full rights alongside men. we the first woman voter in the world, louisa gardiner swain. we had the first woman bailiff, martha simon's boys. we had the first women on a jury we had all of wyoming's women able to be in the legislature. this was mary gadot bellamy. we had esther hobart, morris, who was the first woman justice of the peace out of south pass city. we had nellie tayloe ross first woman governor in the world. all of these were the fallout from beautiful suffrage act december 1
we are in the women's hallway of the laramie plains museum in the evanston mansion in. this hallway we begin to tell you the story of why wyoming was so granting women this right to vote, hold property and. our elected office, december 10th of 1869, our wyoming legislature dictate it this and it was signed by governor granting women this really so remarkable that we have a copy of this they have it at the capitol but we have this copy that is so extraordinary. see that writing that fanciful...
14
14
Aug 26, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 14
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by the police foundation, which is solely responsible for its we are in the women's hallway of the laramie plains museum in the evanston mansion in. this hallway we begin to tell you the
by the police foundation, which is solely responsible for its we are in the women's hallway of the laramie plains museum in the evanston mansion in. this hallway we begin to tell you the
13
13
Aug 25, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
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eye 13
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where the shoshone and crow are fighting with the lakota, and they're all expected to show up in fort laramie in 1851 and negotiate a diplomatic accord together. together. and they're very reluctant to do so because their concerns are more with one another than with the federal government. and so that kind of intertribal diversity was is present now. and it was present 50 years ago, was present 20 years ago as president, thousand years ago. so, like, you know, this kind of diversity is essential if one wants to make sense of the subject, which i think we all and some level are all kind of aspiring to do. one has to begin by recognizing the diversity of this kind of subject matter and so this book, for me in some ways came out of conversations with with the tribes tribal preservation officer, because my first book, my dissertation book, was on sort of early america, and we both come out of early american historiography and copper's feature largely in there. and i you're starting to learn from the past as they also used my book and got to i got to know some people there. but what he and other c
where the shoshone and crow are fighting with the lakota, and they're all expected to show up in fort laramie in 1851 and negotiate a diplomatic accord together. together. and they're very reluctant to do so because their concerns are more with one another than with the federal government. and so that kind of intertribal diversity was is present now. and it was present 50 years ago, was present 20 years ago as president, thousand years ago. so, like, you know, this kind of diversity is...
44
44
Aug 8, 2024
08/24
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CSPAN
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eye 44
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caller: doug in laramie, wyoming. independent, good morning. caller: good morning. i'd like to vote for chase oliver because he's the only presidential candidate likely to reduce the growth and size of the u.s. federal government, the world's largest employer. but chase oliver favors open borders about them which i'm very doubtful. i'd like to vote for robert kennedy because i think he gave the most well reasoned arguments , but given a choice between kamala harris i would vote for trump chiefly because his policies would be better for our economy and our national defense and international relations. but i doubt that he will win. host: why do you think he is not in a win? caller: because he is a white man and harris is a multiracial woman and a great many voters judge candidates by their outward appearance. host: so you see her race as an advantage in the election? caller: for her, yes i think so. host: all right. kiara in spartanburg, south carolina, a democrat. caller: hello, how are you doing. i want to call the man from arkansas a couple of calls back. what blac
caller: doug in laramie, wyoming. independent, good morning. caller: good morning. i'd like to vote for chase oliver because he's the only presidential candidate likely to reduce the growth and size of the u.s. federal government, the world's largest employer. but chase oliver favors open borders about them which i'm very doubtful. i'd like to vote for robert kennedy because i think he gave the most well reasoned arguments , but given a choice between kamala harris i would vote for trump...
18
18
Aug 24, 2024
08/24
by
CSPAN2
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eye 18
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where the shoshone and crow are fighting with the lakota, and they're all expected to show up in fort laramie in 1851 and negotiate a diplomatic accord together. together. and they're very reluctant to do so because their concerns are more with one another than with the federal government. and so that kind of intertribal diversity was is present now. and it was present 50 years ago, was present 20 years ago as president, thousand years ago. so, like, you know, this kind of diversity is essential if one wants to make sense of the subject, which i think we all and some level are all kind of aspiring to do. one has to begin by recognizing the diversity of this kind of subject matter and so this book, for me in some ways came out of conversations with with the tribes tribal preservation officer, because my first book, my dissertation book, was on sort of early america, and we both come out of early american historiography and copper's feature largely in there. and i you're starting to learn from the past as they also used my book and got to i got to know some people there. but what he and other c
where the shoshone and crow are fighting with the lakota, and they're all expected to show up in fort laramie in 1851 and negotiate a diplomatic accord together. together. and they're very reluctant to do so because their concerns are more with one another than with the federal government. and so that kind of intertribal diversity was is present now. and it was present 50 years ago, was present 20 years ago as president, thousand years ago. so, like, you know, this kind of diversity is...