Historic marker program celebrates local suffragist Alice Scott Abbott

A dedication ceremony to unveil the marker will take place at 11 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 27, at Espanola Cemetery.


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  • | 4:50 a.m. June 8, 2022
 Road to the 19th Amendment marker installed at Alice Scott Abbott's Final Resting Place, Espanola Cemetery, May 4, 2022. Photo by Ed Siarkowicz.
Road to the 19th Amendment marker installed at Alice Scott Abbott's Final Resting Place, Espanola Cemetery, May 4, 2022. Photo by Ed Siarkowicz.
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from: AAUW Flagler County Branch

To celebrate the centennial of the passing of the 19th Amendment, the National Collaborative for Women’s History Sites and the William G. Pomeroy Foundation have partnered to launch a new historic marker program commemorating the history of women’s suffrage in the United States.

American Association of University Women Flagler County Branch spearheaded efforts to have local suffragist Alice Scott Abbott added to the digital map for the National Votes for Women Trail, the Florida Women’s Hall of Fame, and have  Abbott’s final resting place recognized and honored with a commemorative marker by the William G. Pomeroy Foundation. AAUW Flagler and the Flagler County Historical Society will host a dedication ceremony to unveil the marker at 11 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 27, 2022 at Espanola Cemetery, 3570 CR 205, Bunnell, Florida. A reception beginning at noon will follow the dedication, at the Holden House Museum, 204 E. Moody Blvd., Bunnell.

In addition to honoring Abbott, AAUW Flagler is working with the Flagler County Historical Society to recognize Flagler’s women who qualified and registered to vote for the historic November 1920 General Election by identifying and marking their final resting place at Espanola Cemetery.

Historic markers awarded through the program are highlighting sites on the National Votes for Women Trail. Sponsored by the National Collaborative for Women’s History Sites, the National Votes for Women Trail seeks to recognize and celebrate the enormous diversity of people and groups active in the struggle for women’s suffrage. The Trail consists of two parts: 1) a database with digital map and 2) a program of historic markers for about 250 women’s suffrage sites across the country, funded by the William G. Pomeroy Foundation and the federal Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission.

The Pomeroy Foundation, which is a private, grant-making foundation based in Syracuse, New York, is providing grants through its National Women’s Suffrage Marker Grant Program to recognize historically significant people, places or things across the U.S. instrumental to women’s suffrage, which was a national movement involving a diversity of women and men from all walks of life.

 

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