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Margarite (Peggy) Baird Johns

(1890–1970) Peggy was a well-known artist and suffragist in Greenwich Village. She was known to mix with radicals, writers, poets, and artists. In 1917 she met Dorothy Day and became close friends for the rest of their lives. They joined the National Woman's Party and picketed in front of the White House to urge the passage of the woman suffrage amendment. Later that day, Peggy, Dorothy, and others were arrested and sent to Occoquan workhouse. Peggy earned the “prison pin,” a symbol of her “sacrifice of individual liberty for the liberty of all women.”

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Saint Sylvia Cemetery

104 Broadway, Tivoli, NY 12583

Dutchess County

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This program was funded in part by Humanities New York with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

 

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