Blog Post Jennifer Errick Apr 11, 2016

New National Park Site Showcases Women's Fight for Right to Vote

The Belmont-Paul Women’s Equality National Monument preserves decades of passionate work in the struggle for suffrage and gender equality. Here's a peek at some of this colorful history.

Today, President Obama declared the Sewall-Belmont House and Museum in Washington, D.C., a national park site. This new unit, now officially the Belmont-Paul Women’s Equality National Monument, served as the headquarters for the National Woman’s Party, an organization that fought for decades to improve conditions for women. This group helped to pass hundreds of pieces of legislation, including the 19th Amendment, which gave women in every U.S. state the right to vote (though many African-American women remained unable to vote for several decades).

Magazine Article

An Audacious Fight

Force-feeding and imprisonment could not stop suffragist Alice Paul’s march forward. A new park site would tell her story.

See more ›

These ambitious and persistent women endured hunger strikes and violence and scorn at a time when there were no road maps on how to conduct a successful advocacy campaign. It’s hard to imagine now what it would be like to live in a world where women couldn’t cast votes. That’s why we need to preserve this important place—so we can remember and appreciate what these brave women did on behalf of everyone who came after them.

Below are eight glimpses into the important history preserved by our newest national park site.

About the author

  • Jennifer Errick Associate Director of Digital Storytelling

    Jennifer co-produces NPCA's podcast, The Secret Lives of Parks, and writes and edits a wide variety of online content. She has won multiple awards for her audio storytelling.

Read more from NPCA

  • Blog Post

    Make Them Hear You

    Jun 2025 | By Kyle Groetzinger

    New signs ask visitors to report to the Department of the Interior anything that portrays U.S. history in a negative light. Tell the administration, instead, to stop meddling.

  • Press Release

    New Park Signs Undermine Rangers, Aim to Erase History

    Jun 2025

    Forcing rangers to post these signs is an outrage and shows deep contempt for their work to preserve and tell all American stories.

  • Blog Post

    6 Worst Things That Happened to National Parks Last Month

    Jun 2025 | By Linda Coutant

    ICYMI: May was a bad month for national parks under the Trump administration and congressional Republicans. We sound the alarm on the last 30 days’ most distressing actions.