Mrs. Pauline Adams in the prison garb she wore while serving a sixty-day sentence.; Pauline Adams, three-quarter-length portrait, sitting at a table in prison clothes with right arm raised holding a cup. Mrs. Pauline Adams of Norfolk, Virginia, was arrested when picketing the White House on Sept. 4, 1917, and sentenced to sixty days in Occoquan Workhouse. She was arrested again at a watchfire demonstration on Feb. 9, 1919, but was released on account of lack of evidence. She was one of the speakers on the Prison Special tour of Feb-Mar 1919. Source: Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (New York


Mrs. Pauline Adams in the prison garb she wore while serving a sixty-day sentence.; Pauline Adams, three-quarter-length portrait, sitting at a table in prison clothes with right arm raised holding a cup. Mrs. Pauline Adams of Norfolk, Virginia, was arrested when picketing the White House on Sept. 4, 1917, and sentenced to sixty days in Occoquan Workhouse. She was arrested again at a watchfire demonstration on Feb. 9, 1919, but was released on account of lack of evidence. She was one of the speakers on the Prison Special tour of Feb-Mar 1919. Source: Doris Stevens, Jailed for Freedom (New York: Boni and Liveright, 1920), 354.;


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