Alice D. Snyder

Alice Dorothea Snyder (October 29, 1887 – February 17, 1943) was an American professor of English at Vassar College and president of the Poughkeepsie Woman Suffrage Party.

During the early 20th century, Snyder led the campaign that earned New York women the right to vote.

Besides her positive impact to the women's rights movement, Snyder was an academic who focused on the work of Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

British philosopher John Henry Muirhead called Snyder a "pioneer in the sympathetic re-examination of these manuscripts".

[7] Snyder returned to Vassar College as an English professor in 1915[2] and was acting as chairman of the Poughkeepsie Woman Suffrage Party in 1916.

[11] By 1918, Snyder stepped down as campus editor of the Vassar Quarterly[12] and continued her activism within the Woman's Defence Committee and the Poughkeepsie Women's City Club.

[19] For her work on the poet, British philosopher John Henry Muirhead called Snyder a "pioneer in the sympathetic re-examination of these manuscripts".