[4] MWSA met in members' homes and worked to plan statewide conventions and conferences.
[6] MWSA invited the National American Woman Suffrage Association to hold its 1906 conference in Baltimore.
[1] In 1910, MWSA worked closely with Elizabeth King Ellicott and presented a bill for suffrage for all to the Maryland House of Delegates.
[7] In 1911, there was a split in the group, with some leaving MWSA to form the State Equal Franchise League of Maryland.
[8] MWSA continued to provide an amendment for women's suffrage in the Maryland Constitution in 1912, 1914 and 1916, with no success.