Maud Jamison

Maud Powell Jamison (14 January 1890 – 18 June 1974) was an American suffragist.

[1] Along with Alice Paul, the chair of the National Women's Party, Jamison and others picketed in front of the White House to pressure President Woodrow Wilson to support women's suffrage from 1917 to 1919.

[1] In 1916, she moved to Washington, D.C., to volunteer for the National Women's Party.

[2] On August 28, she was arrested, and sentenced to 30 days in the Occoquan Workhouse.

[3] She moved to Topeka, Kansas, where she married John Earl Thomas, on 16 July 1921.