Articles related to "May Arkwright Hutton"An illegitimate child few wanted, May Arkwright, would go on to be one of the most powerful women in the Pacific Northwest
Intrepid May Hutton who at twenty three was a widow set out for the silver mines of Idaho, leaving Ohio and her family for a new beginning.
A new marriage and mounting tensions in the Silver Valley were primary elements in May Hutton's life.
The now wealthy May Hutton moved up the social ladder in Wallace, Idaho continuing her pursuit of equal rights and help for those less fortunate
The indomitable May Hutton became a leader in the Idaho and Washington women's suffrage movements
With her husband in the "bullpen," the tenacious May Hutton moved to free him and secure rights for the miners who were being held
In the 1890s, Mine owners and union organizers fought for control of the Coeur d' Alene mines. Suffragist May Arkwright Hutton took up her pen in support of the union.
The mine owners and the Governor of Idaho moved to identify and punish those involved in the explosions at the Bunker Hill mine in 1899
The "Second Battle of Bunker Hill" in the Silver Valley of Idaho was a destructive turn of events that paralyzed the region
A small investment in yet another mine for May and Levi finally brought the wealth that May had been searching for since she left Ohio years earlier
With the worsening conditions in the mines of Idaho came a violent upheaval that pit worker against owner
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