As Marguerite grows older, she draws on a wide variety of sources-from family stories and photographs to archives and scholarly histories-to piece together the real-life narrative of her family. Profoundly changed in the process, she becomes an activist herself, and when she marches in a present-day women's march, she carries a photo of her grandparents participating in a 1914 women's march in New York. With the women's suffrage movement as the backdrop, this memoir and family history illuminates how activism passes from one generation to another-and how a horse-drawn suffrage campaign wagon became a symbol of freedom and equality.
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