Further Reading
- Booth, C. 1893. Life and Labour of the People in London: First Results of An Inquiry Based on the 1891 Census. Opening Address of Charles Booth, Esq., President of the Royal Statistical Society. Session 1893–94. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society 56(4):557–593.
- Carney Smith, J., and Phelps, S. 1992. Notable Black American Women, Book 2. VNR AG.
- Collet, C. E. 1908. The Social Status of Women Occupiers. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society 71(3):513–515.
- Garrett Fawcett, M. 1913. The remedy of political emancipation. In The New Statesman, Special Supplement on the Awakening of Women.
- Gehlke, C. E. 1917. On the Correlation Between the Vote for Suffrage and the Vote on the Liquor Question. A Preliminary Study. Publications of the American Statistical Association 15(117):524–532.
- Hutchins, E.L. 1915. Women in Modern Industry. London, England: G. Bell and Sons (defunct).
- Lorenzo-Arribas, A. 2023. Millicent Fawcett and Eleanor Rathbone: The Royal Statistical Society suffragists. Significance 20(4):34–39. https://doi.org/10.1093/jrssig/qmad065.
- Rathbone, E. 1917. The remuneration of women’s services. Economic Journal 27(105):55–68.
- Rathbone, E. No job too big for them. 1919. The Green Book Magazine. Stories of Women’s Achievements.
- U.S. Census Bureau. Emily I. Farnum. Progressive Woman in the Federal City. https://www.census.gov/history/pdf/farnum28feb17.pdf.
- U.S. Census Bureau. Gertrude E. Rush. Census Enumerator and Legal Pioneer. https://www.census.gov/history/pdf/rush6mar.pdf.
- Weiss, E. 2018. Women, Booze and the Vote. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/05/opinion/women-votes-feminism-alcohol.html.