Lucy Stone, Suffragist Embroidery Pattern & Coloring Page

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This is a digital product delivered as a downloadable file.

This is a digital product delivered as a downloadable file.

About this Product

Celebrate Votes For Women! with suffragist Lucy Stone.

Designed specifically for redwork embroidery, this simple line drawing is perfect for hand embroidery, as a relaxing coloring page, or combine the two and create a one-of-a-kind, crayon tinted, embroidered masterpiece.

About this pattern: Lucy Stone (1818-1893) is widely known as one of the first women to keep her maiden name after marriage, & removing “obey” from her wedding vows to Henry Blackwell in 1855. Stone organized the first National Woman's Rights Convention in Worcester, MA in 1850 & formed the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) with “Battle Hymn of the Republic” author Julia Ward Howe in 1869. In 1879, Stone & co. won a small victory in Massachusetts when qualified women were allowed to vote in school board elections. In 1890 Stone’s conservative AWSA merged with Elizabeth Cady Stanton & Susan B. Anthony’s radical NSWA to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NASWA).

Disclaimer (A.K.A. The Fine Print): Patterns are for your personal use only. Please support my work as a fellow artist/crafter & share my blog & Etsy shop to those you think would like my patterns. Do not distribute my patterns yourself. Embroidery pattern ONLY. It's up to you to make it into a tea cozy, pillow, tote, quilt, wall hanging, et al.

Pattern design by Patricia F. (Tisha) Dolton, aprilsongstress designs - aprilsongstress.com - © 2016-2025 - Lucy Stone (1818-1893) Abolitionist & Suffragist

aprilsongstress embroidery

Glens Falls, NY
If you love learning about groundbreaking women & also love needle arts, this is the place for you! I design and research all of my historical women embroidery patterns.
Contact Maker

Meet the Maker

Tisha Dolton is a librarian, public historian, singer and embroidery artist specializing in the women's suffrage movement. She creates original patterns and hand embroiders portraits of suffragists and other inspirational people, mainly women.

How it’s Made

Pattern drawn by me using paper and marker, then scanned and made into a PDF. Biography researched and written by me.

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