This exhibit focuses on the extraordinary women active during the fight for women's suffrage and the important movements created throughout Canada. They were taking in their experiences and reliving the timeline of events through campaigns, photographs, and posters during this time. The women's suffrage movement in Canada has been around as early as the 19th century, but hit its peak in the 1920s-1960s, the overall goal of this movement was for rights to vote, day-care programs, reform family law, end family violence, equal pay, end workplace harassment, programs for women's poverty, and abortion rights. This fight for suffrage was not only caucasian women but also the women of color who were also fighting for their basic human rights. It should be known that suffragists showed little interest in Indigenous or Asian women, who served more often as an inspiration for charity rather than for sisterly alliance (Strong-Boag). However, that does not mean Indigenous, Asian, and African Canadian women did not have a vital role in fighting for suffrage, they also were fundamental in the movement. When going through the exhibit we will look at famous activists, such as The Famous Five (Emily Murphy, Henrietta Edwards, Nellie McClung, Louise McKinney, and Irene Parlby) and Flora MacDonald Denison. But also lesser-known women who fought just as hard, such as Emily Howard Stowe and Pauline Johnson. With women's suffrage came women's movements. One of the biggest movements/groups formed from the woman suffrage movement was Voice of Women (VOW) which campaigned for nuclear disarmament and peace. The National Council of Women is a council in which women’s views can be presented and debated on both a federal and provincial level. However, the suffrage movement everywhere endorsed improvements in education, healthcare, and social services that would improve lives for women and children. The women's suffrage movement shows that the fight for justice and equality still holds to the present day and without these heroic women who dared to take action are needed to be remembered and discussed. Without them, our society would not be where it is today.