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  1. Frances Wheeler Sayler (December 18, 1916 – April 27, 1957) was an American civil rights and labor activist. She worked in the La Follette Committee and for the United States Women's Bureau, before became an organizer in the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America union.

  2. Frances Wheeler Sayler was the daughter of Senator Burton K. Wheeler and a labor activist. Her papers include her unfinished biography of her father and letters from him and others.

  3. Frances Wheeler Sayler (1916-1957) was the second youngest daughter of Montana Senator Burton Kendall Wheeler. She met Allen Sayler (1909-1989) while investigating labor practices for the LaFollette Committee in the late 1930s.

  4. National Committee to Abolish the Poll Tax was an organization founded in 1941 by civil rights activists Joseph Gelders and Virginia Durr to obtain federal action to override poll tax legislation in the Southern United States, which was used to restrict voter rights.

  5. Frances Wheeler Sayler (December 18, 1916 – April 27, 1957) was an American civil rights and labor activist. She worked on the La Follette Committee and for the United States Women's Bureau, before becoming an organizer with the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America union.

  6. The Miscellany series contains biographical material on Wheeler, notably Dayton Stoddard's manuscript for a Wheeler biography. Also included are transcripts of an oral interview (1961) and Wheeler's voting record (1923-1946).

  7. [3] [4] Durr, el vicepresidente, junto con cuatro secretarias ejecutivas, Sylvia Beitscher, Frances Wheeler Sayler, Katherine Shryver y Sarah d'Avila dirigían la organización. [3] [5] La organización se centró en presentar una legislación al Congreso de los Estados Unidos que aboliría el pago del impuesto de capitación como requisito ...