Saturday, March 21, 2026

West Chester and the Justice Bell: 1915 and Today

 

The Justice Bell in 1915
On October 30, 1915, the jubilant but exhausted suffragists arrived at the courthouse in West Chester, Chester County, with their Justice Bell, its clapper chained and silenced until women had the right to vote. They had begun their journey on June 23, 1915, in Sayre, Bradford County. Now, at their final stop, they would wait for the November 2 election results to learn whether the men of Pennsylvania had voted to give the state’s women the right to vote.

West Chester was filled with symbolism. It had been the site of the state’s first women’s rights convention in 1852, just a few years after the Seneca Falls Convention, where the Declaration of Sentiments, modeled on the Declaration of Independence, had been written. And, it was the home county of Katharine Wentworth Ruschenberger.

Suffragist Spotlight
Katharine Wentworth Ruschenberger

"The bell signifies justice, and justice is the most important thing in the world today.” —Katharine Wentworth Ruschenberger
Louise Hall, the tour’s director, called Katharine Wentworth Ruschenberger their “fairy godmother.” A suffragist from Strafford in Chester County, Ruschenberger was the visionary who conceived of the Justice Bell, and paid for both the bell and the autotruck that carried it across Pennsylvania. Between 1913 and 1915, she tirelessly promoted the Justice Bell as a symbol of women’s suffrage. In 1915, she led the Chester County Woman Suffrage Party’s publicity efforts, and that same year at the age of sixty-two, she accompanied the Justice Bell during much of its statewide tour.

Returning in 2026
More than a century later, we returned to West Chester on March 19, 2026, as part of the Justice Bell Foundation’s 2026 statewide tour retracing the bell’s historic route across Pennsylvania. At the invitation of West Chester University’s Women’s Commission and the Cottrell Entrepreneurial Leadership Center, we gathered at Phillips Autograph Library for a lunchtime networking event.

Our program included a screening of Finding Justice: The Untold Story of Women’s Fight for the Vote, followed by a discussion about Pennsylvania women’s leadership in the suffrage movement and a book signing. Patricia Diggin, executive director of the Cottrell Entrepreneurship Center, hosted the event, and Nicole Stephenson of Narrativa Consulting introduced me and gave a wonderful introduction to the film. A highlight of the day was having Linda Texter Hall at the event. She is suffragist Louise Hall’s descendant-by-marriage and has been devoted to ensuring Louise’s contributions are acknowledged and celebrated.

It was wonderful to share the story of the Justice Bell with students, faculty, and community members who gathered at the library.

Highlights from the Event

  

  

1. Poster of event 
2. Amanda Owen and Linda Texter Hall, Louise Hall's descendant
3. Nicole Stephenson and Amanda Owen 
4.  Amanda Owen and Pattie Diggin
4. Tammy Williams and Amanda Owen 
5. Audience members watching the film

Continue the Journey
Our next stop, sponsored by the Lower Macungie Historical Society, will be at the Lower Macungie Township Community Center in Lehigh County on March 21st.

Follow the 2026 Justice Bell Tour
Learn more about the tour on our website.

• Learn about our 2026 Tour Blog 
• View the Justice Bell Foundation tour page
• See the full schedule of events 
• Learn more about the documentary Finding Justice: The Untold Story of Women’s Fight for the Vote 
• Explore the book The Justice Bell: Tracing the Journey of a Forgotten Symbol

Join us as we follow the path of the Justice Bell and explore the remarkable history it represents in Pennsylvania’s fight for women’s suffrage.

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