Dieser Marsch begann am 16. Dezember 1912 und führte von einer U-Bahn-Station in Manhattan nordwärts. Von den 500 Frauen, die an der Startveranstaltung teilnahmen, kamen 200 mit auf den Marsch. Nach knapp 14 Tagen kamen die ersten vier Pilgerinnen am 28. Dezember in Albany an.[3][8]
↑ abBarbara Sicherman und Carol Hurd Green (Hrsg.): Notable American Women: The Modern Period: a Biographical Dictionary. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge/Mass. 1980, ISBN 0-674-62732-6, 197.
↑ ab Col. Craft Is Angry. Snub For Gen. Jones. Talks of Rushing About Country at Six-Day-Bicycle-Race Speed and Says She Doesn't Like It., 25. Februar 1913. Abgerufen am 14. August 2009 „So angry that she would not speak to General Rosalie Jones Colonel Ida Craft, second in command, led the detachment of suffragist hikers that spent the night at Overlea into Baltimore late this afternoon. General Jones was not in the lobby of the Hotel Stafford when Colonel Craft came tramping in.“
↑New York Times, 17 Dezember 1912 Zitat: „Six Tired Pilgrims End First Day's Hike. But the Drum Gives Out at the Start of the Suffrage March on Albany.“