Ames, Iowa | Ames | Blanche Lincoln | Ames Research Center | Jonathan Ames | Ed Ames | Blanche DuBois | Blanche | Oakes Ames | Les Ames | Blanche of Castile | Jacques-Émile Blanche | Gerald Ames | Blanche Sweet | Blanche of France, Duchess of Orléans | Blanche Marchesi | Blanche Bingley | Ben Ames Williams | Ames Laboratory | Adelbert Ames | "Snake" Ames | Peter Ames Carlin | Oakes Angier Ames | Oakes Ames (botanist) | Nuit Blanche | Nancy Ames | Knowlton Ames | Grace Greenwood Ames | Blanche Heriot | Blanche Fury |
In 1906, Oakes Ames, a Harvard botanist (son of Massachusetts governor Oliver Ames and grandson of U.S. Representative Oakes Ames), and his wife Blanche Ames Ames (daughter of Mississippi governor Adelbert Ames, but not related to Oakes Ames), an artist and feminist, purchased land on the border of Sharon and Easton.
To commemorate the 75th anniversary of the Nineteenth Amendment in 1995, the National Museum of Women in the Arts hosted an exhibition, "Artful Advocacy: Cartoons of the Woman Suffrage Movement." Featured artists were Lou Rogers, Nina Allender, and Blanche Ames.