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  1. Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation is a 1917 American lost silent drama film directed by J. Stuart Blackton and William P. S. Earle, and written by Blackton, Helmer W. Bergman, and Cyrus Townsend Brady. It is a sequel to the 1915 movie The Battle Cry of Peace.

  2. 2 de fev. de 2014 · "Womanhood: the Glory of the Nation." Greater Vitagraph's militant film spectacle which began an indefinite run at the Broadway Theater, New York, last Sunday night, will be one of the most convincing evidences of the value of motion pictures in a time like the present.

  3. When the nation of Ruthania declares war on the United States, an army of enemy soldiers invades the U.S. and captures New York. But the American forces have prepared adequately for such an event, and hidden booby traps, trick fortifications, and remote-controlled bombs...

  4. Stands by Church Window Blown in by an Invading Army's Shell. While thrill after thrill marks the action in Commodore J. Stuart Blackton's soul-stirring patriotic spectacle "Womanhood, The Glory of the Nation," which is the attraction at the (.....)

    • Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation1
    • Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation2
    • Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation3
    • Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation4
    • Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation5
  5. When the nation of Ruthania declares war on the United States, an army of enemy soldiers invades the U.S. and captures New York. But the American forces have prepared adequately for such an event, and hidden booby traps, trick fortifications, and remote-controlled bombs...

    • J. Stuart Blackton, William P. S. Earle
    • Alice Joyce
  6. When the nation of Ruthania declares war on the United States, an army of enemy soldiers invades the U.S. and captures New York. But the American forces have prepared adequately for such an event, and hidden booby traps, trick fortifications, and remote-controlled bombs…

  7. An airborne bombing attack on New York City was the high point of the speculative WWI melodrama Womanhood, Glory of the Nation. Upon returning to America after a sojourn in Europe, Mary Ward (Alice Joyce) learns that war has been declared on the United States.