They drove for the vote. We’re driving for the ERA.
Alice Burke and Nell Richardson crossed America in a Saxon roadster named The Golden Flyer and women won the vote — but the Equal Rights Amendment is stalled. It's been ratified. Congress just needs the courage to say so and affirm it as the 28th Amendment. The Golden Flyer II is now on the road across 25 states to make sure they do.
Watch history happen. The Golden Flyer II is rolling — New York to the Pacific and back. Track every stop as we drive the ERA fight across 25 states. Real stops. Real people. Real pressure.
The stories are pouring in. Rally reports, community voices, and daily dispatches from the ERA front lines. Come back every day — history is happening in real time.
Driving the future. Here's where the Golden Flyer II is headed next.
The drive for women's equality is bigger than one road trip. Stay current on ERA legislation, court decisions, and the issues that make constitutional protection not just important — but urgent.
In 1916, Alice Burke and Nell Richardson climbed into a Saxon roadster and drove 10,700 miles to win women the vote. 110 years later, the Golden Flyer II is back on the road to finish what they started.
Movements are built by many hands. These organizations are helping drive the ERA to the finish line.













