Davis made a stop in Minnesota earlier Monday before visiting the home of local attorney Kalyn Free to support Clinton ahead of the Super Tuesday primaries, taking photos with volunteers and even signing a baseball for a supporter, which the former senator said was a first-time occurrence.

Before Davis spoke, Free told the group that the former gubernatorial candidate “needs absolutely no introduction” and said she still remembered seeing Davis’ breakout moment on the Texas Senate floor. Free said she called her granddaughter, who was 14 at the time, to tell her about the filibuster but that her granddaughter already knew.

“I said, ‘Well, this is going on during school,’” she said. “And she said, ‘I know, but we’re watching it on our phones.’ And that was so inspiring to know that you’ve inspired a whole new generation of 14-year-old girls in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. I just view that as an example of how one person can change the world, and Wendy Davis has done that.”

In her remarks, Davis told the volunteers to “speak from the heart” about why they support Clinton, and she discussed her own experiences growing up in a low-income, single-parent household, becoming a young parent and ultimately, through health care services from Planned Parenthood, being able to get out of poverty.