The cartoonists were C. Batchelor, Charles H. Winner and Walter A. Sinclair. In special features the publicity department avoided sensationalism. Suffrage Flower Gardens, Good Roads Day, the Justice Bell and Supplication Day comprised ...
The cartoonists were C. Batchelor, Charles H. Winner and Walter A. Sinclair. In special features the publicity department avoided sensationalism. Suffrage Flower Gardens, Good Roads Day, the Justice Bell and Supplication Day comprised ...
... they thus be deprived of their teacher Well there goes the first bell & I must to my business again [ Easton ] Aug 16. ... the day being some cloudy & some windy I find H. very happily situated , says she should be perfectly happy ...
Mrs. Lawrence's improvements are not completed; she is extending her shrubbery and walks. She is undoubtedly one of the most skillful cultivators and florists in the country (a country abounding with them), and carries off more prizes ...
Nays—Davison, Hobart, Larson, McCumber, Oliver, Pugh, Ruger, Strong, Eldridge, Helvig, Myron, McHugh, Runkle, Swanton, Van Osdell, Williams, Mark Ward, Mr. Speaker—18. 456 Mrs. Gage has a son and daughter residing in Dakota, ...
... Lane, Lathrop, Lynch, McCartney, McHugh, McNeill, Madden of Polk, Madison, Maris, Mills, Moffit, Morse of Wright, Norris, Palmer, Proudfoot, Rae, Reed of Howard, Robinson, Said, Scott, Smith, Tice, Underwood, Ure, Wilson—54.
(Census of Britain, 1881; Report of the Sixteenth Annual Washington Convention, 1884, p. 114, in Film, 23:573ff; McHugh, Prostitution and Victorian Social Reform, 226.) This reception gained later significance as the founding of the 299 ...
President, Harriette R. Shattuck; Vice-presidents, Dr. Salome Merritt, Joan D. Foster, Emma F. Clarry, Louisa E. Brooks, Esther P. Hutchinson, Sarah S. Eddy, Harriet M. Spaulding, Martha E. S. Curtis, Dr. Sarah E. Sherman, Sarah G. Todd ...
Anna Dickinson: I certainly do not intend to fight Mr. Collier. I believe I have the name of not being a belligerent woman. Mr. Collier says sympathy is one thing and logic is another. Very true! I did not speak of the 40,000 women in ...
Anna Dickinson: I certainly do not intend to fight Mr. Collier. I believe I have the name of not being a belligerent woman. Mr. Collier says sympathy is one thing and logic is another. Very true! I did not speak of the 40,000 women in ...
A. K. Warren, Mrs. J. Musgrave, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Foote; Genesee, Mrs. D. Stewart; Grand Traverse, Hon. ... Mrs. F. W. Gillette of Oakland, Miss Strickland of Clinton, J. B. Stone of Kalamazoo, Mrs. Lucy L. Stout of Wayne, and the Rev.
She became dean of Swarthmore College in 1886. ( NCAB , 6 : 365 ; Franklin Ellis , History of Columbia County , New York [ Philadelphia , !^78 ] , 347 ; Emily Cooper Johnson , Dean Bond of Swarthmore , A Quaker Humanist [ Philadelphia ...
W. Wills; the Reverends Kingman Handy, Henry Wharton and W. H. Baylor of the Baptist Church; George Scholl and Thomas Beadenkoph of the Lutheran Synod; Richard W. Hogue and George W. Dame of the Episcopal, E. L. Hubbard of the Methodist ...
Selections from the Classic Work of Stanton, Anthony, Gage, and Harper Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Gage, ... Anne Webster , Deborah Shaw , Martha Storrs , Mrs. A. L. Cox , Rebecca B. Spring , and Preceding Causes 65.
... the West Coast as " Mrs. Pitts " to teach school in 1865 , and she married August K. Stevens before January 1870. ... Hannah Cutler arrived in California in October 1870 to visit a married daughter , lecture , and organize a state ...
" Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) was an American suffragist, social activist, abolitionist, and leading figure of the early women's rights movement.
Solitude of Self joins the canon of classic American speeches. Elizabeth Cady Stanton's timeless appeal presents the historical convergence between the 19th and the 21st centuries.
Any lingering doubts will be removed when you read her own letters and diary excerpts in this book.At her marriage in 1840, she asked that the "promise to obey" be removed from the wedding vows.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) was an American suffragist, social activist, abolitionist, and leading figure of the early women's rights movement.
Taken together, these essays and documents reveal the different facets, enduring insights, and fascinating contradictions of the work of one of the great thinkers of the feminist tradition.