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Pease, Julia M. -- to Carrie, Mar. 1873:
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Creator
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Pease, Julia M
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VC 1875
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Date
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March 16, 1873
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<p>Vassar. March 16 ,1873, Dearest Cara, Tonight finding no absolute necessity for studying, and feeling too lazy to go down stairs and hunt up the paper containing accounts of inaugural ceremonies, I will employ my time agreeable, if not very profitably (?) writing to you, dear— As usual I am raging at the weather. It always happens that right after I have been unusually wrathy upon the subject, it becomes quite pleasant and I am conscience-smitten.</p> However I shall...
Show more<p>Vassar. March 16 ,1873, Dearest Cara, Tonight finding no absolute necessity for studying, and feeling too lazy to go down stairs and hunt up the paper containing accounts of inaugural ceremonies, I will employ my time agreeable, if not very profitably (?) writing to you, dear— As usual I am raging at the weather. It always happens that right after I have been unusually wrathy upon the subject, it becomes quite pleasant and I am conscience-smitten.</p> However I shall not be so again; I have suffered too much with cold for the last two nights. We pile on all our shawls, in addition to the blankets, have the window down but a trifle, a necessity when six are in one parlor, and yet we lie cramped up all night with aching bones. In the morning, just as we are beginning to grow a little warmer, up we must spring, dress in the cold and go about all day, shivering through the Corridors, shaking at the table, fee. The Chapel seems the only really comfortable place. And yet outdoors today the sun was shining brightly and walking was quite enjoyable. But when a large building once gets cold, there seems no drivingit away again. Sunday. To continue my descourse upon the weather, I can now record a most delightful day. When I awoke this morning I thought I could sunlight not possibly be at Vassar. The bright morning was flooding my room which was fragrant with flowers which had been standing there over night. Andall day I have been reminded of our lovely days In Feb. when the whole grounds are odorous with plum blossoms. The air today does not seem in keeping with the deep cover of snow upon ground. Yesterday Bertha Keffer, a southern girl, and mysef amused ourselves by making a snow man, about a foot high- We labelled him 'Lo! the poor Indian,' I and like little children, enjoyed decking him with green plumes and wands, and sacrilege! we placed a cigar in his mouth. Today I went to enquire after his health, but ah, where he had before smiled upon us, nothing now remains but a heap of soft snow. Can you make a moral for this sad tale? What an amusing time you all must have had when the roof blew off! fit I had beea there I think Papa would not have beea able to say that the gentleman outran all the ladies, for I am not as brave as Texas ought to be. Miss Lough, one of my parlor-mates, and myself are reading aloud "Off the Skelligs," and taking it all in all like it very weU. It has been so harshly criticised that I wan prepared to be disappointed in it, but notagreeably so, as I have been. Really, I have never had such an easy time, in regard to study, as this semester. If It were not for essays, it would all be delightful I was all prepared to give you a good scolding, yesterday when your letter came, and appeased me half as well as a peep at your dear face would have done. Just think, Carrie, I hope to be at home on your next birthday. won't that be fine? Mir lleben sie Drutefi Geben sie meine JLiebe alleren. Lovingly Julie
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Title
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"Who Was Elizabeth Cady Stanton? My Mother," part 1, n.d.:
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Creator
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Lawrence, Margaret Stanton
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Date
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n.d.
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<3 (:._.;t: aw ' ~ -_ c»,~';:v:.e:: ‘ 1. M . .1 " " a. -, \ "‘ ., ‘ ( V ’ — 7 * * — , ’ V _ ~" . V . 3, , y ‘ , P‘ v , - 5 . , 5- ' a v V I I . I ; . \‘ V _ 3 :3 D » ., / » ‘ O 4,. r. . 3 ‘V _ x ~. “ » , ; , ’*‘~ ’ A , , ‘ . .. \ 1 _, 4 _ - .3 "~ , . \ ., . « I 7 K . ‘ 1 . \ L. , V V - . ‘ ' _ [3 J4 .- 1» a ‘ A ‘ A ; ' w G o 1 ~ / , , - 4 / ': ~~,§§- 1» WHO WAS ELIZABETH CADY STANTON? 1815~1902 MY MOTHER By Margaret Stanton Lawrence In...
Show more<3 (:._.;t: aw ' ~ -_ c»,~';:v:.e:: ‘ 1. M . .1 " " a. -, \ "‘ ., ‘ ( V ’ — 7 * * — , ’ V _ ~" . V . 3, , y ‘ , P‘ v , - 5 . , 5- ' a v V I I . I ; . \‘ V _ 3 :3 D » ., / » ‘ O 4,. r. . 3 ‘V _ x ~. “ » , ; , ’*‘~ ’ A , , ‘ . .. \ 1 _, 4 _ - .3 "~ , . \ ., . « I 7 K . ‘ 1 . \ L. , V V - . ‘ ' _ [3 J4 .- 1» a ‘ A ‘ A ; ' w G o 1 ~ / , , - 4 / ': ~~,§§- 1» WHO WAS ELIZABETH CADY STANTON? 1815~1902 MY MOTHER By Margaret Stanton Lawrence In 3 Parts. Part 1 Picture of Elizabeth Cady Stanton Mrs Stanton was the first person in the world to ask for votes for women, away back in 1848. And as the ballot has now been given to all the women of the United States, I thought this would be a good time to tell the rising generation of young people something about the home life of the individual who started the whole question of suffrage for her sex. ._‘,.4:- 94. \\‘ ELIZ.Ð cm STANTQN y Earl Bars ifi Jehnstcwn , Y 3 Over one hundred years age, a little girl was born whese meme Wee destined to be keen by the gee ideas ehe set adrift. JAIfiie ehild was Elizabeth Cedyg TShe first saw the light ef day November 12,Li§15, en the hills of Johnsfiewng Fulton Cagney, flew York. Her iether, Daniel Cady, was e renowned jurist; he set on the bench of the Supreme Court %and Court of Appeals, of New York State, till he was ever eighty years of age, A.life~eized portrait of him hangs in the Capitol at Albany. Her metherfi Margaret Livingston,'Wes a tell, handsome eomanfi a daughter ef Gel. James Livingsten, who served on General Weshingten‘s eteff during fihe Revolutionary Ear. Ere. Cady was a daring horse~woman9 she was full of "vim? and “go”, so that Elizabeth inherited beauty, breine ana fight freezbeth eidee of her family. % She eas breught up in the midst of ease ané luxury; ené this makes it the mere remarkable that, even in her youth, she sheule have felt so keenly the injustice of the laws bearing on eemen. ’«3®t'.i=Is&’$-fl95G$¢SG$€&E§Qfi$$'$ ¢ 1 I 5 3 G 9 :3 3 Picture 1 3 5 <° 5 3 of : 3 e 3 *3’ » . ° §‘:’§Z‘S 3 Cadgf 3 5.» m ‘ , 5’ w ,,_3:”, .» . , g :4: k 3 Q 4; -_., etcedoeaocca-sweetie-necoetfl Childhood I erwaye like te knew haw the people lack that I am.reediflg abfiutv There were no photographs taken in those far-off days so I was glad to come upon this pen picture of my mother: “Elizabeth Cady was a plump little girl with very fair skin, rosy cheeks, good features, dark brown curly hair, laughing blue eyes, and beautiful tooth“. Those merry blue eyes were one of her marked features through life. An event that made a deep impression upon her, as a child, was the birth of a sister. Before she saw the now arrival, she heard several people say, “What a pity that the baby is another girl!" There were already four girls in the family, so when tho nurse took her in to see the little stranger, Elizabeth felt a kind of compassion for the baby. She remarked, in later life, "I didn't understand then that girls were considered an inferior order of beings." In those days there were no law schools in the United States. To the most noted lawyer in any region, the young man went who desired to study law. Judge Cady’s law offices, which adjoined his house, were famous all over the land and students came from the four points of the compass to be under his tutelage. Elizabeth’s Interest in the Law. my mother, from her earliest years, was constantly in her father’s offices, deeply interested in all that was going on there particularly in hearing the students talk about the laws they were studying. There was nothing those boys enjoyed more than roading aloud to Elizabeth all the bad laws they came upon relating to women. They found much more interesting to see her fly into a rage than to pore over musty law books. They always had a new batch ready whenever she appeared. Johnstown was in the midst of a large farming district, and Elizabeth often sat on hot father’s knee as he talked to his clients, especially if they were the wives of farmers who came to tell the tender-hearted judge of how unjustly they were being treated by their husbands. The cases often concerned the farm, on which many of the women had been born, and which frequently had been left them by their fathers before they were married. In 1823, no married woman could own property, If, as a girl, she had inherited a piece of land, the moment she married John Jones it passed into his hands. Everything she possessed his; her clothes, her false teeth even! If he took them away, she couldn't masticate her food! And she had no redress. The money she earned ever the wash~tub was likewise his, and he could collect it at the end of the day from the people for whom she worked! Worse still, he didn’t have to give her any of it. And this right of a husband to collect hie wife‘e wages was the law in California till 1910; when the women won the vote in that state. The Judge was explaining all these laws to old Sarah, whose ne‘er-do-well husband had mortgaged the beautiful farm which she had inherited from her father when she was a girl, till there was very little left. Sarah always supplied the Judge's family with eggs; butter, chickens, cider, and other good things, so that little Elizabeth looked upon her as a kind of lady bountiful, when she appeared at the week~ends. My grandfather got down many books and read the laws to Sarah to show her why he could not help her; however, petting her on the back, he told her he would put her on one of the best farms he owned, stock it for her, and she could have all she made from it, and could stay there as long as she lived. But it was justice not charity that the old woman wanted. Elizabeth had not been idle during this interview; When her father finished with a book, she quietly marked each law that he had read, turned down the leaf, and put the books back on the shelves upside down, so that she would know them. She followed the weeping woman into the street and when out of sight of the office she threw her arms about her, bade her cry no more, and told her that she had marked every one of those wicked laws, and that when the men had left the offices that evening she was going back and would cut them all out of the books. "Then", she said, "your troubles will be over!" As soon as Sarah could get rid of the child, she hurried back to Judge Cady and told him what his little intended doing. So, after supper, he took Elizabeth over to his office, and there, with the child seated on his knee, before the crackling logs of a big fireplace he told my mother how laws were made by the legislators at Albany, that his library was only one of many all over the state, that even if it burned up it would make no difference, that when people wanted to get the laws changed they had to go to Albany, talk to the legislators, and get them to alter the laws, then new books would be printed and the old ones laid aside. Little did that conservative judge dream that what no woman had ever done would, in years to come, be done by that very daughter of his. He unconsciously planted the seeds of rebellion in that fertile brain; and when grown to womanhood, the mother of four sons and a daughter, she took two nurses and two babies with her, and, leaving them at the Delevan house, went up to the Capitol building and made her first speech before a legislature on tfia unjust laws pertaining to married women. That was in 1854. 3i=39!?!&$a!Q5§9$'DiD9Q3@'8§§I§i§ -------------------------- : Picture : : of : : Judge Cady : -------------------------- Loss of her only Brother During my mother's childhood Judge and Mrs. Cady lost their only son, a fine, manly fellow, who had just graduated, with high honors, from Union College, JUDGE DANIEL CADY. Schenectady, N. Y. It nearly broke my grandfather's heart. He was always saying to Elizabeth, when she tried to console him, "Oh, my daughter, if you had only been a boy!“ Throwing her arms about him, she said “I will try to be all my brother was." She resolved to study hard and stand at the head of her class, to learn Greek, Latin, the higher mathematics, and to ride horseback--all of which resolves she carried out. Rev. Simon Hosack. Judge Cady‘s next door neighbor was an old Scotch Presbyterian clergyman, the Rev. Simon Hosack. Elizabeth was a great pet of his. Whenever she was in trouble she ran at once to consult him, she was eleven years old at this time. One morning, as he was working in his garden before breakfast, She came running over to ask him which he liked the better, girls or boys. "Why, girls of course," he replied, “I wouldn't give you for all the boys in Christendom." “My father doesn't feel that way," said the child, "he prefers boys, he wishes I had been one, and I intend to be as nearly like one as I possibly can. I am going to learn to ride horseback and swim, and I want to study Latin and Greek. Will you give me a Greek lesson now, Doctor? I want to begin at once”. “Yes, dear child," he said throwing dawn his hoe, come into my library and we will start without delay." He entered fully into the feeling of suffering that possessed the little girl, and putting into her hands the old grammar he had used in the University of Glasgow, Scotland, he taught her the Greek article before breakfast. Elizabeth Cady was educated in the old Academy in Johnstown. The girls and boys were all in the same classes, except in the languages and higher mathematics. In these subjects my mother was the only girl among a number of boys, mast of them older than she, who were preparing for college. She was always running races with John Wells to see who should stand at the head of the class. Some- timas it’W&$ Jfihflg aamfiéimafi @lfiZa%@€h$ She carrieé cff any cf tha prizes, bufi, when flushed with iriumphg she ran té her father’s affice and laid thasa traasn uras im his 1ap§ and 1o§kad up inta his face for a word of praise; his mag ram spansa was; “Chi if you had only'been a bag.” Thus it was bcrne in uyan har, at an early age; that boys saemad ta fie mars hivhly valuad than girls. The iran sank deep inio her Saul and aha fieterminsd is see what she c@u1d do to lif% fiha terrible edium afitached ta al1‘W@mankinfi¢ “Eighty years and I quate the follawing from.my mothergs autabiagraphyg Msre“:!"FroH;the Jchnstown ficadamy many of tha bays 0f my glass wsnfi ta Enian H Collegefi S$h@fl@§fi&fly¢ ‘When those‘with‘whom.I had studied and aonfiafidad far ‘prizes for aver fiva years saws ta bid me goodubya, and I learned 0f the barrier that prevented my follwwing in their footstegs, ‘No girls amifited here?, my vexation and marfiification knew mg bounds. I remsm$er nsw how'praufi amd%hamdsoma the boys lacked in their naw clothes as they jumpad an the staga~caach and drsve off, and haw lonaly I felt after they were gone, and I had aathing ta do, for the plans far my future were not yet determined. I felt mnrg kaenlf than aver fihe humiliatian of the distinciion made on the grounds cf sex." There was not a ofiilege for girls in the'world at that time;~1830. (Oberlin Collegefi in Ohie, was nut o§ened till 1833.) The Emma‘Wi11ard Schecl. In family ceumcil it was decided to send Elizabeth is tha Emma fiillard ,Sehoa1 afi Tray, N. Y.; the mast calebraiad educafiional instifiutian far girls to study but French, music and dancing. in fiha United States at that data¢ Alasi when Elizabeth reaahadffiwxéfflshe I’-£3 fauna that her sfiudias in the excallant Jehnstcwn Acad@m§"had carried her far bavand the mast afivanaefi glasses in.her new schgcl. There as ngthimg fer her . t, . 2.3 W- ,,_. kylk“ She was so disgusted when she learned this and thought of her boy chums at Union College, only a few miles away, going on into the higher realms of study; that she burst into tears at the injustice of it all. But being a good deal of a philosopher, she pitched into French and music with all her might, and wrote home to her father for the extra money needed for the dancing lessons. The judge promptly wrote back that he was perfectly willing to pay out any amount of money to educate her head, but would give nothing to educate her heels! He was toe mush of a Puritan to believe in dancing. Elizabeth Cady, even as a girl, rarely let any men get the better of her in an argument. She sent off an epistle post-haste, “Thank you, dear father, but your letter shows great ignorance, dancing is done on the toes not on the heels! So please send me the money by return mail." And he did, for Daniel Cady was too just a judge not to know When he was worsted in a case! Educating a Young Man for the Ministry. In these early days girls and women were always doing things to educate young men for something that these sons of Adam were not able to accomplish by their own efforts. My mother was the leader of a club of girls in their church which had undertaken to raise funds to educate a young man for the ministry. They sewed, baked, brewed tea and coffee, held fairs and sociables to pay his way through the Auburn Theological Seminary. When he was ready to graduate, they sent him money to buy a new suit of black broadcloth, a high hat, and a cane. Then they invited him to come and preach them a serman in the presbyterian Church, the largest in the town. Everyone turned out to hear him. The front pews were reserved for the girls. When the church was full and the psychological moment had arrived, the club marched in, head by my mother, and took their seats, all dressed in spring attire, each girl on the tiptoe of expectation to hear what their youthful theolagua wnuld say. I shall never forget hearing my mother describe that scene ta an audi~ enea in Chiaagag when she was on one of her lecturing trips. After dilating on haw faithfully that club of girls had worked to aducaie liha young man, in her round, rich voiae, she askafi that vast assembly; “Ana what do ycu think, my friends: he took for his text? That passage of the Scriptures which says, Pausing a momsnfi ts let her hearers catch the full significance of ihe fihingg firs. Stanton remarked in a slow} distincfi tone, “we never aducatadanQih~ eri” Hef hearers bursi agfi into shcuts of laughter and ayplausaa Some man called ou%5 "I should hope net." when quigg was restored, mother‘went on to relate haw those girls turned and looked at cue ancther for just a momsnt, than all arose, and with heads l ‘they erect, drawing themselves ug to their full height, two by twg/marched dawn that lang aisle and out into the streei. They never stcpped ta hear ona ward ha said. And the huga Chicagc audience, 50 years after the incidenfi, shonisd they selves hearse calling, "Bravo! bravoil for those girls, and thraa eheers for Elizabefih Cady' Stantoni" Girlhood. my grandfather had a large stable full of good driving and saddle horses, carriages and slaighs of all descriptiens. He didn’t allow his fiaughters to gs anywhere with young E@n.n1ess he prsvided the horses far horsebask rifling, ar the vehicles for driving, nor ceuld they go to public anfiertainmgats unless he provided the tickets. This being'well understeod the Cady gir1s'wera graaé , . many favcrltes, and as grandmmther kept open house, and there wara%alway§[nice yaupg. man studying law in her husband’s offices, they never lacksd for asserts. A.most amusing incident occurred in connectian with a certain yaung man fror* T ’ 0 .* - ~ fi - u . \ u‘Ln1on aullega, wna was spending hlS Chrlsfimafi vaoatlgn at the Cady manfiicn. 10 It was oviéont that he was quito smitton with y mothor; he had boon toooing her for being gush o chattorbox, and said he didn’t boliovo she could keep still too minutoo, she emphatically vowing she oould'olohout diffioulfly.% lhoro was o party of these goufig §eOple gothorod about tho piano singing, lough~ ing and talking by turns. It was a glorious moonlight night anfi fins sloighingg so or. Blank oroposoo to my mother thotthoy go for a ride, and ooo if sho really ooulo koop still.l She sent oorfl to Peter to héoo a sloigh harnessed, and she left the room.togot ready. Her sister fioogo went with hor,fi:§E[$hor£1y appeared in the drowingoroom and told fir. Blank heflflfbettor got on his coat, as the sleigh: was at tho door and his lady already io. So the young man rushoé out ifigw the hall, donned his fur coat, cap and gloves ond popped in booido his companion, fill the young folks troopod out on the piazza to see them otort. The ooaohmon handed him.tho lines and finiohed tucking in tho robes; »’Eid shouts from.tho porch and answering ones from.the sleigh they dashed off, the bolls ringing mor- rily as they disappoorod in the moonlight. 0 "Iso‘t this o glorious night for o sloigh~rido, Eiss Elizabothfifi romorkod or. B. fie ?oply. fiftor making several more attempts and getting Mo"ansWors hel “Uh; oomo now, thoro’ooo’t be any fun riding if you aro not going to talks I didn‘t really moan What I said, I knoo you oon koop still if you oono to, I was only fooling.“ Still his companion modo no roply.l The horse was guito a gag ono/(Juogo Ca&§ liked good horse flesh; his - 7 an I ‘i. __. * Wife and all hio¢ lfiwooulo ride and drivo'anything)3 and kept tho young man busy trying to control it. But after a whilo he said, “ooll, if you are not going to talk we might as ooll drive home,“ Still the young lady made no answor, so after a little he turned the horse and drove boob lf iiss Cody kept oil hor lovers at onm‘s length, they never droamod of touching her, house o y or. olonk had not loifi his hand on hor arm.ond bogged her 11 to fiargive him and speak; when he drové up in frcné cf the hangs all its inhabitants game out on tha giazza, inquiring how he had enjoyed his ridgfi anfi fcremgst among_ them was my mofiher, Elizabeth Cayi As acon as Era Blafik saw'har he gasped and turning to the lady besifie him, he axclaimad, “Far haavenis sake; Wifih whom.have I been ridifig: Julia Jones?” a gfi%%» girl Wham ha thafiaughly daw- fiastad. ’ “Bring in the yeung lady; Peter; and shaw Mr. Blank wha it is,“ 1aughn inglycallad Gui Elizabath Sady. It was a feather bolster dressad up in ha? alathesi Ehe yang man wa$ SQ maé,, SQ digusted fihai he mever fully §ogave my mofihér the joke she ylayafi on him. E3 soon transfarrad his devetiens to sofiemoae alas, WhQm.1atar he married. The news spread as far fiawn the Mohawk Vallay as Sghanactady and when he gfit back he collega, the fioys would say5 “So yam Wenfi sleighing with a bolster up in Johnsfiown, Slamk, dié yea enjoy your ri&e?“ fly Kwfiher, I have been field, was a very beautiful yvung wnmaag Ska wag brilliani in cenveraatien, sang and played wall on the pianc and guiiar, was a graceful danger, one whose society was aiways scughts aha had me and 9f admirw ers,'was a fearless hcrsewwow 1, coulé laap any fence or,jum@ any éitch. Eufij she had 3 sericus side to her nafiuras she was an omniveréus reaé E, af staaéaré Eeaks, ever éelving into social questiéns and trying ta solve knotty prmblemsa Sh8‘W&S particularly fond ofarguing with learnadzmen. In diacuasion she aiways kept her temper, was quick to parceive and.to take afivanfiage sf 3 1@0p*hQ183 or a flaw in an Qppcnent’s argumant, and she was blessed Wifih a kean sensa of humara 311 my grs¢&mother*s daughters were well trained in hausa§§}é fluties, and; natwithstanding there were many'sarvan%s in the house§ aash§¢¢h%Ww%r“Was obliged Q V~..._ to spend a certain lengfih of time every day attending ta her special task. 12 Gorrit Smith . Elizabeth Cady was brought up in tho midst of the most oonoorvativo; soofiarian surroundings; How she became so liberal, along so many lines, has always been an interesting study to mo; one of iho poiont influences in the life of this wideuawako young Womn was her oogstant visiting at the home of her cousing Gorrit Smith, the aboliw tionist, at Potefboro, New York. His daughter Elizabeth anfl my mother formed a strong friendship that lastoé all thoir 1iVBSa Grandfothor did not altogether approve of these visits; ”5udgo Cody ad» mired his brilliant nophoo'and appreciated his sterling oharaoiorg but ovary fibre of his being rovoltod against the aovanood opinions of Gorrit Smith. However, the two families were so knitted togothor by relationship and sinooro friendship fihat a rupturowas absolutely impossible, so Elizabeth Cady osoapod oonstantly from the religious austerity of her homo into the swootor3 froor at» mospher of the ?etorboro household," wvitoo my sister, Harriot Stanton Blatoh. “Tho Potooboro house was spacious, and always full of choice society", Writes my mother; "hero you met scholars, philosophers, philanthoopigts, judges; bis~ hops, artists, musicians, and statomon. \ ........ There novor'wao such an atmosphofioof peace, freedom ano good cheer, nor were there over two such hosts as Cousin Nancy and Cousin Gorrit.” There were tins when anfii-slavery was tho all~absorbing EOpi3a Through the portals of the home at Poterboro stopped Wendell Phillips; fiilliam Lloyfl Garm rison, Horace Greeley, Frederick Douglass, and John Brown} As it was one of the stations on the “Under Ground Railway", the outnbuildings often harbored runaway slaves, resting for a day or so till Mr. Smith was able to convey thomby oar- riago, or sleigh, safely to Canaéa, Where, the moment they stopped foot on English soil, freodom.awaitod thom. My mother saw and oonvorsed with those runaway slaves and heard from.thoir own lips the tales of their tortures; Thus it was that she early became interested in the sad lot of that much abused race; Every possible phase of political and social life come up for discussion at Peterfboro, and as those who did thetalking,were the leaers of thought of that day you can readily judge of the influence all this had on the open mind of my mother. . . , , Henry Brewster Stanton It was at Peten¥boro that Elizabeth Cady first met Henry Brewster Stentonfi _ re a direct descendant of Elder’fii1liam,BreWster, who came over in the Mayflower, Mr. Stanton‘wae then considered the most eloquent aod impassioned orator on the anti-slavery pletforme eHe was a finemlooking man, ten years ow mother‘e senior» Elizabeth Cady had a passion for oratory, who unuotal powers and earnest» mess of Mr. Stanton soon made a deep impression upon her. Carriegewloads of ladies and gentlemen drove off every morning to dttend the anti~s1avery meetings that were being hold all over Eadison Gounty. The enthuoiesm.of the people in these great gatherings, the thrilling oratory, were experiences never to be forgotten. My mother says in her autobiography,- "I became deeply interested in anti~s1avory and temperance questions; saeeoeseee I felt a new inspiration in life, and was enthused with new ideas of individual rights; for the anti-slavery platform was the best sooool the American poopie ever had in which tolemmoteepublioan prinoioles of government." Her‘fiedding Journqyg I The result of that meeting in Peterboro in Ootoben,1839,'Wao a wedding in Johnotown, N. Ye; im.May, 1840. Judge and firs. Cody oppoeed.th9tmarriagé Ld of their :w@5%fi{“ fdaughter to "a radical“; but the young P90P19 were Obduratga 14 and a'wedding trip follcwed ts tha'§br1d’s Antiwslavery Convention hefid in Lcnden, England; in June, 1840; My father was Secretary ef the Convantion; as well as one of ths delagates fr¢m;£he United States‘ E333 Amsriéan*wmmen had also been sent as delegates, but on account of English prajudisasg based on asriptural texts; thay-were net permittefi to take fihair seats an tha flocrg so had ta sit in the galleries and look on ignomigfuslyi There were many ringing appeals made in that greai hall $0 seat tha Woman 1 delegatas from.th@ United States; My father; I aflzprcué £0 say, made an impassionm ’ ed speech in their favor, William Lloyd Garrison %i11iamKL10yd Garrison, the knowledge of Whose eloquence was wcrldwwideg and whQm.a11 England had be@n.anxieus to hear; was so indignant at the insult to his counirywemen that he refused to take his saai an the flaer, and sat silent in tirza §~‘§a.1.1ef3? ‘z»*«z'i‘t;h. the ”¥HC}31'L*?31T'1a ~ /7/5‘/7 ‘‘‘’7/(/’'‘‘ , M/%% Z“‘“;,‘Z f 3&4 7 / &/Z:-L/-:1 /9/éjisaniel O‘Conne11 Daniel O‘C0nnel1$ the great Irish oratcrg made his first agpearanca afi the world‘s Coneniioné a few days after the women delegates had beefi rejected. He paid a beautiful tribufia to wamam and saifl fihat if he had been presanfi an the opening day he wmulé have spaken in her f&VQfa‘ Gssaecuaoosaatasoaesma we can) i‘ I 1: 5 o st :1 2 t 85 m ‘Piciure af 99 Lucrefiia Mfifit : «: 9G!'DlQ'U!*ItfiCQI!I<IOOC~1fl!Q*3 - 4. \ ' '~,'i.’.f~‘: V H ‘\ fl’ ' . ,g,;l,§»s."'” 15 Lueretieemeei These scenes all made e etreng impression on ehe heppy young brideg Eliz- abeth Ceey Stanton; One ether experience meée this cenventicnmemereble fie my meeher. Threughoufi its sessions ehe set in the gallery next to Leeretie mfifit§ the distinguished Quaker yreeeher free ?hiledelphie; she end Ere“ eeee became well eequehted. efiother afterward ereee ofi her: “She was is me an entirely nee revelem tiem.of Wfimfiflhfigdascseseasacstcal shell never cease te be grateful fer fihe pet» ieeee eed seeming pleeeure with ehieh she fed my huegering Sfifllasssseeeseseseaea Eben I first heerd frem.her lips that I had the eeme right he ehine fer myself that Luther} fielvie end Jeen Knox bed; end the eeme right he be guideda by my Gen eenvietione; I felt e eeewbern sense of dignity ewe freedeen“ These ewe fliew cussed the grebleme of life fer the eomen cf thee egg, and decided} en their re~ tureflee emerieeg he eell e eonventien with the ebjeet “ef deeiing eéequetely eith the rights cf eomen". This meeting did et take piece, heeeverg till 1848» ey perente trevelled all overfingleedg Ire1end5*Sce£1end end§ be eeme ex~ teeifi Freeeeg and feihee spake in all the large citiee ef the British :S1$5e On returning is her native lend; meeher,eee eekeeeeeet ehe had seen eeeeee that ieierested her meet. Her promgt reply eee, “Lucretia eeeeifi While in fiublinfi Irelend, they were eeeerteineé by Daniel G‘Gonne11§ eke "Qreet $ieeriee“3 as he wee eelled. During dinner, Ere, Steeiee eeked him.if he heped fie geie liberty for Ireland; “Ne”, he eeid; “but ii ie elweye geed eeliey fie claim the ettermoetg and when yen will get eemethingfie caashesocosoaocnesavaaseoaoessn Q ‘ '3 Q 55 Q Q ,. > at A //"’""“"‘-. 5 _,;~'' .3 9; an U ‘,~~/ I W fiqgfiurexcf 3 Q, . V 3 ‘1 ‘V ‘_', I... »-~‘“="_’“"' _ Q s . Eeeeegfiezlree treln ; 1 [4, V ~..,\\‘ Q \( /1;?" ‘ ‘_ §§¥“»-3,_: C If,/"' 5 3‘ G 1* § a figgggibifiiifiiftfifi~§9§O&$O!O$Q89‘ Hbmaward Bcunfi §hen.mothar wenfi in Troy to school she rode on the firsi railreaé built in fihe United Statesg which rau between Schaneciady ané Albany. My parenfis WBm$ fig Europe an a sailing vessslg But they camfi hemg an fiha first steamfir fihat ever crossed the Atlantic Ocean, the iggfius” of the Cunard Lineg All threugh her evantful life she di& things fihat ware beifig dame for the first timai On their returnimr. and firs. Stanton wenfi to Jahns%awn$'where thgy ran maimed under fihe parantal reaf fof twp yearsa Faihar studied law in Granéfather§s effice. Esther busiad herself reading law, historyg ad galitieal agansmyg but in 1842 all her thoughts were turned to the firactical one; mf'hat ts fie ififi a baby. Sha says; “Though mwtherhsad is the mst important of all tha professions; requiring mre knawledga than any ofiher departmsnt of human affairs, there is not sufficient attention given to the preparation for this high office.” In September, 1842, she gave birth to a fifle boy, Whm was namefi afiar his graméfathar5 Daniel Caiy 3tant@n. The scientifia manna? ifl'Whi$h she raised thafi baby'wsu1d have flame creflifi he gif twentieth century mairani She said she had been fihimking$ raading and absarving, ‘ad had as liitla faith in iha pgyular tfiaarw ies sf tfififié days as regarés babies as she baa an m&fiy othar subjgafisy 03% ry sf ligfit illuminated the darkness about her, “It was a hawk by gndraw Qcmbafgn la” 3‘? famayg sha“Wriiaa, She Proved Ber Th0?i%S g fiaulfl that I had tims and spasa to tell in daiail haw she firaimed her hursag her husbamdg her parenfigg evén the d0ct9r§ as $3 haw ha? baby was ta ha ifiaatadg when mast of them.ha& been tha parents Qf num@?aus ahildramg Sui aha carried the day; and har‘h@a1thy3 bauficing baby convinced tham.£ha$ her thcrigs mmat be right, as he never ariad, slept a gfiad Shara of the tima, and; baing givw ” an planfiy af fresh air amd‘water to drink, being wmrsed reguzarky by tha_o1cek3 17 -’ gégi,/é;44Lqnm%%¢2e~ua.Zé%vu¢¢A4ij:Z;;4»» M__ . ¢ M A.‘ a-.« V ‘N 1- wt; aw ’ -3‘ «-1 ‘ _‘}={»‘‘ '-._.'’7 .'.._g‘ "'3: *3 _, 1 _ h@4 wag never 111* E9 fil§§t &1mn@ mg a raam by fi1maa;$:‘ Egbufif sa$u all ac? .% ;% , 8 ,, - _ ¢= mm ..,V;g . ~= *; 2 ~ : , fin I * . ~ $ -+ [ w “’w §ead&n& fii hhls blflm G6flmfiT$d an pay$1a¢0g§; dgat and nyglanefi anfi aha“ she cam t tha Qonalusian that babies ; s}% vied uwless somgthing wag fiha mattfir thafi "7 *3 gauld be remediafi§ Eémaa sha wa child cry withaut faaling haunfi ta flfifl J. R-4 » at “e‘-"* 2 c ‘i , .9» " 1* sub whafl ma; baa cauafig I %e? in life she lecfiurad far aight mmnéhs af avary‘y@a?3 far twalva X‘ 25* Q'"‘§"‘ "'5"? 5 ’~ —‘ us": ‘ ‘“‘ *"“:§Vé.' .‘ ’ 1" ’ fi ‘ 3‘ -9 . 4, " 1' ‘-3 ygayg§ frgm,m&1m$ as Ca1ifgrnma3 fr$m.k;aaasa%a ta Texas; On thasa axtgnazvg traps h 1Ffi A‘ ” av 'fi”“ W%%‘ rv‘n “whims afid i@na?a@t n9%@fl%q Qwd %“?%%v “ai Siaa ‘x.1.£a33E§Z‘1.i:‘J§.1.“J‘e3S E5; 41.. us’-.1 Q {I 1 :3 /L .*...z‘ 5 .-..:. V ‘3 . "' ~ *‘ * «N» J‘ - «-’$« 5 ‘—»~“¥>»3~ «a- G‘? and» *5 in $9 savan saufld shildrafl sf her awn she felt she aauld sp@ak‘vi%h authmriiya An Imgragsiva flbjacfi Lassen . .... Jae ._ Gm ana aocasian, a'wh01a car full of peo§1s'was pn tenfierhmeks fram thg graisngad 3?yiflg_Q§ a b&%y, As maths? enfiarad éha car anfi task he? seafig sha hearfi its pit@0us'Wai1s, SQ she want fcrward and askea the‘waary5 ysumg mgthar if sha might taka ii; The b&%y raadi1y"wanfi ta % marg and wa1king‘With ii ta ihe anfi sf tha car she tagk har ymakat drinkiag qlass from.ifi3 saga; ringimg 1%, gig firaiafii ii af avery fiyay. Sas”ag him 35 ihirsiyg mgthar gag the lifiiia fgi aw ‘Y s samfi mfirflfi iheng smiling mg7%§ he? face, Ea laifi hia ¢@ad 0n.her b?§a$%«an&‘wamt poi’ "‘f” . Q‘ ~ . .7,-4 -“=;"‘:' > 1"‘ "‘,“‘,‘~. g ’s,. pt. -3- ~u-« -v ' .. . faaw as;ae§ lmfiuflfiufiy; flfu§T aghzls gha saturnmd is whara the babylg maramis waragm is th@ chiig gfiill sleyt an paaaafuilya I!” 3“ 3? , . - .,.,.- '? _, ., ‘H! . ‘~‘~. ,. ‘ ,— A Yam S%a3.mada&fi‘; said %flh%fl?§ all ia@ Erb§‘fi§3d§fl‘W%3 a drink @§‘waie:&“ Y?‘-:'~:1:“ 15 age ~ 1 ‘ “Y _' F .,,‘x, 6. V, g , . , V . at 5. g 3 awfiggw axclazmad tha woman} why, ha 3 nava? had a drink mf Waiar mm hlfi lifai“ it A _ '_ _ W. r V N H .. .w._ h N w_ V, , , Euflgi you glVfi3fiMn¢§h§§l@fi and Eibtmfig wafiar?“ Mmfihar znqmgrafls fir”. 1 ’ «,3 . ‘E « ;-,~-. #9 r,«;‘ -r 9». Ufifi gas; cgitaxfig, was 0&3 «nswar. “Haw aid ia geurboy?" mcthar askad. 18 "One year last Tuesday". Wfihat have yam been giving him to drink when he was thirsty?" flnfi t0 he? hG?FGF she received this &flSWG?a "Tea? coffee er milk, and when he crias very har&, we put a few drops cf whiskeygor soothing syrup; in the mil&;§ So methar sat down opposite thése ignorant young paremts and gave them a simple talk em hygiene, disk, dress, digestion, physiolegy, ha impertance above all things of giving children glenty of water ta firing. ézflkzihig tims fihg baby lay on.m@ther’s lap sweetly sleeping; she had thrgwn a light shawl over the chilé. Tha §e0ple in the car gatherefi araund, samfi standing am the seats ta listen. Hang of the man asked questicns, ta carry heme the informaticn to their wives, as they said, they also, haé babies that criafi incessanély. The years after the birih of hér 1fir3t son.Were very full afifi busy ones. In lfiéfi my parenfis mpved to Boston, Mass., where my father began.thapractiee cf lawg as a parimer of Ruus Chcate. There mother mat Lydia.fiaria{Chi1é, Elizabeth Peab¢dy3 Thaodare Parker, Ralph Ealdo Emerson, Charles Sumner; Jehn G."Whittier, Bronsen &lcoit§ fiathaniel Hawihorne, and many ether litarary pegple and reformerag She ané father were frequent viaitmfs at the h0mfls0f §ande1l Phillips and fiilliaz Lleyfi Garrisana flhila in BOStGmfi mother attended all the lecfiures, churehas, cencertsg theatrés, temperancefi paace, prisan~ref¢rm.and antinslavery oonvantions that mgt in the city; She says:"I never lived in such an enthusiastiaally litarary and ram fmfim latiiufla befare. my mantal powers wera kept at the highast tansimn." Th0se'wMre stirring times in which my paranis lived, BostQm‘Wag the stgym cenire of many of the big movements of that day» The great antiagggvgr mgatingg 19 in Fanuail Hall rmakad Basion to its very founfiatisn. They were cften dis» turbed by huge mgbs that woulfl held the most gifted orator at bay hmur after hear. These an the §latform‘were pelted with rattan eggs: cabbagasg and even brickbatsi During this parioé of her life in Bosfion my mother alga visited Brook Farm, gpandigg Emu d&ys thera, and saw that cammunity fixyarimant at its heigfill " -_ ‘:9 ~,,.», «7 - A ’ 3 _.‘ .v.s“_z,"-9, , .« Yark Sun§‘Waited an fiablg. Thus through her earlv vears’was the bent of this breafiminded thmuvhtn 2.3 u 21 3 «.3 ful yaung wnman made firm; the fofindation stones were Wall laid amang “*l native hills, and nsw she began fig build tha supafsfiruature thereon. firs. Stanton as a Housekeeper- *?‘f"" my grandfather had given maihar a fine, naw heuse, baautifully farm nimhed, on the hills of Shelsea, overlooking Beaten Harbaur. She says; "fihen firsi installed as mistress avg? an gstablishmant, one has the fiama faaling of pride and satisfaction thai a young ministar must have in flaking charge ‘-3 5 *.-”:§1I’§3. {:9 w £3 cf fiis first eaugregationg s.... It is a praud mmmant in a woman’$ life i suprams wfithin four walls. ..... I gtufiiad my everything yextaining ta hou$a~ kaapingl ..... I had all ihe mast ap§roved cook~book5, aud spent much sf my , lg . '= M V . ‘l " ' ‘:7 ,M«(. timg picklingfand exyeriménting on.n9w‘&ishes. I felt the same ambiiion ta _% axeell in all fiepartments sf fihe culinary art that I did at schcal la ifia fiifferent .ranehes cf laa?ming. seats I put my whole Saul imts everything and enjoyad it.“ my mnther was a famous housakeeper and cook; though she always kept several household employaes, thera'was nothing she herself could not dc. Her house was always in fierfecfi orfler frem garret to cellar, her back dear as —.u.vz‘-‘v=—’(¢’ 20 ha? front door. Eu 1845 Judge ani firs. Gady mmvad to fllbany fer a faw years ta as~ tablish twn of their senswinwlaw in the legal yrsfassian ihare, S0 fihfi J Qapifial 9f the Stata gfififimg the family rallying paint far same time. G@verncr‘¥illiam H, Seward « firs. fifianiam made several visits ta £1bany during thig period, and fihus‘was able ta take anzzative part imthe discuaaien cf t&a Earriad fiomangs Pramerty Bi11§ the V;-3 - mending in the Legislatures Ths bill haé bean introfiugad in 183* it did mat pasfig hewaver; Wniil 1848. fii1liam‘H. Sew&rd'was Govarnor - 3 9- _ ’ ’ ’ “ “’ figriflg §art gf this tima; he appravad of the bill; anfi hi; Wlffifi a wvman of b o A 0 w‘ . if n» V E3 N‘; “ = , rt ‘*1 3 2“- rare lmtalllganae, advacatad 1t warmly. logawhar , firs. Stanton flT;t$§§ “firs. Seward and I had the epgartunity of talking abeufi tha bill with many membars3 bath cf the Senate and fissembly, in S0ci@iy§ as wail as in smmittas raams.” Gmvarner amfi Mrs. Sewar&‘s friendship far my mather laatad t0 the and 9; uhair £335, and thay'were freguant visitars at aaah 0£har’a hamasg §il1ia3:£. Sewarfl was affierward Secretary Sf Stafifi in ?ra$i&ent Lina01n‘s Gahinafia %Mr3. Stan%on‘$ saemné son Henry was barn im Albany in 1843, during one cf hay visits taera, fiunéar mare favarabla auspices than w§'first fiarnfi she; writes, “as them I ts dc 1:zr:i.i:.E’; sza. bsa.z:y.*‘ imzi. }—mx¥ 33.§.z*d son, C;~erz*i*%; gm-2,33 3fiflHt0n,“W&S born im 1845 at Che1aea¢ H533. under the ahadaw cf Bunkér Eill mmnumanta Sha:musfi have been a very bay wammn wiih thmeé bays ifi Pan? years; she nursad all her b&hies3 and; though she always had nurses; ska did man .31‘ ._‘i things hewsalf for her children, She was a meat devotaé mmthar; she sang and plryad for us on bath yiano anfi guitar; anfi tald uswandarful stories. She 21 cculd racita poefiry by the page; often thesa recitations were fram tha Odes of Hsrace, 0? the Eclsguas of Virgil, she nevar forgefi her Latin er Greek. I hava often seen her, at the twilight hour ih her ald age; surraunded by a bevy of children listeninv s§el1b0und't0 her thrilling tales. -; ”‘5?%l£* * il57” 51 ? Lif@ at Seneaa Fallso lflha sevaritv of the Naw‘England climaie provad toe rigcraus for my father’s ~ he<h; sa this stimulating; intellectual and sccial lifal and his brilliant legal start, all had to he given up; and in the Spring of 1847 my parents mgved to Seneca Falls, fiew*?ark. Father’s haalth improved greatly; hey spant sixteen years of their married life in that littla village; and the?e their ' :¢..s;;\,l~—m . qfiéfif four ohilflren'war9 born. t A 7 %§%w¢i¢ Grandfafiher had given mmther a large, ol§~£ashionadR§ame in Seneca Falls, also a farm near the town. On her way to the new home she stapped in“ Johns» town to visit her parents, and left her nurse and three boys there While she . want on.to Seneca Falls alone to put tha house in hahitablg condition. Father had been called to New'Y0rk flity on important business. Ebther’s eldast sister, firs. Edward Bayard; had lived in fihat villagé sevaral years before, and as ELih@F had oftéa Viaitefl her, she was already acquainted‘With many of the tawnspeapleg I At parking Grandfather gave his daughfier & goofily sized check and said with a kiss anfl a smile, “You believe in woman‘s capacity £0 dc and dare; 35W Q? ahead and_show us what you can do'With that hause.“ She started off quite hagpy at thafhcfight of the rasbansibility cf repairing a hause and pufitimg all things in arder. Tha ylaca had bean clmsad for several yearsfi and needed extensive repairs; anfi the grounds, compriaing several acres, were overgrawn with weeds, and the trees, hedges and shruba sadly neglected. %y'mpther writes in her autobiography: “tit %mi@ute survay of the _ ‘ ‘Y ‘,.3§flij_,*,, - 3 praises anfi due consultatian with sevewal sons 0 '4 v‘: :'~*':'t~~ ’ ’ painters, paperwhangers, and garfleners to work; built a fine haw kitahana wpod~hause and several perches and in six'waaks took passassianifi my mather possessed a great fieal cf axacutive atility and astanishad every ate at wtat she aécomglished in S0 shart 3 time; She told me maay amusing taies of sitting on kegs cf nails and disw cussiag the tapics ef the day with samé of the leading Judgas and lawyers of the tswng who draypad in to adviae her, while the workman were pounding and hammering about themJ In Seneca ?a11s my mother found life decidedly sclitarg and even depressing. In Beaten all her immediate friends were thinkers and refarmars, amang tham.the chief figures of that fiay. There she had a new hcuse‘ith all tthe mmdern conveniences, well-trained sarvants, near and delightful neighbors. Eéra the home was remote, built at the edge of a cauntry village: The h0usa~ hold employees were inferior. ’She had an increasing number of children, anfi 1 fathar was frequantky abliged to be away frat hama on outiness. §hi1e‘we lived in Seneca Fallg he was a member cf the flew York Legislature. Ebthar sums it all uy grayhically in the fol10wing‘wor&s; *Ta kaap a larga hause .and many acres of grauné in orderg purchase evaryzartinla fer daily use? Keep the wardrobea cf half a dozen human beings in proper trimfi take children ta dentifits, shoemakers; day and dancing schools, and tc find teachers for home study,- altogether made sufficient work to keep one brain busy, as Well as all the hands I couié press into service. .fhen, tca; the novelty 0f housekeeping had gassefl away, and much that was ance attractive in dgmggfiig life was now i?ksom.. I had so many cares that the oompant I neaaeé for in~ tellectual stimu1us‘as a trial rather than a pleasure.“ Before this, my mother's life had glided by¥with ccmparative ease, Afiith her hameepathie book and bag sf bufi new fihe real struggle of existence was ugen her; Her &utias'wer9 two numerousg an&§ “None”, she sayss “sufficiently exhilarafiing £0 bring inte play my higher faculties; hamaa 1 auffereé from.m@nfim1 hunger. I naw fully underw steed the practiaal difficultias East wcmsn have to eanfiand‘with in the isolated hemsehsld, flfiw i%e impossibilitr cf wamangs besi davelopment if in centact, the chief part of her life, with servanfis and children“, i§~£4§§fii-¥’O§§94E°I5§4Q$$§O§%$'9G$Ofl‘NB " at “’ 1' 3 : C ’ 9 S 9 1., E 0' ‘ ‘ 9 " ~ 3 \E>"§x;> ‘met’ * z \\ u 5 “‘- 5 “ .‘ 9 : 1 A I is . - ..-=-. ~ - -:=.~.‘- new E aad flmf Qgm Olu3Sb ~ 9 3 ‘ 3 Q t 7-‘ ‘re 1* . ' . ‘agfiv ' 3' 0 S (‘I V * 3 3 5 $ Q I 8 ’ 2 1 I 3 OOG0i§§0®OO!it>Cl=5352?!-fitfiflifi$- Mrse Stanton and twe 3? her bavs ffsm an old dayuerrect G _ ta 3' x,.ZT' Near Our h0me'w&s an Irish setiiament frcxzwfiish came constant commlaints E‘ "§' 1 . 5*’ «rm $ .~m— A ,, -..v ‘ .y, 4, ‘a F‘ ‘ I ‘ 5 ‘ I‘ . th&u krsfi §EdfitGn 3 bays were thlawzmg stauag mi their “pigs anfi reefs”; 38 successful was my mmfiher in bar diplemafiic adjustnanfi of affairs, thafi S18 S90? 1 0',‘ ‘‘t_ ' ‘. 1 - ‘ , N, 2 3‘ mecgms the umpire of the nexghborhood. bhe lent boogs anfi payers ta tfi@’WG§fl fififi mflfii invited the chiléram inta her beautiful grcunds ta pl“y‘wifih her hg;g ‘ "' ‘L "75" ' ‘”"’ W ‘ 1?‘ tn A ’ 1» u »- n. . » and angog uhfi Efllugm, p&Pmll@1 mfid hC?l£Qfii&1 bags: the trageza afid lafifiergfi ymdicines, she tenfied thg sick and mgnistgrad is tha wmmen im the nangs of mate?nitv§ ti‘? she Qagfifiw Qn%f§ an exmfiri if thfli J. ~ E . as -. _ .e=‘m.:... -4» J‘- ,,,,., 1- ,~ ~ 1" 4 ‘L d“ C l XX’) #55- branch 9? the mgdical prafessien. She imugzé them.haw to take intelligent cara cf their babias and children. She was lookad ugan by all her naighbars as their beat friend anfi advisefi, anfi thera'was nofihing they wou1& moi fie for ha? in return. Emerson says a hsalthy discontent is the first step in progress; my mgther says, “The general discontent, which I now‘felt,with woman‘s partian aa wife; mother} hou$ekeeper3 sgiritual guide, the wearififi, anxious look of tha majayity of wemen, all impressed mg with the feeling that some aotiva maaaurefi must %a ‘fiaken to ramedy the‘Wrongs of society in general and GE woman in particular, fiy experiamme at the'fior1d’s £fiti~S1avery Gcnvantian in Lemdanj all I had ra&d of ihe lagal status of women in my faiher‘s law books, ané fihe cpprassian af wnmgn I saw everywhere swept across yg*smul, intensifiefl nww by Hg'mfiny personal exw‘ periencés. it seemgd as if all the eleménts had conspirefl to impel me te same flflwayfi Sggg, 1 ggulfi net sge‘wh&t to de or where to begin, ~ my only thought was 3 public meating for protest and discussion.” In this perturbed sfiate of mind, mother received an invifiatimn to yo my ta '%aterlo0, the naxt tawn, and spanfi he day at the home cf her friends, the Eunfis, fie see Lucfietia fiatt, wha was there on a visii. Ehey haé invited a party of their z— Quaker acquaintances, all earnest, married women, ta meat 4! - firs. Matt and firs‘ Stamioa. §y?hé%her was so full of the spirit wf discmntent, and sfia poured it autwith such vahamenca anfl eloquanca, that she stirrea herself and all her hearers, as she says, “Te de and dare anythingi" like First ficman’s Rights fienventien 0 They deciéed to holé a ”%bman's Eights Convention”. They wrote the call fl A that afterncon and had it printed in ihe Seneca Gsunév Courier an July 14, l8é8. if . , H‘ 5.. 9 Q rs ,, _* I - ‘,3 Q a w I K The c&11 was 1bgued‘w1th0ut slgnafiures, mt was merely an announcement that a r . f 9 ‘ . 5 ‘Hr » _ I ‘. , Jonah s Rzghts Conventlon would be held on July 19, and £0, lfl Seneca Falls. The chief mnvers were Elizabeth Cadv Stant on of Seneca Falls, Lucretia Matt of Philadelphia, %ary'enn ficC1intock and Jane Hunt of Waterloo, and Martha C. T E dright of iuburn. The last mentioned ledy*eee the sister of firs. flott, and the grandmother of Themes fiott Osborne, the famous exdwerden of Sing Sing Prison, who thus comes naturally by his reform proclivities. , .. The Convention was held in the~” Church in Seneca Falls. It ees a great success, the place ees crowded at every meeting, both men end women spoke. James Eott, Lucretia's handsome husband, presided. Someone sage of it: “A religious earnestness dignified all the proceedings”. M 4'c«¢,é"4..:;z/a 3 * ~ -in 'L.«.~.- ~ »~~vr~ —+‘:a’"’ " . “ ‘ - ‘ Of that first ConventionZme»eeeeee dig in her eutcbiogzephy, Eighty Years and More“, "These eere the hasty, initiative steps of the moet;momentoue refornz that hee yet been leunchede in this world, the first organized protest against the injustice which has brooded for ages over the oherecter and destiny of one- helf the race.” But mother fails to tell, in her book, one incident that I think most significant, and which I have often heard her relete; "It shows how far ahead she eee of her times and how clearly she see into the future. She asked Frederick Douglass, the great colored orator, who had oome down from.Rooheeter to ettend the Ccnventicn,°what it ees that his people, the slaves on the southern p1ente~ tions§ needeafitp out them.on the right plane. "The ballot”, he promptly replied. “And I see that is exactly ehat we Women need“, said Mrs. Stanton. Then she explained d" T to him.thet she had drawn up a resolution, tetdshe intended to present to the »%“"'5"5;3 ‘ Convention, and he must immediately jump to his feet and make e speech in favor of its passage, and then she would do likewise. The resolution reed: “Resolved, That it is the duty of the eomen of this country to secure to themselves their sacred right of the elective franchise.” “éfl-Q i,/¢¢¢,{;§::’,¢¢ ii; ey mother told Er. Douglees that in the confierences they had been holding before the Convention, ehen she had maintained that the ballot in the hands of eomen'ees the keynote to the situation, Lucretia fiott had exclaimed: ”Oh3,Lizzie, 26 if thee demands that, thee will make us ridiculousi fie must go slcwly.“ And my father, aha usually stood by my mother in all she did and saifi3 and aha disc spoke and‘fiorked for the cause of wnman,'was so amazed at her .9‘ daring,'when she confiéad ta him what she intended doing,and sp distressed that she would not listen to his advice, that he left tqwn and dié not attend any of ths'meetings3 But mother felt she was right, and nething anyoae saié coulfi turn.her from.her path. Thenfi tee, she remsghered the advice given her by Daniel O3C0nnel1 years bafore in Ireland: “Always ask for the uttermpst; than you may get semethingi” Of course those on the platformywere furious at her for springing her reseluticn on the fionventiont it created hot debate, but the brilliant éefeflse, of Bouglass and her own elcquence and logic so roused the audience that many arese and spoke for her side; and after a two hours’ tussle it was carried. v fl’ ' 4 fl 4') /~',’ /' u r éflemand fram the first was those three . 40 So that Elizabath Cady Stant0n's 1/’? 05/ little worés ~ "VotesJfor Womami“ Susan B. finthony was not present at that first fionventiens she did met some inte the mavemant until three years later, in lflfilu
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Title
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Hiawathas Song
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Date
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1921
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Text
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MUSIC LIBRARY VASSAR COLLEGE poucuxzansvc NEW vopm SONGS S}-IA-WON—DA-SEE (The South Wind), Medium, F (No. 5232) SKARL THE DRUMMER, Iwedium, D minor (No. 5253) COWBOY SONG, Medium, E minor (No. 5254) WABUN (The East Wind), Medium, F (No. 5255) HIAWATI-IA'S SONG, Medium, Fifi? minor T ADJIDAUIVIO (The Squirrel) Medium, G 5 W73 : I at. or I (No: 5268) *Except Canada and Foreign J. FISCHER 82 BROTHER - NEW YORK 119 WEST FORTIETI-I STREET 3, NEW STREET, BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND Pxnu-an in nu To...
Show moreMUSIC LIBRARY VASSAR COLLEGE poucuxzansvc NEW vopm SONGS S}-IA-WON—DA-SEE (The South Wind), Medium, F (No. 5232) SKARL THE DRUMMER, Iwedium, D minor (No. 5253) COWBOY SONG, Medium, E minor (No. 5254) WABUN (The East Wind), Medium, F (No. 5255) HIAWATI-IA'S SONG, Medium, Fifi? minor T ADJIDAUIVIO (The Squirrel) Medium, G 5 W73 : I at. or I (No: 5268) *Except Canada and Foreign J. FISCHER 82 BROTHER - NEW YORK 119 WEST FORTIETI-I STREET 3, NEW STREET, BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND Pxnu-an in nu To Mrs. Mc Elroy -Johnston « Hiawathefs Song H JAMES A. BLISS Op. 10. No.1. Me dim m H.W LONGFELLOW eg-ro con brio (Juos) In the land of the Da - c0— tahs Minn — e —ha — ha, Laugh—ing a - ter, Lives the ar - row mak- er’S daugh-ter, /.‘,\.—. at tempo Hand- som- est of all the mai -ens, I will bring her to your wig—wam, W‘ #13‘/13 #? 3- 3 Esp/res She shall run up -on your er - rands, Be your Star-light, moon-1ight,fire-light, F Copyright, 1921, by J. A. Bliss Assz.'g1zea./ to J.Fa'.s>c-law (Q Bro. J. F.& B. 5268-5 PRINTED IN U. $.A. Be the sun-light of my peo-ple (L team Tem,;0o 1 Thus it was that Hi — a — wa - tha To the lodge of old No - k0 — mis Brought the moon-light, star—1ight_, fire - light, /:57 . ._. — ,-.\ (L tempo Brought the sun-shine of his peo-ple, Minn - e-ha - ha Laugh-ing Wa - ter, , . J. .F'.& B.:'>268~5 Hand - som-est of (Of) all the maid — ens . _ the land of p smccato hand-some maid - ens. ‘fab. J.F.& B. 5268-5. H .W. LONGFELLOW 8 ..... ........ .. eggiero _ J.F.& B.5268-5 ADJIDAUMO The Squ(irre1 J JAMES A. BLISS Slower .' x7[ea’imn ‘ Then said Hi-a-Wa-tha to him, 3'5 l"""""""‘1 I I d the squirrel, Brave - ly have toiled to help me; And the name which now he gives you; For here—aft-er and for-ev-er Copyright, 1921, by J. A.B1iss Assig/zed to .lF¢1s'(.'/car & Bro. l':'—j'll:—'—""| Boys shall call you Ad — ji - dau - mo, Tail in air the boys shall «:31? you!” And /3‘ 8... the squir - rel, r""'"‘l Ad - ji-dau- mo, ' 3 ' ' ' Frisked and chattered ver - y gay - ly, o ...._..4 atempo '“3“‘I ' 3 | J. F.&B.5268—5 Maesta slower In‘ his fur rit. e breeze of morn-ing a, A Group of AMERICAN SONGS LIST No. 1 . REG, U‘ S. PAT. OFF. HOWARD BARLow . . . . . . .Hush of the World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (5193, 5194)* . . Love issoNew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..2 keys (519I,5192)..... Your Eyes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..2 keys (5195, 5I96)..... GENA BRANSCOMBE . . . . . .In my Heart there Lives a Song . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (5038, 5039) . . . . . ELIZABETH H. DAVID. ...Honeysuck1e . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (5151, 5152) InAbsence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..2 keys (5155,5156)..... Revelation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..2 keys (5153, 5154) JAMES P. DUNN . . . . . . . . .The Bitterness of Love . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..3 keys (3976, 3977, 4087) To Helen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4033, 4077) ..... Under the Greenwood Tree . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4340, 4275) . . . . . A White Rose . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4034, 4076) . . . .. G_ FERRA1-A , , _ _ _ , _ , , , , _ ,Night, and the Curtains Drawn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (3845, 3000) . . . . . CECIL Foggy-rg , , , , , , , _ ,A Masque . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Medium (4532) . . . . . . . . . Rest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4546, 4547). . . .. The Watcher . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .High (4545) . . . . . . . . . . . When the Last Sea is Sailed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bass (4534) . . . . . . . . . . . FAY FosTER , , , , , , _ _ , , _ ,My Menagerie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4491, 4460) . . . . . Secret Languages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .2 keys 4665, 4666) . . . . . Shadow of the Bamboo Fence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4328, 4327) .. . . . When Lovers Part . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4663, 4664) . . . . . Your Kiss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..2 keys (4454, 4455) J. BERTRAM Fox . . . . . . . .A Ballad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . High (4737) . . . . . . . . . . . Evening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .High (4596) . . . . . . . . . . . Eventide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (5079, 5083) . . . . . Sadness; Tears . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (5078, 5141) . . . .. FRANK H. GREY - - - - . - . -Messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 keys (4860, 4861, 4923) When Blossoms Come . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys 5160, 5161) . . . .. VICTOR HARRIS . . . . . . . . . .The Cupboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (5096, 5097) . . . . . A Madrigal . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4982, 4983) Nod . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..3 keys (5092, 5093, 5094) Silver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (5098, 5099) . . . . . A. WALTER KRAMER - - - -Eternal May . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4244, 4245) . . . . . ForaDream’s Sake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..2 keys (3851, 3852) joy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys 24246, 4247) . . . .. « Song Without Words . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .High 5020) . . . . . . . . . . . HOWARD D. MCKINNEY. In My Soul's House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4867, 4868) . . . . . Slower, Sweet June . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4681, 4688) . . . . . To a Hilltop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 keys 4863, 4864) . . . .. WILLIAM REDDICK . . . . . . .Spanish Serenade . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .High or Medium (5077) . Travelin' to de Grave . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4955, 4956) . . . . . , GERTRUDE Ross . . . . . . . . .Early Spanish-Californian Folk-Songs (Five).. . . .2 keys (5I20, 5121) . . . . . . Sakura Blossom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (5143, 5144 ‘LILY STRICKLAND . . . . . . . .Bay0u Songs (Four) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4944, 4992) . . . . . A Beggar at Love's Gate; Song Cycle . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4440, 4501) . . . . . Today is Fair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..‘ . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4338, 4339). . . .. DEEMS TAYLOR . . . . . . . . .Captain Stratton's Fancy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Bass (5242) . . . . . . . . . . . Banks 0' Doon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Medium (5210) . . . . . . . . . Plantation Love Song . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4334, 4333) . . . . . The Messenger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4732, 4733 The Rivals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4728, 4729) .. . .. A Song for Lovers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4730, 4731) .. . .. PIETRO A. YON . . . . . . . . .Gesu Bambino . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4452, 4453) . . . . . Veneziana . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 keys (4463, 4464) . . . . . 0,...- *Fischer Edition Numbers; the first for high key, the second and third for medium and low. J. FISCHER 82 BRO. - NEW YORK 3, NEW STREET, BIRMINGHAM, ENGLAND
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Title
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Rainy Day, The, The Rainy Day
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Date
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1873
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Text
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2. A 5./7a:.7:w...,__ _ >. :::'.-._:' :'5_v' Oliver Bits on -Comp any . I/7/55;: 5275/17/7. x47/7//.'’ , A4/47/74$ /7,95/4 L/U/7/7 [C \/75_';//7../_.=j5jc$ [’J. ‘4_’.£TZj7/'7‘5z7/7 LEAQ7. T mmc uuunv VASSAR COLLEGE /V )/z7/'// 5 /7.17/7547/75 £27; :3 E.“ .1 an ff En. nu. n...“ 5? .._.m We ad .h.—: ;._..m mm. 7.5 1.5 «WoMAN’s BUILDING, o 20 Fifth Avenue New York T0 HRS.‘ OHA E. _§£I1VU2I . THE RAINY DAY. Wt'itteJ1'b_)' H.W LONGFELLOW. V...
Show more2. A 5./7a:.7:w...,__ _ >. :::'.-._:' :'5_v' Oliver Bits on -Comp any . I/7/55;: 5275/17/7. x47/7//.'’ , A4/47/74$ /7,95/4 L/U/7/7 [C \/75_';//7../_.=j5jc$ [’J. ‘4_’.£TZj7/'7‘5z7/7 LEAQ7. T mmc uuunv VASSAR COLLEGE /V )/z7/'// 5 /7.17/7547/75 £27; :3 E.“ .1 an ff En. nu. n...“ 5? .._.m We ad .h.—: ;._..m mm. 7.5 1.5 «WoMAN’s BUILDING, o 20 Fifth Avenue New York T0 HRS.‘ OHA E. _§£I1VU2I . THE RAINY DAY. Wt'itteJ1'b_)' H.W LONGFELLOW. V C()n|1p()sed by ERMINIA RUDERSDOl{FE T Moderato e tranquillo. . VOICE. is cold, and $ PIANOPORTE. dark, and dreary, It rains, and the wind er wea-vy, T119 vine SUE C]jI]gS fo the lnouldzring wall, But at ev’- 1_-‘y gust the d€a{l1eaV'Q_§"fa}_1, } ‘ 22:19 7 ‘’Q'*‘f‘5‘‘°d'’‘W°Tdi'‘gt0 3”‘ Of C0"~€“8ss infhe )'eaI'1373 1))’ G. D. R11<seH&(”():int’hx3oflice <)f1}xe-Li'9>2‘2'*"’za.1<;!‘{‘(;x1«>‘:"~e=~s; at Va/,». - W3 M . ' "3 1910 p000 rall: And the day is (I-ark and } f mime, mnitlne uiml -% er‘ wear r , my flmnghts :-fill cling to flue W} > \} L ; D 5 = I + J I 51 1 / ’ U I l I I E p000 rail: 41 iaampo. I l —. I5 ‘I’ 3" I ' ' '\\__// da_y.s‘ are (I-ark and (Ire-a - vy. I’ I a tempo. 1.1000 rall: 1319 V ‘- sIti]l_®_*_ I sad 11eaPt!%__, and cease the clouds . 3 still 5111' - .\ X ” ‘ poco tillargrznrlo. _ com - 111011 fate of AA‘ AA EXHIBIT FOR N. Y. ROOM OF WOIvIAN’s BUILDING, 1OAL\ED BY [T In - to melt smue must fall, S0111-9. f"r1V>‘a ———-———— 501119 d"‘.Y~"7 501119 Zen - tanJ - (10- (g;,,,.,‘ W‘ must be dark and (lrea }‘ , rum; 1'rlll!?nf: 1917919 c6lla voce. a tempo. , 20 Fifth Avenue, New York, To be returned to Mrs. Theodore Sutro Cheurman on Music and Law. L'.‘!".‘v’ffWD!-"YT EHEE.‘ “led to -------------------------- .. an on Music andMrs. Theodore gut Law ‘CHOICE GEMS SELECTED ERG/"I IGLIVER DITSON COMPANY'S L/;\Ti:‘sT__i.isTs or piiw. MUSIC VOCAL. Wit and Wine. G. 4. 4. to n. Jf. cz.e=z.«..... so AmeAri;:an Beahuties. 0. 3. . I...C. »f~W.u- 40 v _ Tne story of 2111 fLI1(:l‘l!tl(ln"‘ who inmle inorry wit I hi~' W0-step i-ince movement for the ]il.‘ll1). A '.ll:ll’- SOl’1g 0' Gowane. Db» 4-. (l3 T0 Ell» ' flf¢F“7:l77§7/ C()lll'tlBl‘.~!, anil kiiitriitlell lll.-lbS.:l‘\’lllg-ll] in. IL i-la lino, ining piece for players who like light. II1UlL)(liU11sl‘)i(lll0 A pretty soiig, with \\'0l'(lS in :he S(30t(:ll‘ll1:1lL‘('t. Suit- hezirty, rollick‘in_: soii-,5 for baritone. Try it. llllldlc VV1El1‘iill0 $1110 llimce 1‘l1.Vll1l1l. able for a soprano voice‘ ‘in! , i ‘we llllSlEil,{0 not, 21 song - ~ _ 1 5 (w_ M .. . 1 p. , _ that will be much in \"0.‘—,"lle ainoiig,‘ ailiiiirers of good sweetheart! my Song '5 c°m3' B’ 2 ) ) 7' Boston Belles‘ Olumute $11011’ L)" L F l The $>hiIdren’s Hour r l modern vocal (‘0lllll0~Iitl<)llS F’ S" Sm”'M/rs’ : ' TV'w"”'Im" Maiden Dreaming. G- 4- <1 t0 g- - - . . Mtwl/. The odilness of style nianiI'e.~'t in tlllSllL‘\V:~l0l1g,£1.‘! well as the e.\'cellen(tcoi' both poet ‘ ' I.I14l nielo:ly, shouhl place it zit once ainoii;.>; the most ilc rable of recent song pl‘0lli1cll0ll:l. The piano aecompaniineiitis ol'it.sel1‘an attraction. ' ' F. 4. to F. On the Swinging Branches. at E "Won. “On the Swiiigring Branclics,” or the “Soiig oi'th_e ]’»obolink,” i-I one of the latest of Mr. \Vilson’s composi- tions. It is of an unu~iu:illypleasiiigii:itiii'e,tastet‘iiI and grrai-.el*iil, while the nielorlioii~i wziltiz-i'e1 llll makes it specially 2ltl.l':l('lJl\'C as to the popular reqiiircnieiits. Earth’s Fairest Flower. Di». 4. c to F- Orton 127'/uIIe_1/. One of the best mollern songs for mezzo-soprano or baritone. It liasa ;,-'racel'ul nioveniciit in 9-8 tempo, with nielo;ly anil piano acconipanimeiit alike agreeable. Vj]|ane||e_ (Peastiiitfs Song.) El). 5. hi; to g: Dell Arvmrl. “Villanclle,” or the pcasant’s soiig—./’u£ ru. ]m.s'.>‘(‘7' l’lLi'ronrlelle (“I’ve seen the sw;1ilo\\'si»:isshyine”)Ais one of the most acceptable of the modern s<)iig~s. The translation is by lln.l‘I‘_lS()lll\Illl.‘ll'(l. Both Freiirli iiml Englidi version are given. It is recoininenilcd to sopranos. fie Lea!-jeth |V|e_ Duet. Eb. 4. . . . . S. Salter. A hne sacreil duet lor alt’) an l tenor. \’Vc C0llllllCll(l it_ to <:lioii'—sin;,rers. The accompaniment is 1'oreii.her piano or organ. There's a Friend for Little Children, 0. 4- C- to g‘. E. S. Hosnzer. A solo which many who (lC.~'ll'C suitable ])lC('€H to be sung to a Sabbatli g.',‘2tLll0l‘lll}.;‘ will be plciise<l ll’! obtain. The acconipaiiiineiit 1'or either piano or orgaii is inter- esting. The piece can be usccl to £l(l\’.‘l.I’lt£lf_],‘0 by :1 clioir- soloist for special oitcasions. It is a gem for home use as well. ry' . Titania’5 crad|e_ Sopr. or Ten. F. 5. E to/'i..] .eiman.. 'fitania’s crad[e_ Mezzo—Sopr. or Bar. Ebipllgi 7:1 (1 r. The well-known worrls from Sliakespeawii “Mi l.~'uni- mer Night’s I)reain” (“I know a bank whereon the wild thyme blows”) are liei'e melodioiisly anil arti~‘tically set liy Liza Lehman. It is agooil song for an e.\'pei'ienced Vocalist. Published in two llll'f(I‘I'Cl’ll? keys, as above. _ Ely. 4. bl; to El}. Pe/ez-son f iretty poein set to equally attractive and very tune- ul music. 'Tis that] Love The9_ Duet. D. 4. (Lohr) Vzme. A most a-rreealile duet for two Voices of Illeilllllll compass. Try it. Love's Signal, Ab. 4. cto F‘. A. F. Burnett. One of the most enjoyable of recent songs. The worrls are by Freil. E. VVe:itlierl_v, the well-known ICng_;li.~il1 writer, anil the music by l’>lll'll(‘l$t will llllll l.io~':t.<i o1'iiil- niirers ainoiig lovers of the best English songs. The sentiment is very prctty:— _ “Only a wee worn kerchief That lay in mv trembling hands, As I sat by the \Vll]ll0\\' (lI'0f1illll]g!,‘ And looked on the moonlit liinds.” Waitin to welcome her Bo . G. 2. «i to F11. g y J. W. Wlzeelm‘. PODUl£tl'.SOIlg and chorus byapopularauthor. The sentiment is §:_'()O(l, and the song is worth a place in your collection of vocal gems of this kind. At the French Ball. So11g.\vithD2mc0.DF- iipcto F. . . ;ru.hain. “I went to the ba1l,_theimiiglity French ball, Anwl I ilrinccil with a little grisette; She was not over stout, aml not very tall, And so pretty I soon called her ‘pet.’ " Darke Musketeers. llI2ll‘(.‘ll~S()1l"'. F. 3. The 3' to F. V.‘ W. I/V/teller. Another new comic song by the aiithor of “The Col- ored Four Hun=lre(l.” Briglit aiiil catchy. He isn't on the job just now. Eb. if Fllibto F. C 1 C’IlH.(}IL. Humorous song. Just the kind to provoke inerrinient Spanish cradle Soy-|g_ F in. 4. E!) to Di). lioott. One of Mr. Boott’s latest contributions to the li-tot‘ excellent modern soiigs. Both Spaiiish and Eiiglisli ver. sions are given. The song is one of the most noticeable of recent coinpositioiis. It is for a voice of inecliuin compass. al is told. Bb. 4. bl; to W2. A5 aT e that 147. F Smlzls. An excellent song for low voice. eitheralto or baritone, and we commemil it to all who admire gooil verse set to equally good music. sooner or |_ater_ El). 4. bl; to E5. W. F. Surlds. In this song Mr. Sl.l(l(lS has ailinirably set the ver.~'es of Stewart Allen to an original melody, whicli expres~ie~i the sentiment of the poem in a musicianly anil agreeable manner. The accompaniment is for citlier organ or piano. A line song for low voice. The Touch oftha Wand. G. 3. Chansonette. Eb. 3. who E5. . ..... c l The above three soiigs by Frederick S. So n'ner~4 a"e the work of 3. mu-Iii-ian whose music will repay the learnerin the most il.f_flU()2Ll)lL) manner. The piano p2l>'t.~l are no less satislactory anil iniisiciaiily t.h:in the inehnly 1L~l(:l1’ and the general treatment of the themes. Sufier Little Children. D, 4. <~%t~11 R:"’:'<’*'- _ A new sacreil .~l()I)fJ,‘ by Martin R ie lcr; toaclier ol .~ii.i5- 111),’ at the N. E. Coii-acrvatory of Music. He? Last Good By 2. F- 2. 0- to F. D 7'WW8- A song and chorus in the popular vein. Ne\\‘an.l ‘ pleasing. Take up Thy Grog-,s_ E‘). 4. a‘; to F. C’ E. I} I’:-me. A saci'eilsoi1:,r for inezr.o-~Io;ii':iii ) o - l)‘tl'lt.).1l‘ Ex - lent for a choir soloist. Ace.iiii_i.Liiiiiic-iii; s.i;t:Lblelor either piano or orgaii. Forsakey-|_ B.ill:nl. G. 4. ll to F1 . M'i'lIrir.'I. The gooil t i<tc anvl Oxquisit ‘ t eatinent of tha. t‘.i mi: so beaiitil'ully cxpre~i.<el in the vi-.i'+c.~i by Mary (J. l’reston, are <;li:iractei'istii-, of II I. '.-i=on hlillaril. This is his latest .~l()ll_(; and to all <i.i:.,-‘ei's with mezzo-sop 'aiio or tenor V ' ea we say, try this now ballad, Elllll you will not r ‘r , ' The inelorly and the gi':ic.'.1‘iil. llL‘.ll('.2ll§i£ plan» am-.oinpziniinent captivate the hearer at once. Don’t fail to secure this latest song by Millaril. The Boat with My True Love’s Name. F, ‘-’- 0 to I). (,‘oII1n. (7042. A n:'.w song; by Collin Coo. It haa :1 pretty “'1|.‘It'/4' rel’r2iin, anal will [)i'<il):).l)l_\’ be popular as a li'_>;nt, lllL“<)ill- ous “lmrit-soiig,” or a “cats-liy“ song and rei'rain oi’ t’ic college type. Simple, ll:l.lllt_\', anll meloiliou.-.'». Here is a verse, to show the sentiment :— “My true heart is a brave, brave girl; She lives by the wiile, 'i<le sea, Ami when I sail on the r.c«,~.-iii She watclies anil waits for me. I have a boat so trim and neutr- For siiilin-_; she’s won her fame,- Anll I call my boat the ‘ Ilonnie Bell,‘ For that’s my true lo\'e’.~i naine.” “Over the sen, over the sea, My Bonnie Bell goes sailing with me." There’s a Green Hill far Away. E9. 4 E/')l'1) G. J. (7. lVm'7'mi. A sacrerl song for soprano. One of the Very lieu‘. of rccent solos for i-hoirsingers. The familiar verse in a new musical setting. INSTRUMENTAL. Gov. Russell's Grand March. Eb. 4- _ G'I'II(‘€ ,I.’I7‘I]Ill_f/. A captivntiiig March for the piano. A gooil portrait of Gov. Russell ailorns the title page. Stolen |(is5es_ Walt7.. F. B‘;anil G. 4. _ .Io.s'ephin(- (ii-0. Goorl Waltzes are always in ilemanrl. 'l‘h‘is sci is very pretty, and we :1(lVlS(3 all who desire \valtz-iiiiisic for the piano to obtain a copy of it. Beacon Waltzes, ‘,> 4. _ . . . Lruvrence .’\"eeIm. Good lllCl0lllOl1S Walt’/.-inusic for the piano. Try ll‘. Figaro wa[tzgs_ A. I). G. 4. . , . LomI)rzr«Im'r>. Fine W'alt7.e.~i for the piano; not iliilicult, and well worth leariiing, Violanta Po|ka_ G. 3. . . . . . . . J. l{n.ecIil. Spirited, lirigiit, pretty (lance inusic for the piano. Columbia’ Fantasia-l‘olk:i. l<‘ortlie Cornet. Roi/iizson. An - ilmirable solo in G l'or the Iii; cornet. Fine piano accoiiipaniiiieiit. The piece is do licate l to anil play.-«l by John M. Floekton. It is one of Rollinson’s best cor- nct solos The Young Player. Selected Pianoforte Pieces for the Cultivation of a Refined Taste. The >lel:(;<)ll]]1!‘lBO9 the following :- I)i<:.xic l\ll<1M()R\'. . . , . F 7'/mnze. S\VF.I-IT l\Ii«ii.0oi'. . . . . . . F. ‘I’/mnw. A QUAINT 01.1) Sroin’. ’ AL.S'ATIi\N l).\Nci<:. . . . . SLr.i<;i-Y Err‘. (Crarllc Soiig.) A‘). -2. . SHADY NOOK. A. ‘Z. . . . . . I’. Lr/czi/lie INi)i.\N DANCE. . . . . . . I’. LIl<,'()IIlt3. l\Ii«:imIi1i~;N'i‘. A. -. . . . . . P. Lu miirt. JUMPING JACK. G. ‘2. . . . I9" ('/iu.zw,r]/mt, ON TIP'l‘()E. I.)-niajor. F-iiiiiier. E. (I/Lvriwf/n.r/I. FINGER-TIP STUDY. ‘. . . E. K‘/on-.«i,r/nri/. II.\l’P1' GRElC’l‘ING. l). ". . _ . E. (,7/i.rI,i'II_r/i7(I.f. The above ll2lll1()'l pieces tl‘0 alinirably 2lil.I.lllIl.‘(l to tlie use of young players, especially ])llpIl.~l. Dancing on the Levee Schottisch. Q. -3. _ _ E(l£UL)L ( /n'1.s‘lie. Captivatiiig scliottiscli for the piano. Old Hickory. Scliottiscli. C. 3. Pe1'z:_7/.S’«)_i//ii.nm'. A military srliotti-Icli for the piano. ll: l~l not h.-irvl, even if it is old hickory. It is very pretty, and. “c:itcIi_v.” A brilliant moreeziu for piano, by an exr or-«I y 110])» u'_ coinposcr. ll: is not too «li.ii.-ult 1‘.art.ie a\'cr:i;e proliizieiit pupil. ' The world's Fair. Six Ea-‘y Piano Piece-' by IIENRY .\)IB. 1. ‘~l<‘.un C()LU.\IBI.\.” W'u.lt:. G. 2. "ENoi.Isi{ Bi.oNo1<;.” Po//.-u., C. 3. "l‘[‘Al.I.\N (_:lIRL." Yorlc, G. 4 “SUO‘l‘ClI LASSIE." Galnp. (.2 5. “(JIIINZCSE DIAIDEN." il[Il7'i'/I. C. 6. “SPANI-ll[ l§i«:Li.i<:.” S«-mm,» 1,_ _ The :1!) )VU named si\' piano pix:-,e.~i are easy .’lll'l suit- Illlle for _VUll!i_‘.‘;‘ l)i‘gl|llIOI‘.‘l. lllai.-li p.c(-c ll.‘l> the pi'upi’i' “i'ingeriiig” in licatc-'l. The t tlc-pziqe ofcach i= ranti- fully illustrateil bu (il12l."£l(‘tl.‘I‘l~|l2l(‘. lei.-«N of the «ll e"— iit maivlens wl1o<eii:iti ii litv is }_:ivcn in the lit. S.-.n<l lo: fl the “The \Vorl<l’s l<‘air" set of pieces by llcxiry l.:imu Six Easy Pieces. 1 (.‘li.e.»-tor llmmi. . “l§lI.I<?l<]N l\/IAZURKA.” C. 2 . . . . , 2. “F.\li'Nl‘LEI{()\' l\IA1{(ZI[." Eb. . . 3. “illrsric G.\VOT'I‘l£.” . . 4. “.<i;\i\ii«:i: l)iu«:.uis." F. 5. “i\[iNui«:'i‘.” l). 2, . 6. “Sm: \BA:\'I)l<).” F 2. . _ . , _ . ‘A rei_narkahle ple:i.~iii;_§ aiiil wsll w ‘in -.2i ~'et of piano pieces. l<l\'eryboily who lins l.l'lU(l iiliciii -my - so. Silver Chimes, Morceau for piano. l)_;. 4. _ _ _ ‘ I _ V.’ ’I). ll"i/.wiiI.. u3“"'lll'l.'l.I1El)lIl2l1)l’. li'li tiilt in I‘) wile" -._i I t i "ili3’l. .in_«_; l.ii_i‘.a~'ia” style. The correct Ii.i_;e:iiig 14 ;__:iven for the pupil’s use. Societe de Bons Vivants. Piano Piurc. G. 5 . . z'.i'.‘. (.)i-e_of Mr. Sn lrls’s best piano pieces. “Goo-l Feltlo/iv’. ship" Hthe Eiiglisli name for the piece. Enchanted Valley, I\Iorcc:iiil'oi'piano. A5. 4. p _ (i'(LIl«Ihr>1‘. A brilli~.i_nt inorceaii, such as the :L\'ii:':i,gc pi'oIloic.it ainateur will OllJ0_Y. Playful Ron;lo_ For Piiino. G. 2. C’. U7. Greem’. ‘ An exizellciit piece fora pupil. The correct (Gcrinziii) liii,-reriiig is given. Congaree Dance. F. 5 J. F.Gi'(ilcr. The latest piaiiol'orte composition of John Francis _ (lllllUl'. It is in his usual “<::il.cliy” style. «I eranza_ _ (Hope). Melmlie for piano. Alz. 4. Very pleasing. I(](3in_ -Electric P_olka_ For Piano. F. 3. . . ].’oc.a'/cc. Briglit, Jolly, catcliy piano lllllrslll‘. Electric Polka_ Wit/L Toy lust/'imzants. . lfnes/cc. For schools or l(ll1(lCl‘g1l.l’tC11l-‘l, thi~' piece, ii.i'tir the in:iiii_iei' of IIay<ln’s “Toy Syinplioii_\',” has inusic for the ()i-.ai'iii.-i,_ Tin VVhi+tle, Bells, Ti'iaii;.,-‘le, Violoiiitello, l‘)i‘ll|ll, \'ioliii,_ Autoharp, l’op-g;ull, Quail, and (,‘Iapper~, 'Ill..‘ ineloily is pliiveil on the l’ia.no.aiiwltlicl-lnlrli'eii 1ll‘.('.UlIl]l:l.l'ly with the iiistrnmeiits nieiitionexl. This [|l0i'U wzi~' |lCl‘lUl‘nlGLl in :1 Boston I{iii(li:i;;ai'teii \\'ll,ll gool clfect. Les Fleurs_ Value for Piano. F. . Lzulot-£i:. Easy and Pretty. Toreacloyg Walt/. for I’i:iiio. D. 4. A showy waltz oi‘ ine<liuni llilliculry. Colored Four Hundred_ I\Iai'ch for Piano. _ ll». Km;//ll. T. P. 1201/10. The popular song arrangezl as a “two—step.” Sprlng’s Return_ G. 4. . . I3, (7.I(1ez‘1L. Full of Joy_ Waltz. (J. 4. . M abel Gay, G. anil l’»',. 4. , _ . Sy|phide_ Polkzi-inaziirl-;a. U and E; 4. FOR THE MANDOLIN:— Flight of Birds, Polka. (Walilteiifell. Ilfaxc//. A Iiiie polka for two inani_loiins, \VlLll_g‘llllJi1l' or piano :i.ecoinpaninient. FOR THE MANDOLIN WITH GUITAR ACCOMPANIMENT. Llf/7/I (‘mvillgu M'a.7‘ch. (‘Z l\I:iii«lo‘iiis ) I’7-(Ie](n1Il, ’.1/[Til I§i>/Inn's Fair, lVn./1‘.2:<>s. ('2 l\l:lIi(li)lll1S.) l’/-eclmiil. Ullid liowens‘ Fair. l/Valtzes. (solo). . l’/-eclaml FOR VIOLIN AND PIANO:— R‘ -;"s Prn_1/67'. C. 4. . . F. 5. . . -' ‘ .l{.'l irlmmv. . . (' oncltrl. C. 3. KlIl.I'l(’I‘l[6(] G. ‘J. ./lI'cIo(li'e. . 3 . . . . i, A. ‘2. . . . . V01/JIILIIII. above violin pi zis, with piiiiio xii-comp-.iniinciit, are i'.lassic~' whi-eli C\'Cl'_\ lea "lie ', as well as all violiiiists, shoull have. The <,{r2irliii5.; _:ri\'eii above refer.~x to the violin parts only. The piiinoacconipiiniineiitsvuryas to tlilliculty. U7«r/jiier‘. B®$’]?‘®Rl: I9fE’I”‘S©N Philadelphia J. E. DITSON & CO. New York C. H. DITSON & CO. Chicago Boston LYON & HEALY JOHN C. HAYNES & CO.
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Title
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Agreement between Phelps and Barlow, witnessed by Jasper Parrish, n.d.
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Date
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n.d.
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Whereas by Mutual agreement between Oliver L. Phelps of Canandaigua County of Ontario & State of New York and Jonathan Barlow of …County of Hampshire once State of Massachusetts it is agreed that a …..given this day by said .. as his & administration of the Estate of Oliver L. Phelps Esq. late of Canandaigua always shall be .. with Capt. Jasper Parrish of said Canandaigua to him held, or delivered as in hereafter stated It is … the understanding that paid change is to be final and...
Show moreWhereas by Mutual agreement between Oliver L. Phelps of Canandaigua County of Ontario & State of New York and Jonathan Barlow of …County of Hampshire once State of Massachusetts it is agreed that a …..given this day by said .. as his & administration of the Estate of Oliver L. Phelps Esq. late of Canandaigua always shall be .. with Capt. Jasper Parrish of said Canandaigua to him held, or delivered as in hereafter stated It is … the understanding that paid change is to be final and conclusion as to any claim of the Estate of Oliver L. Phelps d… against said Jonathan Barlow but as this this an others .. whom it is thought may be able to pay this proportion of said Bond,it is agree that said Jonathan Barlow shall not have the benefits of said … to .. against the Estate of said Phelps or in favor of the other …, but that in .. he should be found on any of the Bond aforesaid and be able to .. and .. then the said Parish on having proper nation of the same shall be authorized to deliver said … to John Barlow- said Barlow further agrees that before he applies for said d.. he will notify said Phelps of the same, and if in any .. then may be instructed, against him in which he may be liable for cost or damages said phelps will give sufficient indemnity for such liability and it may be .. for said Phelps to make up of the name of said Barlow, then in that .. the .. shall not … to relieve the other .. from this … Signed in presents of Jasper Parrish Oliver L. Phelps J[?] Barlow
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Title
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Barnes, Lucy -- to parents, Mar. 17, 1872:
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Creator
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Barnes-Sellers, Lucy
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Description
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VC 1875
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Date
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March 17, 1872
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Vassar College. March 17. 1872. My dear Parents) Daily hare I look for a letter from you in answer to my inquiries about going home, but have been thus far disappointed, however by this time next week 1 suppose all matters will be settled and X w£U be in great excitement, with the hopes of starting for 3300 the following Wednesday. And when X get there I have some thing to ask you which X could not think of putting on paper for X dont think X can write with nearly so much effect. This last...
Show moreVassar College. March 17. 1872. My dear Parents) Daily hare I look for a letter from you in answer to my inquiries about going home, but have been thus far disappointed, however by this time next week 1 suppose all matters will be settled and X w£U be in great excitement, with the hopes of starting for 3300 the following Wednesday. And when X get there I have some thing to ask you which X could not think of putting on paper for X dont think X can write with nearly so much effect. This last word puts me in mind of an Essay X wrote yesterday and which as been distressing me for the longest while, (vis) What kind of prose composition has the most effect upon man kind fc Why. X took fiction because most read- I dont know how this will coincide with your ideas upon the subject. On Friday evening of this week as we had a lecture from Mr. Parsons - on Michael Angelo, Chapter Beta would not be able to give her long looked for "swell" Opera of "The Doctor of Alcanlaia" (which if youremember we heard at the 7*^ Street Theatre by Mr Ghilehirst and Bishop he) To this Chapter asked the Sophomore if they would be will- ing to have a Candy pull in the Steward's Department the next night instead of their usual sociable so that the wonderful opera might have the Kail This the Sophs- agreed upon and so Zeta flourished never was the Hall so full in fact packed. I sat about in the middle of the room Mar. 17, 1872 - 2 and so tightly packad that I could hardly stir- when Liaxie asked me how X should feel If there should be a fire imagine my comfort. All the Invited guests and not the admitted without theirtickets- All the ; ; J u ; , , i i ' ■ , . , ;'. ' I , ' , 1 ; , profs, every teacher together with the Pres fc lady prin- were present. The principal performers were greatly applauded and were showed with tit } , ',' .' t ' ■ t 1 i flowers from the audience — This Opera- cannot not be compared • ' * i < ; I l ' . ' J " v 1 ■ ' , i I ' with our Drama The Lady of Lyons - being so entirely different Neither could they have been visa versa for Beta has the Singers and Alpha - excels in dramatic tallent.—— Do tell Aunt Pattie for me that X Intended writing to her to day but find it now impossible so that X will have the pleasure of seeing her before my next letter With lov~ to all believe me Aff- Daughter Lucy Lucy (Sellers) Barnes, '75March 17th, 1872 Lucy Sellers Re an Essay on what kind of prose has the greatest effect on mankind
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Title
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"Elizabeth Cady Stanton..." pp. 89-134, n.d.
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Lawrence, Margaret Stanton
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n.d.
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89 During their etey et the convent, hother went up into the Black houhteine, e few milee away to vieit my brother, 5‘ ie French wife, ehfi her numerous reletiohe where ehe eew the life of the modern Lengueooo. Here everything differed from America end the plains eroghd Toulége. The eeeeehteceh neither eeeeh French hor uhéeretehfl it, they heve e Qg;g;g,of their own. Their egriculthrel ieeleeente ere ee quaint ee their epeech, the plow they uee &e a long heem, eithe eteve in the miefile with...
Show more89 During their etey et the convent, hother went up into the Black houhteine, e few milee away to vieit my brother, 5‘ ie French wife, ehfi her numerous reletiohe where ehe eew the life of the modern Lengueooo. Here everything differed from America end the plains eroghd Toulége. The eeeeehteceh neither eeeeh French hor uhéeretehfl it, they heve e Qg;g;g,of their own. Their egriculthrel ieeleeente ere ee quaint ee their epeech, the plow they uee &e a long heem, eithe eteve in the miefile with e eow at one ené end e boy et the other! The ereih ie out with '-.3 e eickle, the manure ie eoettered over the ground with the hand; - or wee in ieee. But inside the beautiful Berry eeheion, one returheo to mooerh times, the tehle, the bede, the rooms of the oheteeu were much the eeee as those of Toulouee eho New York City. The cooking wee most delicious, "whet an edmirehle eroe duct of French gehioue ie the art of cookery“, hrs. Stanton re~ merkee. hy hrother was busy on hie hook, "The Women Question in Europe," eho every poet hrought manuscripts and lettere from ell over the Continent eritteh in elmoet every tongue known to lBsbel. l Ae there were many good linguiete at the Cheteau, ehé they ell epoke Englieh, theee finally aepeerefl in English dreee, then they were hended over to hre. Stanton to elter end polieh. So thet juet whet my leer mother went to France to evoid, ehe foune eeeitihg here ehere ehe eent to rest. But ee it was all’ for the Geuee of Women, ehe rut her heed to the plow, end hid it with e emile oh her fece. She wee eelightee with the ecehery of the Bleck hounteine, eeid they.reeih@efi her of the rehge of eouhteihe around the Yoeeeite Velley in Celiforhie; off in the distance you see the ehowmaepped Pyrenees. One of her greeteet pleeeuree euring her visit there Wee wetohihg the development of her first grendohild Elizehetl Ceey eteeton, Jr., eelleo Lizette, then three mohthe old. _ After e eon+h'e etey ehe returned to Toulouee. The eietere gave her e moet effeotionete eeloome, ehe hee eehy pleeeeht n the gereehe, e nueher of ehom epoke incl.‘ chats with the prieete lEngl:eh. Mother, not having epoken French einee eke left the 4” 9' Emma Willard School, over fifty yeere hefore, eee rather fiuety, 1 to get it milely, so ehe neturelly preferre to eeeee i her E35 W my eieter egtenfiee heee in the heeuti- $3.; :15 4’ netive tongue} She ffful Gethefirel %e the City, heilt in the eleventh Cehtrry: ehe eeye "Being entirely new to ue it wee a moet entertaining epeoteouler eerformeeoe. With our Amerioen ifieee of religioue fievotion, it eeeeed to ue thet the people ee well ee the heilding belonged to the Dark Ages. xxx The one redeeming feetere in the whole rerforeenoe flee the greed eueio.“ Ere. Stanton Often ' "r \4 eelhed in from the garden end took e beck eeet in the ohepel, eorihe the eervioe, it heihe eumeertiee ehe wore no? het: it ie rt‘ ....1 Ho sf} Tl J. {U 1?» (30 t the rulee of the Epieoopel end Cetholio oherohee, you know, for eoeee to enter the eeeteery eith unooveree heefies but ehe eiehee to ehoe the hune, ee they filed out that no puhieh- heih» eo H: 5523;» e, ee 0’? eeet free heeveh eeee fioeh ueoh her for floieg th mugh Qlggr than they, end a foreigner, they never reeohetreted with her. "The eietere, who eeeegee the large eetehlieheent, eeemefi happy in the mieet of their eevere eutiee. XXX The? 6V1- I -,. _ , - ’ ' --V "9 _ er‘ eehtly eejoyefi the eoelety of eeeh other, every evening rrom eet ‘ , .++. N eix to eieht, thevrin the eereeee in e orrole eewihg, knluulflea end ohettine, with oooeeionel hurete of merry leughter. XXX , - . 3 LO 1*-‘ Their exietenee ie not es eonotonoue es thet of mogt women in fa.-ri the ieolet d houeehold, eepeoielly thet of the fermer'e eife _,_ .<~—;r*nc\*:i'»;e«r1nvA*)?A%xr:umx-n3vaim+¢~9!«mdvW“‘“’“ 5;‘: A,\n- « .3 in her eolitery home, milee from a village end poet offioe. they teught e eohool of fifty orehen eirle, who lived in one of the oonveet heileinee. they eleo hee e few boereere free the old erietooreey of yeenoe, who hete the Reeutlie, end etill oling to Popee eee Kings. xxx Ey eenehter, to eeefeot hereelf in the Feenoh lenguege, eehreoed ever; ohenoe to telk with everyone ehe met." ‘,1 ‘t ey htoteer, hie wife eee hehy often eeee down to te eee thee, eleo e certain young Englieh frienl o ey eieter?e, er. Bletoh, of whom we shell heer more leter on. The gentlemen hee to go into the oity to sleep, ee no men were elloeefi to etey one night eithin these halle. The eevotion of the eietere to thet heeetifel hehw, eee flelightful to eee, they eeid.‘ ere. Steeton eefi her eengnter eede eeny eleaeent eeqneintenoee in the Gity, among whom were eome Irieh femiliee, who eere tryi g to live an refluoed inoomee. One feeily geve a bell in their honor juet before their eepertureg es there eere eeverel oomeeeiee of French eoliiere etetionedlet Toulouse, eeny of tie offieeee were ereeent, es well ee eeny Englieh peoele, ene eome Gereene, eleo eeverfl.Amerieee, heeiée the eeebere of ey feeily. hother eeye ehe eae e "locker on in Viennel“ eo ehe had tfig Qpggftgnity of oompering the ehill of the fiif”erent netion— elitiee in deeoine, ehe wee eueh impreeeed with how muoh more eeee end geese the Aeerioene eenoed. Heving heen e fine eenoer in her eey ehe wee ehle to jneg . Some of the College Profeeeore geve'thee ferewell eihnere, while they theeeelvee gave a lerge einner et the hotel, ehere with eeeeohee end toeete they heé e C.‘ E.) merry time. Mother presented Prof. Joly with e ooey of the I Vol. of The Hietorr Q; eomgghgmgggeee, he wrote e meet compli- eentery reviee of it in one of the leeeing French journele. After fourteee houre of travel, they found themeelvee in Ferie, which Mother hee not eeen einee 1840» She eeye, “fly eojourn within its enohenting eelle wee ehort, u too ehort - ene I ewoke e to find m eelf, after en eheenoe of forty—two yeere, -5 ‘-43’ one eormin egein en the ehoree of England, ene before my eyee were feirly open, grim Ole Eegleei eeleeeed me heck. >!=$=**=¥<*%e>¥€?¥~i**>!==%*fi<*****?<*>k** AGAIM IE One of the firet thinge ey mother eee eieter EEGLAED. did on vale ieg England eee to teke eert in e weee— ing, in which Berriot Eeton eteetoe end the heeeeome Engliehmen I eeoke of, William Eenry Bletoh, eere the ohief eetore. This event took piece Eoveeher l882. The knot wee tied by m eother'e beloved friene Rev. eilliem Henry Cheening, of Eoeton, Eeee. who hed been ereeohing in London fer many yeere. ey eieter Herriot eent to live in Eeeingetoke, e pretty little Englieh teen eboet fifty eilee out of London; ehe lived in Engleee twenty yeere, tekieg en eotive eert in the euffrege end other reform moveeente there. Miee Aethony met eother in London eee they hegen e round of vieite to ell peete of Englend eee eeotleed, eeetinge, oonveetione, eeeeohee, eermone on Seeeey, dineere eere the oreer of the eey. They met ell the eell-known men end women reform» ere of thet ti e, they vieitee et the homee of John and Jacob ; Bright, their eietere ene fleugetere, they met Lyflie Becker, 5 otevie Hill, Joeeehine Butler, Gherlee Breeleegh, Annie Beeeet end 93 meny othere. Ere. Bletoh often joined thee, eo thet ehe eee eerly leunohed into the midet of the reform movement of the hritieh Ielee. A L A They hhfi hooro eo muoh about ell theee people, their great oeeonetretione, eith Lords and members of Perliement pre- eidingvthet hother end Sueee were enxioue to oompere the eotore in thoee eoenee with the epeekere on thie eifie of the Atlentio. *1$:e eege, "he lietehefl to their puhlio men in Perliement, the Courte eho the pulpit; to the women in their verioue eeeemhliee; and oeee to the oonolueion thet emerioene eurpeee them in oratory end their meetinge. A heeiteting, apologetic eenher eeeee to he the netionel ouetom. Even their eoleet men, who hove vieited thie country, eooh ee Kingeley, Stanley, Arnold, Tyndale end Coleridge, have all heen oritioieed for their eloootionery oe- feote. They hove no epeekere to compare with WenoellyPhillipe, George William Curtie, or Anne Dickinson; John Beeégfiie eithoutiee eeer eeohg hie eountrymen, end Aehie Beeent, emong the women. The women, as e general rule, ere much more fluent then the meet" hoe. Stanton reeohed the Eritieh Ielee in time to etteno the greet demonstration in Gleegow to oelehrete the giving of the hunioipal frenohiee to the women of Sootlend. Over five thoueend people eere jeeeeo into St. Andrews, mostly women. “When a Sootoh eooienoe is thoroughly roueeo, nothing ooh equal the eethueieem," ehe eeye. hre. hoclereh, e eieter of John Bright hreeided, my mother hed the honor on thie oooeeion of eo- ereeeing, for the first time, an eediehoe in the Old World. hother egeih met and visited many of thoee ehe eew in 1840, when she etteheeo the horld'e Anti-Slavery Convention, ae e hride; ehe heo a good time dieoueeing the etetue end advancement of women einoe thoee early days. “T xi /1 F ;eeeA,e¢m '3! F ‘ On her return to London ehe vieited eenoeee D. ooneey end his wife in their beeutiful home end one euneey filled E hie pulpit for him. At their home, emong othere ehe met hr. 3 end Ere. William Deennhoeelle. My brother Theodore met hother in London ené they oalled on our hinieter Jemee Rueeell Loeell, eleo eihre and hre. George W. Smelley of the Trihune eteff. By epeointeent they eeeet en hour end more with John Bright; he received them eith greet ooeielity enfi ehoeeé a thorough knowledge of end a keen interest in ell thinge Amerioen. Free trade and eomen Suffrage formed the ohief topioe of oonvereetion. Mother eritee , "He Wee not eounfi in regard to the politieel righte of women, but it ie not given to eny one men to he equelly clear on all queetione." Hie brother, Jeoob hright, on the oohtrery eee e eteunoh eeffregiet, he fought many a hettle for the women in the Britieh Perlieeent, of ehioh he wee a memher. One one i of hother‘e vieite to Perl eeent ehe hedftge good fortune to heer Gledetohe, Perhell and Sir Oherleefii£ke epeekg She writee, "The pleoe eeeigned to Leéiee in the Houee of Goeeone ie really e fiiegreoe to e oountry ruled by e Queen, ~ Viotorie eee then on theihrone. “Thie derk perch ie 3 the higheet gallery, imeedietely ever the eeeeker‘e desk ehfl Government eeere, behind a fine wire netting eo thet it ie quite impoeeihle to eee or hear eeything. The eixteen eereone eho sen eroed into the front row, by eteeeihg with their noses pertly through the opeh net-eork,"oen have the eetiefeotioh of eeeing the oreniel eroh of their eulere end heerihg en oooeeionel eeen 4;, “ to liherty, or en lrieh growl et the leak of it. I Wee tolfi thet this net work was to prevent the memhers on the floor from eeing flieturbed by the heeuty of the women. On heering this, F--I reeerked thet I was devoutly themkful that our Amerieen men were not so eesilyesieturhed, end thet the heeuty of the women of the United Stetee ewes not of so dangerous a type. I oould.but oontrest our specious galleries in the magnificent Capitol et Washington, end in the verious Stete Cepitols, ehere hundreds of women oee sit at their ease and see eeo heer their rulers, with theee‘éerk, dingy huilflihgs." My brother, who Wes eittihg opposite on the floor of the house, eeid the women lookee like He said he could not fiitieguish an outline of bi1i¢e.i$rerseeo:‘e1 eny body. The hon, John Bright, the greet liherel, bed a few- orite daughter, ere. helen eright Glerk, during our stey in Englend there was hole et Leeds e greet Liberal Confereeee and ere. Cierk wee one of the del getes from a Women‘s Liberal League. Mrs. Clark end Jens Cobden.- eeughter of the oelehreted Richard Coheen — both made elo uent speeches in fever of the resolution to extend perlieeentery euffrege to women. "Ae ere. Clerk eede her im- =.2 $ peeeioned eepeel for the reooenition of women's politioel equality, «.2 thet imeense getheriee of sixteen hunerefi men (1880) was hushed into profound silence. For a daughter to epeee thus in thet greet repreeeetefiive oonvention, in opposition to her helovefi fether, the leeeer of thetpexty, as en.ect of heroism end fideli- ty to her oen highest convictions slmost eitheut persllel in Englieh history. The effeet on the eudienoe was hoth thrilling end surerisieg. The resolution eee peeeed by e lerge majority." Theteweuing a reception was given to John Bright which er. end ere. Ceerk etteeeed, es she epproeohed the dais flm.whieh her noble fether stoofi shaking henes with the orowde a. "I F. *2 Te; ’ 9, \. home, where ehe epoke to e large gathering on the Suffrage Ameh&- 2 (£3 thet peeeefi, ehe remarked to her huebend, "I wonfier if father hes heerd of my epeeoh thie morning, ehe if he will forgive mei for thue%euhlioly differing with him?” The eoment the great eteteemen eeught eight of his eeugheer, he eteepee down end taking hoth her henfie in hie, kissed her on either cheek. T i Mother afterward vieited ere. Clerk in her delightful §§ E meet in the United Stetee, and preaohed in the ehuroh the Clerke etteneed on Euneey. While in London, Eother and Seeen attended many re- form meetings, heero Cherlee Berdleugh address his oonetituehoy ene hioheel Devitt on Home Rule for Irelene. The Englieh re- foreere eeemed to vie with one another to do honor re the two Amerioen reformere, e greed farewell reoeption Wee giveh them in Prinoeee Hall, et ehioh Jeooh Bright, E. P. ereeified. Fare- eell éineere eere giveh for them by Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, Herriet Hoemer, Dr. Garret Anderson and several othere. Mother epent her birthday fioveeherfllfi, 1883 et Beeingetoke with her fieughter fire. Herriot Stanton Bletoh, "It wee e eed flay for us elli, ehe eritee, “knowing thet that it wee my leet eey with my beloved ones before my eeperture for Amerioe. When I imprinteé the fereeell kiee on the eoft cheek of my little grand fiaughter, here, who firet eee the light Seetemher 30, l883, — E ehe in the dawn and I in the euneet of life, I realized how wieely théhroed ooeen woe e eeperete ue. hiee Anthony met me et, the beautiful home of hr. and ere. Jeooh eright, where We eeent a few fieye, our good friends Ere. Lueee and Mrs. hoflleren, eietere of John and Jeoob Eright, eeoorted ue to Liverpool, where we were to teke the eteeeer." %”her eutobiogreghy, "we 97 There they bed another large reoepfiion, more epeeohee were meee ene the wisdom of forming ea Internetion Suffrege Aeeo- eietion wee dieeueeed. Acommittee wee formed to ooereepoed eith frienee in eiffeeent netione eboue the matter. fiother ene miee Anthony being eut on thet ooemitfiee. Thie led to the firet internetionel gethering of women, which wee held unfier the eueeieee of the Eetionel eomen Sgffrege Aeeooieeion,of which E Elizeeeth Cedy Stanton eee Preeifient, at Weehington, D. O. in March 1888. “On the Atlentie for ten eeye," Mother writes in R“ —&§P«.:*’5%;§§i ""2 _ % many opportunities to review ell we had seen end heerd. xxx I often queried with myeelf ee to the eignifieenoe of the boon for which we were so eerneetly eerugglieg. In eeeeieg political poe I, are ee ebdioeting that eooiel throne where ehey tell us our influence ie uneounieé? E0; no} The right of euffrege%ie no ehedoe, one a eueetentiel eneiey that the oieizee oee eeize end hold for his own proeeotion and his ooueery‘e eelfere. A direct eoeer over one*e own pereon end‘ ate property, en infiivideel opinion eo be oounted, on all queetione of public ineereet, ere hotter than infiireet infloenee be that ever eo fer-reeohing. **$*$$***$$**** WOMAN AND‘ ” On:my mother’e refiurn from Englené, as her TEEQLOGY houee in fiew Jereey wee etill rented, ehe and feeher ‘went up end oooupiefi the ole homeeteefi in Joeeetown. Tho old family eervente who eere living in e litele home of their i own, oeme gee looked efter fihee. Theee eueen joined her end 0 E .-. » f Women Soffreee working ell‘ r - *“"' ehey eegan Vol. I:I of fee Ejetggy -' '‘«,-~, .. ,u. e -, .- . ,-«- ,. " . " ' < _ I" rfi“ " ‘ ,f‘;;. ” . . »¢Lnrough thee eumeer ego the following winter. ieey llkewlee 98 eroueefi the women ene liheeel men of old Johhetdee on the queetion of woeee eetihg at the eeheolmelectienymmet Wee each to he helég eed the iepoetehee of hflvifig woeeh run for eeheol trustees. They ‘1 " J ‘_., Ia. .; ..‘ m .;v.,%.,-ow.- -_ ‘ 1,-.~‘ ,..._ .3.‘ ..(r , _ 5,, "u, at: m;.rr<.\_ 1:1 , 4!l‘| ‘ -31-; up.» 4: ‘4—- 1?’ '.. _~ ‘ «p,.Ir. w'..« 7,4», ..._ quite wekee ep the old tewh Wind bflfiifi meetihae, eitisiee 1h the 3 iv é a ' :- ....J¢ iieee eeeeee, egg their pzeeehse oh the etreete. A women wee elected eefitruetee. in Jen ery 1885 Mother went to Weehington for the 4 .’a' A-. .- ..,x..p .. -.‘».., uh. . -" . ;,~., » - '-x ~ . :.“‘ . 4." -M-‘q ‘i 01*; -- In wwr’ -, *4‘! Annual Sufzreee Coneeheien, ehe eeye the mein ieeteie of that getherihg wee the paeeine of eome reeelutione eeeoreihg e more liherel View of Women‘e eoeitioe in the church. They were not gi;f§ % eerriee, however, without a bitter fight. \, E $he eeid thet religious ereede tefight thet Women gee eh efteethgueht in eeeetien, her eexme misfortune, merriege e qenditieh gt eeyxitude, and eeteynity e eupee, ehe claimed thet theee doatrines were eeetrerV t9 tbe-1eei9f.GQfieend ereeeete ¢f- £heeeie_ That such doemes hlfiehtedewmeee and throueh her flexe- ;gged_hyeehijg; therefore be it F : “RESOLVED, thet we call on the Chrietieh fiinietry, ee leedere of thought, ta teeeh and enforce the fundamental idea of eereetion"; - ee eteted in Genesis I shah. B6, 37 end 38, reeee, ~ \ "thet men was made in the image of God, male ehe fehele, and given 3 eqeel rights oeer the earth, but none over eeeh other. And, E furthermore, we eek their reeoghitieh of the Seripterel deelere- ‘ tien thet, in the Chrietien religion, there is neither male her female, bond nor free, hut ell ere one in Christ Jeeue." She preeehted he: reeolutiohe end they of eouree etirred up much diecueeieh, but were finelly peeeed. Since 1878 hrs. Stenten; Mrs. Gage eee Edwin M. Bevie, the brilliant eon-in- lee of Lucretia Mott, hed been trying to erouee women ae to their CD degraded eoeition in the ohuroh, they had been presenting reeolu» tione et Convention elong thie line, hut they were either euppreeeed, or eo emeneed that they were meeningleee. She eeye the Resolu- tione of 1885, teee ee they were - got into print end roueed the ire of the olergy, who both wrote end preeehed egeinet them, end thei: eoree were eo ineufferehly insulting to womenhoofi, thet at leet the ire of eeey women wee eroueed, end the hell wee eet rolling. And it hee rolled ever einoe. They demanded to be ordained ee minietere, eldere, deeoone end to he reoeiyee ee delew getee in ell eooleeieetieel oohyooetione. eow fielighted eother would he eouie ehe know that et the leet Epieoopel Convention in New York City even that oon- / eervetive body has eeoidee to eeeit women to ite oounoile. The % ohuroh, which hee ever been kept running through the preeenoe, herd eork end eoney of the women of the World ie beginning to wake up. V On her way home from the Weehington Convention in 1885, she etopeefi in Alheny, Where ehe end eeverel other Women hed tee hearings hefore the Senate end Aeeembly. Being open to the puhlio hoth hearings were oroweed. It wee neerly forty yeere eihoe ehe made her first epeeel in the olz Ceeitol at eleeny. She remerke, "The member of the Committee preeented the eeme oalm eepeot ee their ereeeoeeeore, as if to eey, ‘Be eetieet, eeer eieteee, eternityie before you; this ie eieply e qoeetion of time. hhet may not oome in your iey, future gene» tetiohe will eurely poeeeee‘”.t Further on eheyeetlyoeeye, "It ie elweye pleeeent to know that our deeoeeeente are to enjoy life, liberty end heepineee: eut~ehen one ie geeeihg for one hreeth of freedom, thie reflection ie not eetiefying." e"Ie hey Fether end hother left Johnetoen and took poeeeeeion of.th%ir home in I 100 New Jereey again; in June Miee Anthony arrived with a box of elfreeh éooumente for another eeeeon of work on Vol. III of the Hietory. My fether*e hook, “Random Eeoolleotiohe”, publiehed hy Harper Eorthere, on ehioh he he” been working for eometiee, E % %e§peered thee eering. A dinner eee given him on hie Eightieth g hirthdey (June 2?) by the Preee Clgb of Eew Yorh:City. eith § eeeeohee and toeete hy hie life long friehde he had a meet eh- 12% joyehle time. He had long been one of the Politieel Eeitore on the eteff of the hew Yeek Sun. On fiovemher 13, 1885 Mother’e Suffrege eons enfi \ E. eeughtere, all over the hetioh, fieoieee to oelehrete her eegehtieth fig hirthdey, hy holding meetinge, or sending gifts. This hohgr Wee euggeeted by Elizabeth Eoynton Herbert, of Chicago, in her ; eeper the eee Ere, the hovemeer eeieion of which eee entirely dew votee to Mother, fourteen double eegee. Theee articles were contributed by different peoele, all over the oountry, who knew E her eell. They wrote ehout her in proee and veree, as a mothex, houeekeeper, epeeker, reformer, presiding offioer, eetriot, friend,1 oonvereationeliet, eteteemen enfi writer. She wee invited to fieliver en eeeey on "The fileeeuree mm. J of Age," hefore the flee Yor: fiity Suffrage Leegue, a moet eeeutiw ful edfireee thie ie by the eey, ending with one of her fevorite qeotetione from LOngfel1CW'e Morituri Selutemue It ie never too late to try whet we may £0. “Ah! Nothing ia too latfi Till the tired heart ehell oeeee to eelfiitate Ceto leerhed Greek et eighty; Sophoolee E? Wrote hie greed Oedipus, and Simohidee ii . e , W ., o the 3: Bore off the prize of veree fI0m hie oomheere, gé when eeoh hea hueoeree eore than foureoore yeere, ii Ame Iheoeheeetee, e fouxeooee ehe ten, 101 Red but begun hie Chereetere of men; Chaucer, et Wooeetook with the nightingelee, At eixty wrote the Genterhury Telees Goethe, at Weimer, toiling to the leet, Comeleted Feuet when eighty yeere were peet. These ere ineeei exceptions; but they ehoe how far the gulf-etreem of our youth mey flow Into the Aetio regione of our lives, when little elee than life iteelf eurvivee. XKKEXXXX XXX XXXXXXKK XXXXXXXKXXX For age is opeortunity no leee Then youth iteelf, thoueh in enother dreee, And ee the evening twilight fades eeey e The eky ie filled with etere, invisible hy eey." The eey wee uehered in with telegreee, lettere, exereee 4% It §a3§ea €51} ee ehe keet up for e week, from all eeete of the flnitefi States and Europe. Mother eeye, "The eulogiee in proee and veree were eo hearty eefi eo numeroue that the rifiioule and eriti~ oiem of forty yeere Were huried eo eeep that I ehell reeeeher thee no more. There is no oleee who enjoy the preiee of their feilowmen like thoee eho have only hed hleee eoet of their lives.” emomg other gifts that pleeeed her highly wee the errieel of her eon Theoeore’e hook from Paris, 4 Ehgahomeh heeetig;‘gg;Eu:ooe, ell heeetifelly bound end the firint eo good. i?Lee: 4 Ee€§e’7¥iéf: he, . ." :0} v. _ ._r All thet eutumn eat the following wihtef hother enegiyéeet {.0 ueen eorhed patiently on Vol. III of the fiietory, ehe in the seeing of 1888, were ehle to eey fieie. And it wee well thet thie wee eo, for in June five eohe, éeeghtere, e greeeeeughter i ehe en Eeglieh neree, Elizeheth heeheon — who ie etill in the employ of the feeiiy, efter thirtfiigwo yeere of eeevioe, ~ With teenty pieoee of luggage, ell errived free foreigi ehoree. They fillee the house ehe heerte of their perehte of oveefloeing. If .c:;. »J”§« -f‘ the e , 4 _ J t of VoteefQr_Eomen never entirely filled 5. the mind of this great mother of mine, ehe wee interested in that fehemoet, and that iholufled more liherel laws for women; then she saw that all the oollgee and hohoole muet he ohen to girle, literary, medical, theological ene law; then oehe fiivoroe, temper- ehoe, more eeheihle dreee, eleahing up the etreete, more perke 5 and pleygrounfie for the children of the poor, free oohoerte, lectures and dehoe hells for the youth of the lehfi, with heefi mg rooms ene smoking rooms for the men end women, ell eerm and oom— E fortehle in ophoeition to the eelhone, with hlenty of hillihrd 5 roome and bowling alleys. She olhimefl thet it woulfi he oheeher for oitieh end etetee to eupply theee free, them to keeh up eo E E heny §rieohe;lthet with pleoee of eeueemeht, properly regleted E and lookee efter, our men hhfi hoye, - and girls too - woulfi not E go eetray. She wehtei hefiter ooohihg in the home, more eeiehtifio E oere of hhbiee hnfi ohilfireh, eehter efiuoeteo moihere ehh fathere, E ‘heiter housing for the hoor, finer eohoole,- hr, hilliem W rt, with ell hie sane ehfi revolutionary eohool ileee, would heve flea V lightefi her eoull She efivooeted prison refoym, where the men g sazsaj. _ 5 ooulfi heve oomforthhle places to sleep? outdoor work, better food, ehueemenfie, the teeehing of e trade ehe pay for their week, eo that when they got out of prison they'& have some money to start with and a why to earn their living. ‘he wanted a hroefier ohuroh, eith more liherel oreede, e reoog.ition of the mothers of the reee, and women tehihg hart in ite oouhoile. It strikes me he I etudy her life, enfi heha her ehtohioerehhy, epeeohee,ertiolee end letters, that there ie no euhjeet on which she hee not Written ehd epokeh foroihly, ehfl in the moat heeutiful hhglieh.A I heve never known e more vereatile indiviehel, you eee, I Wee her meet intimete 30m§&RlOfl end houeeheeper for the leet twelve yeere of her life, end I never fully eepreoiated her greetneee ee I fiid «:2.» V 0?? .......o............,.....?T?"‘»* 3—‘»"3~i1?3-ii’ P0 103 5”‘: oriog those years. She hoo always been a g*oot toodor along many lines, a careful otuoent of innumorohle oohjeoto, hence 43% why she was vitally intorooted in so many things. ‘ he was a faithful reader of tho floily preoo, and when she came upon onyu ohe did not aporovo of, she at onoo~oat down, ond with g ' . ‘V/' fa;~"'*” ‘ it . ' 5/‘if §«o”§i~L»;._h§»t,9-=w~«~«=t§ Tr‘-fi?:*mei WWJ : “fie” t. MM thing was‘ groot pains, oent off a letter to the {1 Stooton writoo: “I hoé long hoard so many .1§§::'I' 3 0 oonflioting opinionfi about the Bible - oomo saying ititught woman's omonoitotion and some her suhjootion, that, ioring thio vioit of my ohildroo, the thought oome to m that it woulo he ovary biblical reference to women in one omoll {D well to ooll Q cf‘ oomtaot volume, and ooo on which oioo the oalonoo of infloonoe really was." So she propoood to orgoni§e a oommittoe of tom; a. m M , .—., T - cw A . V ».-.. «,,.. Q — ietont woman io Eflfilmfii hoi the Lnlt3& otatoa some of oHO& should be good Latin, Great and Hebrew ooholors, for the thorough re» ”ho Old ood How Testaments, anfi aooortoin what the vioiohs of ti real otatoo of Woman woo unfl 3 the Jewish and Christian religion. As the women now were otufiyin§,thoolog in many institutions, anfi .«J,-.--..«...,_. M "--—--so-—,m......_-;.....,.......,,....».., .... ookioo to he oriainod as proaohors, to he admitted to Synodo ono § .. Gohorol assemblies aod were refused, on Bihliool grouoos, my v=>4wx.,x-.,.__,_' " “""~'-up... imothot felt that the time had come for women thoooolvoo to look 3 into ”thooo oorioturol irgomooto and authorities.“ During the visit of my oiotor, fire. Horriot Stanton Blatoh, Eioo Fronooo Lorfi of England, o vory hright olovor peroon, orrivod for o ohort otoy: oo Mother ooooultofi these too about the project t‘ tor, those throo Women imoooiotoly oot to o ..l 30 moor to her hoort, aha oo they hoth reooily , E4? T k 0 w'-- .-s .3 ‘n'*- . obreol W1 through tho Eihlo in a fow doyo, noting down on fiioo Loré fa’ . & ?~pa§er, gash chafitar aha veyae that in any way rem f€”??é to woman, and founi tuat all the facts ané teachings in reg-fid to our sex occugied legs than one tenth of the whole scriptures. They yurohaged acme cheap biblaa, cut out fihsse fifi, pa tei them on sheets of feoiscap payer &nd wrote their comments thereon. Mather Wrote to 3 numfier of slevar Wemen «mm 4" ‘ »*" . 11"" 4''“ -"~ ~.-in V . -" I ‘ . . . ‘ . . . am“ fiflnsi them to 3013 thls revlalng commlttee. Thus Thgwfiggggjs B131? hafi ifia incemtion and start. But mothafi founfl the reepmngea, ‘~.—' -1-:11-:'. ..w. .'"“5 1" "“ M6 an» a"‘ I -4 r o _;-~. :5 -, ‘ 4.04, ..,.. _ .' 1 ‘u 1 $3 a whole, were zgther aiscouraginq, game Smifi, the Eibla had no I , KY‘ .:-3‘ ‘ k ‘ ~ 2' L", ‘: -. . at W ' -tr . . or 1% scald be infierureted to fiflmfl anything ~ algvery, when we §ro~ .- -§~ -: If ' in ' - - H ~ 4* v J, ' L “A "" ' .. ° 4. 3 . - @e3tedWyhat aatzugtlca , gufi L_33r m, amen 1t éalfipfik no lon%e?£ ¢WW‘Q““".. .;._. P R’ , , e V ~ _. . V ‘T . . , . _ H ,— ,. - an -r-«foe ’yvv(~-1n-__9V.$_»-«wt n xv‘??? ":- r-«~93 ~aav~w-\x1- --Mr w!&-':'$uI\9I-44-z>2p¢_:~:-an r-.vvy_r ’-Qr-=~4'~ -"r-r:- Aw .,_ , ,_ , . . . ., _, yo Mat «:9 . A ,, ,, _, ~——m , _‘ , _ “W __ E Others oonsiieréd it wouid beVa aacrilegeg Ei%3 finthony wrote it woulfi be a work of sqpgrgggfiieng she further a&id, "thgt Wham our politinal aflualifiy wag reoofinizefi anfi woman became full fledged V . « . . rs. , V‘ ‘ ‘ -. .54 - an 3 ’,.I-_ ,~-»., _ Q -,_y_. .3. .'__ n: “ I ‘m rlssn cimmzens, the churcu weula Lastaa to Uflmg uh B1013, " ‘ > V.” ‘I? " I ' It ‘I "5""; U . ' . ' A ". . .r 'x-"v' .3 ‘ '3? ‘ %¢myar seeks, 3£ee&s m.fi dxeslmline mg we age gage hzgh-Water E. E1» mark of liLarty.”% gaien Gflrdiflfifi camaiéerefl the reviaion mogg , ,‘.._ ...“ / V ,, ,.“» . y.,_ ‘ ., > ,.~..r ‘,7 __.‘_ ,‘,_F in: ., ?“‘w~ “_ ,.«.4 _ fij__,z'n ' ,2’ ;'.:i.,'.’£..fx.3L ‘i?‘$'I'Q L; ::.CE. :7 §:LlT~3 cu iiy 1,; :3:.'.,c.EE,-1'1 O11 33:.-_‘*-..'§...:.].. I S ;:€,::§i ::::;t 1 ‘:3 8 an& am faaain&ted with the work." Théugh, m éh diacouraged, Eothsr never fully gava up the hofie of ranewing it aomatime, when ether of her “soadjuters .P” 4" ~<, -:~' --. * ' in , an 1 I. 3 ‘ II - G .--a , - , - F ,,....,.-»»=»~'=*'~v~a:\ whoulfi &W&km $0 its impertancew mfli after thair warvicaa. Nww ~\ . . 4, » -. .4, ...., ‘ L V) .::~ . °§ ,_ In the autumn of 1886 Krg. Stanton again sa1led w$fi§w$ far Emglanfi, wifih her fifiughtar, gyanfifiaughfier anfl nuraa» “ ‘ **$$*#***$******* iL2t%a kma ithe hooks ehe ehfi ey eieter, hre.Eletoh reefi together that winter, EhGLeh2 I elweye like to know the titled of hooke I oelebeeted peoele ere reeeihg, and in thie f ehfi F§hV$E EEVISITED oheeter of her eutohiogeephy, mother telle of ene gives en intereetihg eoeouht of their oontehte. The firet wee Doeeeh‘e “Life of ehelley," Cotton hoerieonie "Service of hen", .Cernegie‘e "Triumphant Demooeeoy“, hetriet hertiheeu‘e treheletion ¢ ‘ our 1'" ' «C3 1 «‘ m ‘ .» ‘T‘.~’2 4'‘ r A 3 "-54" - 4* . . of the eoree oi Auguste eomeg. Zheh they eteht muoh of their ~- ‘ i ,~..- ' M 4- time thet winter Stfifijlflx Um -. V-ad’ Eihle, reeeing the eoeeenteriee of _e;_: ,,«mey.,..e»~.«..>.r;s<wa»u;ax\~:u:««ac:r\°'*‘°""""’“ ‘ V e Clerk, Seott end horeeworth (Biehop of London) on the eorihturee. They fouhe im eeny of these heoke e very low eetieete of women, eepeoielly fih the eoeeenteriee. hother eeye: “ho eohfier the right reverend biehope ehé clergy of the hethodiet Church, who helieve in the divine o w igin ehe eethority of the Pehteteueh, exclude women from their greet eonvooetione in the Ameeioen Ee- hutlio in the nineteenth oehtury." ere. hereeret érighu Lueee, - eietet of hon, John {,0 height - vieited them eurihg this Winter end they oellee her ettehtion to these meny texte in the old Teetemeht, ehe eeid, "heil, here ie en ineieieue influence egeinet the elevation of women, which eet fee of he heve ever tekeh into ooneieeretion." She hei juet returned from a flying vieit to Aeetioe ehe eee en- 5 thueiestie in her ereiee of the Women of the Uflitefl Sthtésaegfl L my eietet'e houee wee filled thet Winter Wit; fihfirfi vieite from eehy of the heet known eeh end eoeeh of the eritieh Ielee, eho ell oeee to hey homege to our dietihguiehee hother, Elieeheth Ceey Stehton. In the eerihg hethet went to Frenee to vieit my bvnehae Theoiore in hie ehereihe epertmeht, ottoeite the oeemtiful - .1. ‘.__i .....t. \.,.J J5. -'v- E...’ ‘-—»‘I-» —....~ "‘ '”" ’ "”"¥‘ I W ~"‘ Trooedero, overlooking the fieine. It eee her firet erheriehoe in a dwelling ell on one floor, ehe eee delightee with it. She eeye, "whirling to Paris, on a train, in en eeey oheir, through the heeutiful wheat fields and vineyards, I thought of the .»v*’”""'“'"'“"““ lumhering old diligence, in which we went to that City at e eneil'e eeoe fortyweeveh yeere hefore." She remained in Perie till Oetoher, end eeye ehe never ehjoyefi eix months more thorough~ ly. There were eo many dietihguiehefi Amerioene in town, he Well ee Freneh reformere, men end women, thet they gave regular rece- tione every hefiheeiey efterhoon; hither came journeliete, artists, musicians, eenetore, deeutiee eno noveliete. thong the many Amerieene who oeme were hr. and Ere. James G} Blaine, hr. & Mrs. John Bigelow, Daniel C. Freheh, the eoulptor, hrs. Begley end fieughter, wife of the Governor of Michigan, hiee Bryent, éeughter 5 of the poet, Greoe Greenwood ehh éeughter the talented eihgerg hre. Cherlotte B. hilhour, Louiee Chehdler houlton. She vieitor who intereeted my mother very much wee Bjorhetjorne‘Bjorheon, the horwegien noveliet end repuhlioe . She heeri Pere Hyeointhe preach, end met his Amerioen wife eeverel timee. She took long orivee every day through the perke and euhurhe, with gerden ;pirtiee, oonoerte, opeeee, thee ree and the Hieeodrome, with iinhere, reoeptione and teee, ehe epeht a happy, huey eeeeon. She ettehieé e etete reception et the Elyeee Palafiea eeoorted,hy one of the Frehoh Derutiee, hoheiehr Fehre, where ehe wee presented to the Preeifient of the Republic and hie wife, Julee Grevy. She ele met the Prime hihieter Julee Ferry, who eeii among other things: "I am eorry to oohfeee it, but our Frehoh women ere fer hehinfi their eietere in Aeerioe." hhile ih Eerie that eurmer, ehe “tee in the hand 107 ' A m / / a of two ertiete“, fiehe Klumehe, Protege OI hoee Bohheur, who g yeihted her portrait: and ?eul Bestlett, who mouléed her head on-A:«‘¢..»»wvx4:~rM'<4-3!a:«1».~Jav-<mmy.x ‘ . in oley. The letter hee eihoe hecome qvite e femoue eouletor. ,.; \- ,«.>+w<.«:.\>m~..-.2.:«u. ___V\__,,,- X! , ,., Suheey in Perie eertioulerly fielig.ted ey mother, ee that ie the iey for the meeeee. "All the ext gelleriee, li~ if I! J“ ;I&fie$, oohoert helle and gardens ere open eni orowoed; all the heople ere éreeeee in their heet out eelkihg, driving, having pionioe in the herke end gardens; huehenee, wivee and ohiléren leuohihg and telkihg happily together. The eeete in the etreete ene perke are full of the lehorihg eeeeee. The hehohee end O oheire ell over Eerie, along the ourh etonee in every etreet end fl,,,,,.,.-..wgmm;:~...-.am>nav<s- _._ —,,«-,a,~ - . .~:;~.- > ,,.~.»L-\’-'*““ , .,..A,.,. '\ 4. -:1 -an .w'mc‘J.ny‘/.‘.‘N7A'&‘3«r"V:r-1:»;-rn\‘J\r:;(5\x*J :«n~:<:rv“=I?-‘<"‘ highway - ehow the oere iV8E.$O the eomfort of the people.", In Q.» Feenoe you eee men and e men everywhere together} 13 Eflglfln the men generelly et-gger ehout elohe, oering more for their pipee $3.. 6 in eer then their mothere, wives and eietere. Sooiel life, ,1 mom the hoof eepeoielly, ie far more neturel amihammohiouein (3? -v ,_ _,_,_ W , ,k N , _ ' no ’ . :- Frenoe then in Ehglehe, oeeeuee Women eix more freely 1h hueineee '9 » 1 7 5" . L-‘ ' . ‘K 7. 3’ . . H ‘ i . ii . . ‘ . - " hue eeueeeehte. afflj 'E%e’fi= %lhe.ell;;m»«li,:;.shlly \ ‘El, , /V, 4,__‘‘ég__ , ,4‘ I, .. , . , . J ' . ,‘:.‘P_.~:5‘J\ ‘. .96» In Eovemhe Mother returnefl to Beeihgetohe ehfi in her eiery ehe telle of the hooke she reed during that Winter and hi ehet their vuthore eey of women, "One wee the hell i§,§e§ig;'hy U Sir Thomee Browne, 1)., in thie the siuthor ciieoueeee on many high themes, Goo, oreetioh, heeveh, hell end voeoheekee one g eentenoe on women. xxx ‘the whole worlfl wee eede for men, hut the twelfth pert oi men for eoeen. men ie tho whole Worlé.- the hreeth of @ £3 women the rih end orookefi eieoe of eeh’”,i Speaking of the writings of John Feel hiohter, ehe eeye. "I found in hie ohegter oh Wfififii hehy eqyelly riéiouloue § etet eehte mixed up with much fuleoee edmieetiohg" W0? fii” Ehe 5 1 33 '_ 0 d we _q I f A. ‘[1’, 0 J ‘ _?_V_K fine thet Heinrioh flfilflfi, the here» 5. .1. .7 . ’ .- 1: ' ..«;:.2 ‘by ’E yore, hem any higher ee.1mo 8 S 108 of womon. In gohn Rmokin’o biography he givoo, aha ooyo, "a v a»-=mr~ V L.-* glimyoo of his tim:§;t1_in rooorfi to the sex when a young mane” fiother mot iurits the winter, While up in Lonéon at a rooofition, otepniék the Ruooion Nihilist, “a man of grana f‘*'*».,\ prooenoo ané conversational poworo." Ho ogoko Englioh vary well 2 1 too Eothor had a long and intorooting talk with him. Ho after» 2 W t 3 E " 1* V. T‘. .<» . - pm 4* »-'“n ;“"‘ z“‘~. . 9» as ‘ ~ - :.»“'1. . ' , Ward oomo to the united St&t€o &%£.h%£ o hfimfifig beforo :.Gommittoo; E of the tomato in r garfl to our extradition treaty with Rooaia. goo otont oovorml houro with the ?rinoo too ?riooooo Kro§otkin,w :T“"'- r"‘ -"*1 L’ 7% . 1"‘ ' "’ '. " ‘ I "!" . " k 7 . ‘ mlfifi mflméiufi mihilifltfi, in their h mblo hon lfi Loofloo, they lnp -A n q ‘ ., .~» 3* ' ins-, urns ‘ £1.-»~.. , - fiolgo in no luxorloo, but devote all thoir &Om€y to help tooto va _ of tooir oeliof in escaping frog tho floating of tho Czor. Ho tolé Eothor of 413 aafi trioon oxyotiooooo in Loth Fronoo and Ruooia. “One of tho rofioomonto of cruelty thoy prootioo on yrioonoro in motor to allow than to hoax the human voioot o A . , _ . t “V ,,_,_ ,1 ‘ _ V, A 7 w W V . , :2 -3,, V :3 soléiot alwgys ggfiamgfifliwfi the warden who oiotrioutoo tho fooo, to goo that no woso is otoken. In vain tho goof §rioonor;¢oko quootioos, E0 anowor io over oaio, no tidingo of the outoloo . __ . V__ 3,,‘ .. _ Y I fl._ ,,,,,_7 . .7 p 3;».-_‘ ‘ ,-1 as W ‘ H; ,-u ‘ ‘an. *3 worlfi ever given} One may wall amt mhot oovil in ouman Iorm fl has yroooribofi ouch triaon 9 1 Ono fiaroh 4 1888 Eotiox oailofi from Southampton f .r“‘! _ — ’ ’ f , W - oounoll O_VfiQmQQ; for flaw York to ottonfi tho .ir5t Intoroationogw W use-=-mp;.«-v=g.~. vggw ‘gum oooo to to halo in taohington, De C. On the train oho mot ho: t 5 “ ‘ f .’ . ' w» 1 30mfi$filOfi$ for the voyage, firo. Guotofoen, Era. Ashton Dllko ono ‘Y Baronooo Griponoorg, from F aloud, a moot ohgrmiog poroon, betwoon }.Je whom anfi gy oothor o worm tgiaofiohip otooe. The other ool gates . -5 _‘ t W _ . 0 ‘1 ‘ ‘R5’ ..!..'}1« . .» ml. .3" 7.‘? .-1. ' 1 gr wgrggg 5;; e*~=,«w'*~.,r‘* 3"-H 5"‘-t:1"“.':A "1 we "'1 _r_, M W T -9 .1»-\ ~<n ‘wk. ‘_.€:., ,2, “W 2:; .- ~ ; , ‘E {.23 '7 —-3 . ; j..« . ' _ _ ,I* ~ $&ll@m fEQ»=¢l$atfQUlc M b+Lt to; “toe w» R» »v?w $”d¢ *w* Gob: H: 3% ‘..*o.'~2. '5!) ‘~.»:.. V ‘ . fir A a tt.,*t wmfi m not woro over roafiy to filmy fihiot wito two oagtaln Woo o \ I ,» t ‘ ‘ "1 ;-W ‘ “‘ rt; . gootlofion, who were likowise fret from aoomxoknoma. Off Eanfiy [1 KTVK. ;1.x_,7r ml: . ,..C:.»..fi.s .1. . . .3, ..<».,.s. .. . , 1.2 . 4. .2 ,E.x.X ._.__.za1. ri.§...,au.7.is.9 awn .. ....F§. .E1..«..._._ , _,.,.u./...../.7..:..,x._7........,../€.n_..w.a...a..... , , ..v,,...>....¥. _ e:§_1£&3x5..3»,.u.1.a1a.. 109 ? (J. ‘V? §;9 f 3 57; '1‘ @ ‘am’ 3 “J.” +. .n .1 W t r: 122% e ~any mfies. @ that K‘ EM» 11' J.» L: 3.... . . . fix. nfig W; W... .h% :<4..f5 5"! 2“? i %re, $u:f' ti 9 3 mean talked ‘*3 ‘"3 $ 1‘; .3 V 3 mm. :1 t firri C onklinw 1% 889. + “W r,“‘1 1 ’ éfiza . fV aw: 5 5 an C 553 G V 55:: .6 0% ‘I C 3. $ .3. 1"‘! K} {:9 a ._ praat 1 .nd mafia K5 "HI exg. L.» I». ?Q%cQe awreaaian 0 a ,,. W ;, they safismag ‘ »~ 1 e g ‘{“z. . ii 5 CL ,~.i,*72 1 Of Women, zwvx, 4:1‘;- '1?;.. avuy ’-.~»."L..“; xv Qouflcil of h "9 ‘so’ bta . 1“ . 33 Anthony, . . m...“ .. 3.. . Q T .. . Q 1 Q . a W 1 , .§a 3 2 fl, .J7 3% . i. niw C Wu... .1 +4. ..& nv... :3 E. .1 ,, ..,...,_. n. m. I 8 E 0 H......,.” .3 2. ._.... .. .1 h B +._ R P .0 L 3.. .1 . , if R. . u . .1 O. rim I . .1D.ux..a.m h 3 .. 2 mm 2 +u .3 T .3; «.5... 1 afl 3 O f E 3 .1 _., +. .. ._.,.,. .3 mi .. an an fl .3 T M...” .1 aw w.,.,.. m f O as E f .3 .1 .1 E .._..x +.. V. O . 3. x a. 3 mm a n m . m. . G G . iamage ale Yark U43 TFQ O f": .1. filty t. ‘Kan ..,z \_,i W*sm $1 to “Guns Va i0 + 4 9 :. * " . 0. .+7§3 ‘U‘«.J .2 ‘ml Q:‘E"'3.$ t 2:’? 1;... gas? F (‘G1 V. I ‘V :7: B 3% V 3 a stem by much vfl 7:1! ‘and t“ "!fi‘(T J I 3 e or O r xv lanai the t L , ‘ fl .. aaluem Wraneii ‘:1 ‘*5 I257. 3”‘ ::«:4''. +11 .m '~..vv$.1 ‘$4.... h. 1987, though it hafl alaga of 1 "$9 x~“'*; 3 g ‘.2; CL :4.’ Era ,.:;r 1 .,‘,,, . ,,,.,, *- M QrChxht nawa oi ox: mm: .x E .m. mm. 9» h .w,. 1?... .x. . .1 H L. , 8 w. «M. . H.“ .. V 6 3 .1 ... A as T w * 8 . pi "NM 3 . s h C 0 am I V .7 8 .x. t. I +... 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Jr 7 «J: 1 m 2,. .5. a P. .3 f .3 . u .. . «F L... . ..w ...,___ «L 3 .1 Q E .3 .....m . r wu. . 4 . I. A n 5.. 4. .1 a .1. ., ... .. Aw Qw AM ..J mm T; +u .+u ,. mfi. Wu flfi LL Wu fa mm mfi w: 9:. WW 3i .110 Eeehel Foeter hveey ehe ey mother. Although the Couhoil wee av oelled ehd conducted hy the fiuffrege Aeeooietion, verioue other Soeietiee were repreeehted. hiee Anthony wee the fihehoier of 5 . . -. .- -—- :~. ‘ - ft’ '1.‘ e V m .-r aw ‘ r"-.‘ J1 ' the oeoeeion, hevihg reieee hle,GoC for the euheoee, which eheolee V‘ the exeeheee of the fieleeetee in heehihgton, end an fie 1’ 5- C9 5‘ 2% cf 0 -E if e ‘< 5:: 3...; $»..J for huhliehing the reeort in book foee. hr. eefi Ere. Seoffore, eroprietore of the Eigge Eouee enterteihed Eother ehfi fieeeh, ee they eleeye geherouely did, a .-.,-- _ gs tq» , » ' . . 1"“ _ - "*1 . .v‘' ’ eivihe thee heeutiful eeerteehte with erivete hethe, eeele eerved S...» ‘ L...» - Ho ‘:3 C+ heir rooes, eheh they eo eeeireé, ehe eleeye pleeefi their fine oeeriege end horeee et their fliepoeel fiuring their etey. ‘Z2 £-.... . Vi . I ‘ ‘V ‘‘ __.’ "W ‘W 6 W 3 ' I if :4 It 7 K _ Q “hey ewe thie every yeer that the flu? rhea Convention wee held in heehihztoh, their hotel wee eleeye the heedquertere for ell the me Q I ‘W I M I‘ ‘ C r . V ‘ eelegetee, their receptions, huhlio eughese, dihhere, etc. were held within their hoeeiteble fioore. at 1’ . A .= »- wt-— ;"- <.__ -* 4"”. 1 ' .2‘ : .''*' “" ‘ . ' Ae eooh ee uother erriveh eueeh loceee her in her hflg H room, eo to eeeek, ehfl hede hex erite,:r“fihe eeeeohfiito he flea ~ Ti” lieeeed hefore the Goemitteee of the hoeee ehd eenete, end ehother ee Preeifieht, for the opening of the Council, only ellowihg her out for a long erive each dey£ my mother Wee et thie time eevehty -L1;-« L"‘,“,.1f"‘ three y»ere OA&o {D t, e , "The levee theetee wee otowéee for en entire Week ha‘ i “ i -" «"5 ., .. ..,. . -: ehe hoete of ehle woeeh epohe, ee ii eeeeielly ifimgiffim, on ell g the vitel queetiohe of the hour." - -v ' -r - » m -‘->, ‘£3 . '2 . s'‘‘?'' 'p "The heerihe at the Geeitol, eiter the eeetiha oi C» 1 ‘ ..,. ,- . -3""; ' 5" .1 ' 1'1 " ‘ ., ;‘':‘§*.. 1 - _,*;"“'.‘ + the Council, was vem;»ietereetihe, L? hi the foeeigh he egeuee eerg ifivifigfi ta gyeek eeoh in her native leheeege; to efigreee their elleeee rehreeehtetivee in the helle of legieletion Wee "-J Avenue, Clevelend. Mte. Southworth hid five thoueehd oopiee »g:wfie e ptivileee they hed never ehjoyee at home”, eritee hrs. Stenton. ~..? hehy hrillient reeeptiohe ehe uihhere were given in honor of e if") fig,‘ a 0 A‘ 0 r P‘ fl-u . W 1 «-3 4%‘ ‘I If . J. (‘L ‘. . theee hi tin eieheo women oy the tivee of eeverel Senetore. 3‘ f‘: Ohio wee to hole e Qoeetithtionel Convention in the E tell of 1888, ene et the request of the Ohio eeffrege Aeeoeietion,3§&§‘ h ther wrote en egyeel to the Women of thet etete to riee up end $2 eemehd their right to vote for delegetee. Mother wee to etehfi fig? that winter with me in Oeehe, heh., eo ee etopped on our eey outfi§3%;; to vieit Eye. Louiee Southeotth in her beeutiful home in Euclid Q: h . _,:a:‘ ’ 1,.“ *ix. Ft 0 hrs. Etehtoh‘e eh eel puhliehed end dietrihute& et the eteoei- _ . . , :Iw~*~mW.= "' .*“)~‘?. [.10 Lalo t on .n Columhhe. fim-¥Jfl%:LL , % %L_e E $we* he reeohed Omaha in time to eelehrete the ogehihg of the greet teiltoefi bridge hetweeh that oity ehfi Goehoil Bluffe. "Here" hether eeye, "I eat oehle ears, for the firet time, runn~ ihg up eni down hill without any vieihle meene of locomotion. Ae the Company rem an oyen oer ell winter I took my eeily ride on it of nine miles. hy oldest son, Denial, who eeeortee me, in the text that Wee enoloeeé, while I eat outeide." Thie t ,hehit of hother’e oelled forth many reeerke, one iey 3 men eeia quite eudihly, "It ie evident that ole lady eoeeh’t know enought to oome in when it reins!" “Bleee me!” eeie the oohdeetor, who often oohvereed with E the: on her trite, end kn~e who ehe wee, “that lefiy knows more then the Queen of Ehglehd; fer too much to 5 ooee in here hy a hot etovel" n: "L ‘ “‘ s‘ .-‘ea xv” 1‘ ‘2 ‘ V: Dutihe my eother'e etey in Oeehe there wee a lhrge , ‘-at 5 pa;-J‘ §.Jo 3 G) !-4 rt e eeetihe ih the Deere house under the eueeioee 5 ehfi ehthueheet of the State fiuffrege Society et ehioh hre. Stanton spoke. Various perlor eeetihge for Votee for Women were hele et which a giano affair, ono Esther, as Prooiooo Nu» Kr» ,"«.E”z‘€”-.«:“,:_‘_~ . , 1; z,7§._ 3...! .5 CL} Mother tolkofi, and she wrote for the daily papers all oofin her §‘L'3t33‘»yo ; ‘ J * qt ,.,:; In tho soring Mother returned to tho Eaot and spent the oummor with her oon Gerrit at Hempotooo, Long Island. In the 5¥%%m -5 ~ rm - . .z“‘- A - 3 pm I i:-» M v . . ' ~ . -t autumn mro. Blmtflh came over from England on a vioit, and I goineo them on Long Iolono for a abort stay. to all went uo to Geneva, €“”j ““' ;« L . .7. 3 *" . 5 6 to "‘s.3<,Lr"‘~ a L ='o£ %~;»:~,}§\9W 4”" t. Y. to goo oor.oouoin Mrs. Elizototh Smith Miller, in hor boootiu l¥¢“a O ful home on Sonooo Lake. From thoro we welt to the oanatoriom fir ot Danovillo, as Mother had a bad cold, and org. wlotoh was troubloo with inoomnia, they thought thoy’@ see What Dootors Jomoo and ?ate Jookoon could do for them. Having ooon boon oat straight; we all went to Washington to attend tho Aonual Suffrage Convention g ‘x’. J on& to oolotrate M133 Aothony'o oevootioth birthooy. flro. El>toh, mother onfl I opoke at tho oelobrotion, which was, of oouroo, of tlo Suffrage A$SOCi&§ ;at* it ‘ 4 in _ Ex j, e.. V‘ '- , V “ . K . ’* ' -. 2‘ '- ! 5 Q . ‘1 9‘,/:‘ 5. »1.,__v,; -4 . mi ""1 T“: m ‘[37 z:. {E ‘ifs .53, 8 ;:>s“:: . ,ll.@:f1 M3/' 1-«LC flu «..o:..z.-..«. . A“a:—:Z: 3%.; 5‘ ~-., 5 ,1 § 5“ '\,:."@a‘-r~;\— ‘~«;'l§":; 2 . 2%, W‘ J? * -Us ‘ 1": s’:-2 /W :' -‘:7 P‘ '~' ""5 ’ “'3 E V . ’ aiator hurriod to ma? York goo oailoo Ior nnglono, wooro they lonooo March Bnfi, 1890. oi t _‘§fig fr «~w **$************** E.‘ £3 . . or ,-. 2. “ .': . . = 3 3' V ’ w, ’- : ‘, Y’ ' §f,v\r.‘ la- ‘? :5: L rx ¥a;s.&/-u W“? ».~3””‘7~ u. ,. K ».. * — f ‘ .. s, ,, . ‘+5: ‘L; r. 5 . t . ,. 1”» E33. $?A§TQE'S Two questions of sooial ethioo stirred toe LAST VI$ET To people of Englano in the year 1890, as fiothor E§§LA§D. lanfiod on ito shores. One woo ihorlos Stewart Parnell's frienoohip for Era. O'Shoo, ono the 3 other woo tho Loro Ghaoellor‘s deoioion in tho case of a firs. 3 / — .« ,_ . A, . ,,.» Jackson. “The poly: , tho orooo and tho yooplo vioo with eaoh 5 “%W" 3'-’Nrr.»r i othor in trying to dethrone Er. Parnell as too great Irioh loo&erV out the united forces did not ouooeed in destroying hio oe1f-ros- . -al.fi9r‘=':4Ev:‘xm1a.m:'A:¢#rv<Am&“ I f ._9;;,.,‘A¢\x«n ..;vi”"""<fl 44I~C‘«"kn ooot, nor hounding him out of the Britioh Parliament, though, after a brave ano yrotraoteo rooiotoooe on his part, tooy éid 113 e ceeed in ho'hein him into hie greve", wrote ere. Stehton. She eeid, "It wee pitiful to eee the Irish themeelvee, mieleé by e hypocritical poeuler eentieeht in Eeglefifi, turn egeinefi their greet leefier, the only one they hgfi hed for helf e century who . _ g -1’ ;-~- 3-», ._ , -,-~ 0: in . ,-N. . -.-,. - fr - ‘ eee ehle to keep the Irieh queetioh uygermoet in the eeuee of 5 -32 Coeeehe eer after yeer." He told them the eeeetee on home Rule would eeeee ee econ ee it wee no longer foreee on their CS3 ooeeiflereeieh, ehe he epoke truly, ee econ ee he wee eone fihey "Q '1 efioeeee. The queeeionlthet eeueefi the eociel fereehii eeeeieely, etetee eee this: "Gen a men be e greet leeder, e eteteeeeh, e generel, en edmirel, e leerned chief juetive, e trueted leeyer er ekillful phyeieien, if he has ever broken the Seveeeh Coeeene- meet?“ Ere. Stanton feerleeely exereeeed her oeinien in the §eefieiheie;_§eyieeg‘et fihet time, in a meet ehle ertiele in the affirmative. ‘mre;‘Jeeoh Eriefit, Ere. Ellen B. Dieeriek of 3eet0n,* Keie Field, in her hegezihe Eeehihetoh, egreefi with my mother. ,, H ‘ ‘ ~ ‘ . _* / - W , **.. An, '3 * eeey other women epoke out prometly in the hegetive, "with e eiieeeg heee egeinet'thoee who took the eypoeite View tiet wee leeehhehle",* eeye fire. Etehfion in her eutobiogreehy. ‘ ; fig ,. \ x 4__ 0 The Jegkecn case eas hhiet The moment efter §kZ§_ . . ,5 _...._ ”__ _. . .. ‘‘‘_S____ . N _ ._‘l .. 1 _ _. ‘A ,3“ r*-: ‘ . ' ,“’ hr. ene ere. Jmuhfiflfi eere eerrie ie eeeme the geese wee obligee ’ ' ' »- hr N!” \ ‘-4 — - .4. 1- a"--x ,-*v- .2" 5"; ;‘ ' "K "3 J, M ir'_'; to etget fer eueerelie. ee eee gene tee yeere, ehi fiurifig fiflmfi .’ V , “%‘, eiee ehe hegen es feel e greet evereion for h‘e, ene wrote him .3 :i'v':."' ‘ “.4/" W} . ‘ ,« "gf’ . ’ §mlfla Mhu on hie severe he __ ,1 3?» ehe never eentefi fiG,$m3 hie € > ' “ ' " 3 ' - {ti ; . ~?*m~ ‘:“W, -:~~'» fiffx ,1‘. lag‘? "<’ «*3 3-~.-‘' 'vP‘* ';""w 5:’ cieimee hie hriee, hut eheieould net even eee his; e%~Q$~£i@&wy$§d h S Ct} r and kept her under eurveilleede, her friehfie, eifih e exit of heheee eoreue, eompellee him to eroeuoe her in Court. The O . K ‘ « mo --.’ 1 4 . . , - ‘ . ,1“-« W 1. ' ' Comeon Lee of~Eieleee ie thee e hueheee hee eheolute right over W Q 11% ~hie wife. The lower oouxt, in hermony eith the lee, .maihteihed hr. Jeokeoh'e right over hie eife. Her frienfie eepeeled the oeee to the higher Court end the Lord Chenoellor revereed the . eeoieion. eith regard to the right eo fheqoently eleimed, givihg huehehde' the poeer to eeize, imprison and oheetiee their eivee the Lore Cheheellow eeie, "I am of the opinion thet no euoh right exiete in law. Xxx thet no euoh right ever did exiet in lee. 32.7 I eey thet no Ehelieh eubjeot hee the right to imprieon ehother E glieh eeejeot, Whether Wife or not." Through this eeoieion the eife walked out e free women. Over one hunfired yeeee ego Lord Chief Juetioe heme- field eeve hie feeoue eeoieion ee regard the hleok men, "That no o eleve ooulfl breath on British eoil." But the fieoieion of the Lore Gienoellor in the Jeekeon oeee, heroh 18, 1891, hother ooh» /;”?§ eieered more importeht, es it effeoted not only one eeoe, hut #5 one helf-the hueen zeeily. ere. Stanton eey, "Th (8 Lord Chenoellor with e oleeeer vieion theh thoee ehout him, rieee into e purer .3 eteoeghere of thought, ehfl vindieetee the eternal erihoiplee of jeetioe and the dignity of British Lew, by eeciering ell etetueee thet meke eivee the home elavee of their huehenee, oheolete." eother remirke further on, "It ie not oohetitutiohel eeehdmehte nor etetute lees We neee, ht juegee on the heeoh of ii our Sheree‘ Court, who in deciding greet queetione of humen rights, ehell he governed hy the heeie eriheielee of juetiee tether then ipteoeeeht.” She meie vieite to verioue eerte of the Eritieh Ielee, wrote for the eepere, both Ehglieh ehfi eeerieeh, there eee e ooh» 3 g e , , V {2 "E .,. . nu» .~-. a -» V: 3% Iii ' .r"¢‘3 V‘: 3,13 {:3 5:5 eteet errieel ene eeperture of eehy of Eeglena e firee ww ro em 5% i ~ - .9 A: i » 9 l‘*‘ , ere et fire. Bletoh’e hoepitehle home. ey omother, hie eiie mfim g eeuehter oeee over on e vieit from Frehoe, ehe Mother telle hoe U. ._ 2 . 1. . .. x.,?.% 1.21: .3. _ .5 .\..Su..1:uL. .¢..I:xx..,.x _. .voyeee wee roegeo ehe wee not eee eiok e eoeeee, ehe hed e privete gee 115 ehe enterteined her two little gfeedfieughtere with etoriee. She wee e femoueeetory-teller end elweye hele children eeell bound with her telee. She reeo.§;§hehp§%theA§yoe§§§x§fl ene Bjorneone ,;g gpdleflfieg, and found both deeply intereeting. Aleo Shelly*e poeee end Keel Peereon'e ie&e pert releting to the Metrierohete meee_eueh eedeepiimpreeeion on her mine, thet E? eke wrote e erect on the eeeieot. She eleo reed Beehofen, Morgen and eilkeeoe, theee heoke ell mege e erofounfl impreeeion on her In Auguet 1891 ehe eeee her iovee ones and engiene eooe—hye for the leet time eee eeilefi for Eee York. Though the etewereeee axe took most of her eeele on fleok, or in the lefliee eeloon. She meée many pleeenet eoqueineeneee, pleyefi oheee J3 ‘ l end whiet, all the way over, wrofie leteereiehi reee Eere@ith’e i Eeoiet en’ Ibeee'e eleye. One gentlemen who oroeeed with her on this voyage eeid ehe was the eelie of the ehie. On leading, she, my youngest brother: Roeert ané I 5.4’ A ~. ,, K W ‘\._ V 13;: ‘‘’--‘’*-r '‘'..‘<«-' .41,’.*»%“~»*E.-‘%5£7v5e.w"; , »; g; ;. xvvw 3: f\,_,,« ,. , g _ A eet up houeeheepieg togeeher; my feiher hefi diea eoee yeere‘eefore 5 3 ex? {died oi % V g enfi my huehenfl\in l8§O%fout in Geliforeieg eo thee I hefl returned § East to live. Hoeher thee epeeke of her new eurrouheiege, "T? gefigéef . 5;; - ee treneportefl free the street to your epareeeee in helf e minueetx to have ell your fOOfi_&nfi.fflel eeet fio your kiiohee by em elevem ore of l"“§"; tor in the rear, to heve your rooms ell wermefi with no ef your own, eeeeed like a reelizefiion of eoee feiry fireem. With an exeeeeive outlook of the heevene above, of Centeel Perk ene the lfiouleverdieeeeethe to have a nioe tile&’roof on which you can walk; geve me e feeling of freeeom." fie eeifer how old mother grew, ehe eee alweye ready 43.4’. M M , ‘__ ,, ,,-- > - W ~ .i ., ,i V ‘ ~ __. ,_.- £ -4...’? , ,. to edoee ihe eee eee eevee elgeed for thinge ee oeey hwe eeen. fihe were he Roeheetee, econ gftee lehéiee to vieit eiee.£nthony, end there she eet for en ertiet, Afieleide Johnson, _..«m-m.........—...., ,. who wee to “ieeelizefl Sheen end me in marble for the Wor1d’e Fair.” Sheen gave a large reeeption for hoeher durihg her etey, end ehe egoke at eh ifieehee meehihg thee wee helo to try and induce the Ueivereifiy of hooheeter ho OEQM ite doore to éhe girle of thee eifiy. he the e men %ere~texed ho keey it ?OiKg they fele their '2' ,- 5 u"- 0‘ ..‘~ H‘ .i._ M, ~.:, at ,‘,«q An" , - u ‘ -.,.,”’ V3‘ . .‘ ‘ -we . 4, . . '1 §"'1‘ .:’..“'t _..«»r . mfiufimufiifi bed & flgno t0 lefl firxhllegfifi es WGL1 $8 Lflelr BORE» e morning of fine re *~ - ,4: .,. ;he wiie of the §E§Sl¢3uh of 4""? U’ "9 (3 5 F’ <2: (0 *3 W F’ ‘< V { "P 3' meeting preeentefi her huehend wieh twine, e hoy end a girl, enfi among other thinge hother eeid in her epeeoh; "That if the Creetor ooulfl riek placing the sexes in such neer reletione, ehe a :2 2"‘ ‘ 5" I 4'‘, a 5, w . 3} ,_,;v5“M,» 3"" fir‘ } ;%:'‘*~¢.~,-3£~~A~«%:“‘, " ‘g " :22 - L 2. W ' ~-=- = .a-.\= , K. thoughh they might with eefefiy walk on the ee@e{Qempge enfigfigxeuev e 3 E “T the eeme ouxrieulum to§eeher3" he Preeidehe egreed with her. E“ 22:‘; V 3 ,_ 5*‘ an , r J . 9“ ‘-.;,»"‘5§;z‘:v ‘ x L -'3 3z:,$.> e;wfo+v~ m % o ” % ~»«» “M Later the eomenjreieed several hunereé thoueene flollere end the doore of that eeet of learning were theoenhehen to ehe girleii ‘kg- **3!<¢k3?<*3$7§<={¢>!<?§<>‘I<=!<=§<$1’:<=€<=!<:§‘* ~ ***'*~*: v gr .7 .: . .. » - -» . 4''‘. ~ ‘ ' ~ The fiehh hlhheafi Mbthe:*returh e from Rooheeier 1n tlme Ehhhloh, and to oelehrete her fievehty-sixth hirthoey eieh §0§%?I*U?IOfiAL thoee of ue ohildrefih who were in flew York. GQ§¥?hiIOe OF l89§g She eeye, "I hed treveliee about oonetently E for over twehty veers in Freeee, Ehglehfi enfi 1 my own oouhery, enfl hed eo eeny frienfie, ehfi ooereeeoneente, enfi preeeine invitetiohe to e§eek before oluhe enfi conventions, thet now I fieoided to teen over e new leef ehfi reee in en eeey eheir. Bue eo oomplete e ohenge in onee life oould hoe eeeily he eeoomn pliehefi." Fer fr 3 it, ehe Wee ee buey es ever with her pen: hut as she heé hefl e fell getting in a oerriege, enfi hurt one of her knees it Wee not ee eeey for her to eelh ee of yore, eo thet 107 ' A m / / a of two ertiete“, fiehe Klumehe, Protege OI hoee Bohheur, who g yeihted her portrait: and ?eul Bestlett, who mouléed her head on-A:«‘¢..»»wvx4:~rM'<4-3!a:«1».~Jav-<mmy.x ‘ . in oley. The letter hee eihoe hecome qvite e femoue eouletor. ,.; \- ,«.>+w<.«:.\>m~..-.2.:«u. ___V\__,,,- X! , ,., Suheey in Perie eertioulerly fielig.ted ey mother, ee that ie the iey for the meeeee. "All the ext gelleriee, li~ if I! J“ ;I&fie$, oohoert helle and gardens ere open eni orowoed; all the heople ere éreeeee in their heet out eelkihg, driving, having pionioe in the herke end gardens; huehenee, wivee and ohiléren leuohihg and telkihg happily together. The eeete in the etreete ene perke are full of the lehorihg eeeeee. The hehohee end O oheire ell over Eerie, along the ourh etonee in every etreet end fl,,,,,.,.-..wgmm;:~...-.am>nav<s- _._ —,,«-,a,~ - . .~:;~.- > ,,.~.»L-\’-'*““ , .,..A,.,. '\ 4. -:1 -an .w'mc‘J.ny‘/.‘.‘N7A'&‘3«r"V:r-1:»;-rn\‘J\r:;(5\x*J :«n~:<:rv“=I?-‘<"‘ highway - ehow the oere iV8E.$O the eomfort of the people.", In Q.» Feenoe you eee men and e men everywhere together} 13 Eflglfln the men generelly et-gger ehout elohe, oering more for their pipee $3.. 6 in eer then their mothere, wives and eietere. Sooiel life, ,1 mom the hoof eepeoielly, ie far more neturel amihammohiouein (3? -v ,_ _,_,_ W , ,k N , _ ' no ’ . :- Frenoe then in Ehglehe, oeeeuee Women eix more freely 1h hueineee '9 » 1 7 5" . L-‘ ' . ‘K 7. 3’ . . H ‘ i . ii . . ‘ . - " hue eeueeeehte. afflj 'E%e’fi= %lhe.ell;;m»«li,:;.shlly \ ‘El, , /V, 4,__‘‘ég__ , ,4‘ I, .. , . , . J ' . ,‘:.‘P_.~:5‘J\ ‘. .96» In Eovemhe Mother returnefl to Beeihgetohe ehfi in her eiery ehe telle of the hooke she reed during that Winter and hi ehet their vuthore eey of women, "One wee the hell i§,§e§ig;'hy U Sir Thomee Browne, 1)., in thie the siuthor ciieoueeee on many high themes, Goo, oreetioh, heeveh, hell end voeoheekee one g eentenoe on women. xxx ‘the whole worlfl wee eede for men, hut the twelfth pert oi men for eoeen. men ie tho whole Worlé.- the hreeth of @ £3 women the rih end orookefi eieoe of eeh’”,i Speaking of the writings of John Feel hiohter, ehe eeye. "I found in hie ohegter oh Wfififii hehy eqyelly riéiouloue § etet eehte mixed up with much fuleoee edmieetiohg" W0? fii” Ehe 5 1 33 '_ 0 d we _q I f A. ‘[1’, 0 J ‘ _?_V_K fine thet Heinrioh flfilflfi, the here» 5. .1. .7 . ’ .- 1: ' ..«;:.2 ‘by ’E yore, hem any higher ee.1mo 8 S 108 of womon. In gohn Rmokin’o biography he givoo, aha ooyo, "a v a»-=mr~ V L.-* glimyoo of his tim:§;t1_in rooorfi to the sex when a young mane” fiother mot iurits the winter, While up in Lonéon at a rooofition, otepniék the Ruooion Nihilist, “a man of grana f‘*'*».,\ prooenoo ané conversational poworo." Ho ogoko Englioh vary well 2 1 too Eothor had a long and intorooting talk with him. Ho after» 2 W t 3 E " 1* V. T‘. .<» . - pm 4* »-'“n ;“"‘ z“‘~. . 9» as ‘ ~ - :.»“'1. . ' , Ward oomo to the united St&t€o &%£.h%£ o hfimfifig beforo :.Gommittoo; E of the tomato in r garfl to our extradition treaty with Rooaia. goo otont oovorml houro with the ?rinoo too ?riooooo Kro§otkin,w :T“"'- r"‘ -"*1 L’ 7% . 1"‘ ' "’ '. " ‘ I "!" . " k 7 . ‘ mlfifi mflméiufi mihilifltfi, in their h mblo hon lfi Loofloo, they lnp -A n q ‘ ., .~» 3* ' ins-, urns ‘ £1.-»~.. , - fiolgo in no luxorloo, but devote all thoir &Om€y to help tooto va _ of tooir oeliof in escaping frog tho floating of tho Czor. Ho tolé Eothor of 413 aafi trioon oxyotiooooo in Loth Fronoo and Ruooia. “One of tho rofioomonto of cruelty thoy prootioo on yrioonoro in motor to allow than to hoax the human voioot o A . , _ . t “V ,,_,_ ,1 ‘ _ V, A 7 w W V . , :2 -3,, V :3 soléiot alwgys ggfiamgfifliwfi the warden who oiotrioutoo tho fooo, to goo that no woso is otoken. In vain tho goof §rioonor;¢oko quootioos, E0 anowor io over oaio, no tidingo of the outoloo . __ . V__ 3,,‘ .. _ Y I fl._ ,,,,,_7 . .7 p 3;».-_‘ ‘ ,-1 as W ‘ H; ,-u ‘ ‘an. *3 worlfi ever given} One may wall amt mhot oovil in ouman Iorm fl has yroooribofi ouch triaon 9 1 Ono fiaroh 4 1888 Eotiox oailofi from Southampton f .r“‘! _ — ’ ’ f , W - oounoll O_VfiQmQQ; for flaw York to ottonfi tho .ir5t Intoroationogw W use-=-mp;.«-v=g.~. vggw ‘gum oooo to to halo in taohington, De C. On the train oho mot ho: t 5 “ ‘ f .’ . ' w» 1 30mfi$filOfi$ for the voyage, firo. Guotofoen, Era. Ashton Dllko ono ‘Y Baronooo Griponoorg, from F aloud, a moot ohgrmiog poroon, betwoon }.Je whom anfi gy oothor o worm tgiaofiohip otooe. The other ool gates . -5 _‘ t W _ . 0 ‘1 ‘ ‘R5’ ..!..'}1« . .» ml. .3" 7.‘? .-1. ' 1 gr wgrggg 5;; e*~=,«w'*~.,r‘* 3"-H 5"‘-t:1"“.':A "1 we "'1 _r_, M W T -9 .1»-\ ~<n ‘wk. ‘_.€:., ,2, “W 2:; .- ~ ; , ‘E {.23 '7 —-3 . ; j..« . ' _ _ ,I* ~ $&ll@m fEQ»=¢l$atfQUlc M b+Lt to; “toe w» R» »v?w $”d¢ *w* Gob: H: 3% ‘..*o.'~2. '5!) ‘~.»:.. V ‘ . fir A a tt.,*t wmfi m not woro over roafiy to filmy fihiot wito two oagtaln Woo o \ I ,» t ‘ ‘ "1 ;-W ‘ “‘ rt; . gootlofion, who were likowise fret from aoomxoknoma. Off Eanfiy [1 KTVK. ;1.x_,7r ml: . ,..C:.»..fi.s .1. . . .3, ..<».,.s. .. . , 1.2 . 4. .2 ,E.x.X ._.__.za1. ri.§...,au.7.is.9 awn .. ....F§. .E1..«..._._ , _,.,.u./...../.7..:..,x._7........,../€.n_..w.a...a..... , , ..v,,...>....¥. _ e:§_1£&3x5..3»,.u.1.a1a.. 109 ? (J. ‘V? §;9 f 3 57; '1‘ @ ‘am’ 3 “J.” +. .n .1 W t r: 122% e ~any mfies. @ that K‘ EM» 11' J.» L: 3.... . . . fix. nfig W; W... .h% :<4..f5 5"! 2“? i %re, $u:f' ti 9 3 mean talked ‘*3 ‘"3 $ 1‘; .3 V 3 mm. :1 t firri C onklinw 1% 889. + “W r,“‘1 1 ’ éfiza . fV aw: 5 5 an C 553 G V 55:: .6 0% ‘I C 3. $ .3. 1"‘! K} {:9 a ._ praat 1 .nd mafia K5 "HI exg. L.» I». ?Q%cQe awreaaian 0 a ,,. W ;, they safismag ‘ »~ 1 e g ‘{“z. . ii 5 CL ,~.i,*72 1 Of Women, zwvx, 4:1‘;- '1?;.. avuy ’-.~»."L..“; xv Qouflcil of h "9 ‘so’ bta . 1“ . 33 Anthony, . . m...“ .. 3.. . Q T .. . Q 1 Q . a W 1 , .§a 3 2 fl, .J7 3% . i. niw C Wu... .1 +4. ..& nv... :3 E. .1 ,, ..,...,_. n. m. I 8 E 0 H......,.” .3 2. ._.... .. .1 h B +._ R P .0 L 3.. .1 . , if R. . u . .1 O. rim I . .1D.ux..a.m h 3 .. 2 mm 2 +u .3 T .3; «.5... 1 afl 3 O f E 3 .1 _., +. .. ._.,.,. .3 mi .. an an fl .3 T M...” .1 aw w.,.,.. m f O as E f .3 .1 .1 E .._..x +.. V. O . 3. x a. 3 mm a n m . m. . G G . iamage ale Yark U43 TFQ O f": .1. filty t. ‘Kan ..,z \_,i W*sm $1 to “Guns Va i0 + 4 9 :. * " . 0. .+7§3 ‘U‘«.J .2 ‘ml Q:‘E"'3.$ t 2:’? 1;... gas? F (‘G1 V. I ‘V :7: B 3% V 3 a stem by much vfl 7:1! ‘and t“ "!fi‘(T J I 3 e or O r xv lanai the t L , ‘ fl .. aaluem Wraneii ‘:1 ‘*5 I257. 3”‘ ::«:4''. +11 .m '~..vv$.1 ‘$4.... h. 1987, though it hafl alaga of 1 "$9 x~“'*; 3 g ‘.2; CL :4.’ Era ,.:;r 1 .,‘,,, . ,,,.,, *- M QrChxht nawa oi ox: mm: .x E .m. mm. 9» h .w,. 1?... .x. . .1 H L. , 8 w. «M. . H.“ .. V 6 3 .1 ... A as T w * 8 . pi "NM 3 . s h C 0 am I V .7 8 .x. t. I +... O T O I n B 8 +9 am 8 S I 2 f .m . _. U +.. E E U; C N. ; O my .3. 3 .+. mu m. . .u my flu .. u& .m «H mm ww. mm mm aw v. mu an 3 8 f 3 T V. um .x. +... T 3 8 E u 1 O G E aw - mu ... .%H. av ..w . V aw .. mu M. 9. my .mM .a U ma. «M w. .n. O 8 ...w.... an .3 T .x, E +.. .1 +u W C 1% ...fl ....,.,.,__ 5., .. . M «Q 1 8 H ..fl _+u .1 .. I +_. R my... 6 H .,.w,m .3 +,. - 3 n .3 .1 .1 .3 8 f I S as 3. Au .1 am 3 . M... «Q 8 3 3 u 3 .1 E .x, .... a U 3.“ n .1 Z 8 +u AI .1 .3 .3 S T. on T” ,. W... T .+-. .x +... +.... 3 W 3 3 .1 .+... 0 V Ln“ aw mm av &, nu ¢u an my ... aw M.w my . V. 1 .1 as .3 ...a... V. E 8 3 .. an... .1 .2. an. E +... t L. . u . . .1 . -_ .” ..,..... . .... .. mm .1 mm; H L“ 8 M. W nu ,“ Wm. . n 54 I1 1 IV V 3 1% ii v t? wort & 1 y I} 5% ‘v :: LA. 8 5 3? .i~.‘ Y zfi ml r: *.a. *3 TE . , , gofbar'a OT‘ ”: 51 ‘ad’ 33113. It T . -~ ‘u, ‘ ,... f _ J. 1...’. 1.01.1 .2363 32:5 ’-.1?‘ 1.. 1:» ‘J ..C3f”'I’.'3 .4337 1 rs» 5% ; §D¢Evv.J fmlrqgns-:Ilfi1?‘T 4 A 1 .3 319 unuer sf Wgiflh 1 Ccmvafit C sen fl .. .,..=.-:=rsf-l:*v+j_(\3*.<:v z 7 .’-‘Wk/"n.J ¥.—’:.w L4 _n" K-J‘ ’ .=.. },/’"‘??5:":i.T3".'.‘E“i¢ 1 J... €.:?;”8 “"3" * C?‘ -§“""‘s .2 J C‘ UI: ~ Mn--E- ~i'+I."::2+,*‘: ‘* '3!‘ Va & '9? 3.. U WW 3 J Tha ta. 3.” .,w mw my av. av «MM fly. .nu mu m& .n. M. Q w. .m. . . m. 1 4. . l . ......,. A . 0 H. 3. my 3, Q .1 t. 3 O . we 8 .1 d T. .+.,. f V. 3 f A 3 C .fl E 3 mm t ,._m 3 Q E O 0 Tm rs V V 4~ - f Egig 11:3 (3 :5 \J - 4.. , in fafie‘-Av ‘-1.9’ m + *5.) u w; +_ .:.m ‘ .1- ho- ,-33 -1» ~ 1 T e. .3... 3.. *4‘ ’1 5 J 19:: fl 'J“ ,_J 1§Lr:; ‘ya 2'‘. ~1- .. : ..'‘‘z., 1 h at Q - ‘hay - 4.. 41" D ,wr :1 2.). 1. '..:;*. -,5 V 7,- O 1:3. Hook the gilot same abaérd a. 3 t 3 4y WIQ 1.’. W ,,,) TTEE: 0 4- SJ 9; «%7'~F'~}v'~ 1wl%flOW 1 n 1 _ _ .21.: m T F nw E B 8 E Q 2., “WWW .. E M G 1 . .1 .1 . . u A. . I . .. .. Jr 7 «J: 1 m 2,. .5. a P. .3 f .3 . u .. . «F L... . ..w ...,___ «L 3 .1 Q E .3 .....m . r wu. . 4 . I. A n 5.. 4. .1 a .1. ., ... .. Aw Qw AM ..J mm T; +u .+u ,. mfi. Wu flfi LL Wu fa mm mfi w: 9:. WW 3i .110 Eeehel Foeter hveey ehe ey mother. Although the Couhoil wee av oelled ehd conducted hy the fiuffrege Aeeooietion, verioue other Soeietiee were repreeehted. hiee Anthony wee the fihehoier of 5 . . -. .- -—- :~. ‘ - ft’ '1.‘ e V m .-r aw ‘ r"-.‘ J1 ' the oeoeeion, hevihg reieee hle,GoC for the euheoee, which eheolee V‘ the exeeheee of the fieleeetee in heehihgton, end an fie 1’ 5- C9 5‘ 2% cf 0 -E if e ‘< 5:: 3...; $»..J for huhliehing the reeort in book foee. hr. eefi Ere. Seoffore, eroprietore of the Eigge Eouee enterteihed Eother ehfi fieeeh, ee they eleeye geherouely did, a .-.,-- _ gs tq» , » ' . . 1"“ _ - "*1 . .v‘' ’ eivihe thee heeutiful eeerteehte with erivete hethe, eeele eerved S...» ‘ L...» - Ho ‘:3 C+ heir rooes, eheh they eo eeeireé, ehe eleeye pleeefi their fine oeeriege end horeee et their fliepoeel fiuring their etey. ‘Z2 £-.... . Vi . I ‘ ‘V ‘‘ __.’ "W ‘W 6 W 3 ' I if :4 It 7 K _ Q “hey ewe thie every yeer that the flu? rhea Convention wee held in heehihztoh, their hotel wee eleeye the heedquertere for ell the me Q I ‘W I M I‘ ‘ C r . V ‘ eelegetee, their receptions, huhlio eughese, dihhere, etc. were held within their hoeeiteble fioore. at 1’ . A .= »- wt-— ;"- <.__ -* 4"”. 1 ' .2‘ : .''*' “" ‘ . ' Ae eooh ee uother erriveh eueeh loceee her in her hflg H room, eo to eeeek, ehfl hede hex erite,:r“fihe eeeeohfiito he flea ~ Ti” lieeeed hefore the Goemitteee of the hoeee ehd eenete, end ehother ee Preeifieht, for the opening of the Council, only ellowihg her out for a long erive each dey£ my mother Wee et thie time eevehty -L1;-« L"‘,“,.1f"‘ three y»ere OA&o {D t, e , "The levee theetee wee otowéee for en entire Week ha‘ i “ i -" «"5 ., .. ..,. . -: ehe hoete of ehle woeeh epohe, ee ii eeeeielly ifimgiffim, on ell g the vitel queetiohe of the hour." - -v ' -r - » m -‘->, ‘£3 . '2 . s'‘‘?'' 'p "The heerihe at the Geeitol, eiter the eeetiha oi C» 1 ‘ ..,. ,- . -3""; ' 5" .1 ' 1'1 " ‘ ., ;‘':‘§*.. 1 - _,*;"“'.‘ + the Council, was vem;»ietereetihe, L? hi the foeeigh he egeuee eerg ifivifigfi ta gyeek eeoh in her native leheeege; to efigreee their elleeee rehreeehtetivee in the helle of legieletion Wee "-J Avenue, Clevelend. Mte. Southworth hid five thoueehd oopiee »g:wfie e ptivileee they hed never ehjoyee at home”, eritee hrs. Stenton. ~..? hehy hrillient reeeptiohe ehe uihhere were given in honor of e if") fig,‘ a 0 A‘ 0 r P‘ fl-u . W 1 «-3 4%‘ ‘I If . J. (‘L ‘. . theee hi tin eieheo women oy the tivee of eeverel Senetore. 3‘ f‘: Ohio wee to hole e Qoeetithtionel Convention in the E tell of 1888, ene et the request of the Ohio eeffrege Aeeoeietion,3§&§‘ h ther wrote en egyeel to the Women of thet etete to riee up end $2 eemehd their right to vote for delegetee. Mother wee to etehfi fig? that winter with me in Oeehe, heh., eo ee etopped on our eey outfi§3%;; to vieit Eye. Louiee Southeotth in her beeutiful home in Euclid Q: h . _,:a:‘ ’ 1,.“ *ix. Ft 0 hrs. Etehtoh‘e eh eel puhliehed end dietrihute& et the eteoei- _ . . , :Iw~*~mW.= "' .*“)~‘?. [.10 Lalo t on .n Columhhe. fim-¥Jfl%:LL , % %L_e E $we* he reeohed Omaha in time to eelehrete the ogehihg of the greet teiltoefi bridge hetweeh that oity ehfi Goehoil Bluffe. "Here" hether eeye, "I eat oehle ears, for the firet time, runn~ ihg up eni down hill without any vieihle meene of locomotion. Ae the Company rem an oyen oer ell winter I took my eeily ride on it of nine miles. hy oldest son, Denial, who eeeortee me, in the text that Wee enoloeeé, while I eat outeide." Thie t ,hehit of hother’e oelled forth many reeerke, one iey 3 men eeia quite eudihly, "It ie evident that ole lady eoeeh’t know enought to oome in when it reins!" “Bleee me!” eeie the oohdeetor, who often oohvereed with E the: on her trite, end kn~e who ehe wee, “that lefiy knows more then the Queen of Ehglehd; fer too much to 5 ooee in here hy a hot etovel" n: "L ‘ “‘ s‘ .-‘ea xv” 1‘ ‘2 ‘ V: Dutihe my eother'e etey in Oeehe there wee a lhrge , ‘-at 5 pa;-J‘ §.Jo 3 G) !-4 rt e eeetihe ih the Deere house under the eueeioee 5 ehfi ehthueheet of the State fiuffrege Society et ehioh hre. Stanton spoke. Various perlor eeetihge for Votee for Women were hele et which a giano affair, ono Esther, as Prooiooo Nu» Kr» ,"«.E”z‘€”-.«:“,:_‘_~ . , 1; z,7§._ 3...! .5 CL} Mother tolkofi, and she wrote for the daily papers all oofin her §‘L'3t33‘»yo ; ‘ J * qt ,.,:; In tho soring Mother returned to tho Eaot and spent the oummor with her oon Gerrit at Hempotooo, Long Island. In the 5¥%%m -5 ~ rm - . .z“‘- A - 3 pm I i:-» M v . . ' ~ . -t autumn mro. Blmtflh came over from England on a vioit, and I goineo them on Long Iolono for a abort stay. to all went uo to Geneva, €“”j ““' ;« L . .7. 3 *" . 5 6 to "‘s.3<,Lr"‘~ a L ='o£ %~;»:~,}§\9W 4”" t. Y. to goo oor.oouoin Mrs. Elizototh Smith Miller, in hor boootiu l¥¢“a O ful home on Sonooo Lake. From thoro we welt to the oanatoriom fir ot Danovillo, as Mother had a bad cold, and org. wlotoh was troubloo with inoomnia, they thought thoy’@ see What Dootors Jomoo and ?ate Jookoon could do for them. Having ooon boon oat straight; we all went to Washington to attend tho Aonual Suffrage Convention g ‘x’. J on& to oolotrate M133 Aothony'o oevootioth birthooy. flro. El>toh, mother onfl I opoke at tho oelobrotion, which was, of oouroo, of tlo Suffrage A$SOCi&§ ;at* it ‘ 4 in _ Ex j, e.. V‘ '- , V “ . K . ’* ' -. 2‘ '- ! 5 Q . ‘1 9‘,/:‘ 5. »1.,__v,; -4 . mi ""1 T“: m ‘[37 z:. {E ‘ifs .53, 8 ;:>s“:: . ,ll.@:f1 M3/' 1-«LC flu «..o:..z.-..«. . A“a:—:Z: 3%.; 5‘ ~-., 5 ,1 § 5“ '\,:."@a‘-r~;\— ‘~«;'l§":; 2 . 2%, W‘ J? * -Us ‘ 1": s’:-2 /W :' -‘:7 P‘ '~' ""5 ’ “'3 E V . ’ aiator hurriod to ma? York goo oailoo Ior nnglono, wooro they lonooo March Bnfi, 1890. oi t _‘§fig fr «~w **$************** E.‘ £3 . . or ,-. 2. “ .': . . = 3 3' V ’ w, ’- : ‘, Y’ ' §f,v\r.‘ la- ‘? :5: L rx ¥a;s.&/-u W“? ».~3””‘7~ u. ,. K ».. * — f ‘ .. s, ,, . ‘+5: ‘L; r. 5 . t . ,. 1”» E33. $?A§TQE'S Two questions of sooial ethioo stirred toe LAST VI$ET To people of Englano in the year 1890, as fiothor E§§LA§D. lanfiod on ito shores. One woo ihorlos Stewart Parnell's frienoohip for Era. O'Shoo, ono the 3 other woo tho Loro Ghaoellor‘s deoioion in tho case of a firs. 3 / — .« ,_ . A, . ,,.» Jackson. “The poly: , tho orooo and tho yooplo vioo with eaoh 5 “%W" 3'-’Nrr.»r i othor in trying to dethrone Er. Parnell as too great Irioh loo&erV out the united forces did not ouooeed in destroying hio oe1f-ros- . -al.fi9r‘=':4Ev:‘xm1a.m:'A:¢#rv<Am&“ I f ._9;;,.,‘A¢\x«n ..;vi”"""<fl 44I~C‘«"kn ooot, nor hounding him out of the Britioh Parliament, though, after a brave ano yrotraoteo rooiotoooe on his part, tooy éid 113 e ceeed in ho'hein him into hie greve", wrote ere. Stehton. She eeid, "It wee pitiful to eee the Irish themeelvee, mieleé by e hypocritical poeuler eentieeht in Eeglefifi, turn egeinefi their greet leefier, the only one they hgfi hed for helf e century who . _ g -1’ ;-~- 3-», ._ , -,-~ 0: in . ,-N. . -.-,. - fr - ‘ eee ehle to keep the Irieh queetioh uygermoet in the eeuee of 5 -32 Coeeehe eer after yeer." He told them the eeeetee on home Rule would eeeee ee econ ee it wee no longer foreee on their CS3 ooeeiflereeieh, ehe he epoke truly, ee econ ee he wee eone fihey "Q '1 efioeeee. The queeeionlthet eeueefi the eociel fereehii eeeeieely, etetee eee this: "Gen a men be e greet leeder, e eteteeeeh, e generel, en edmirel, e leerned chief juetive, e trueted leeyer er ekillful phyeieien, if he has ever broken the Seveeeh Coeeene- meet?“ Ere. Stanton feerleeely exereeeed her oeinien in the §eefieiheie;_§eyieeg‘et fihet time, in a meet ehle ertiele in the affirmative. ‘mre;‘Jeeoh Eriefit, Ere. Ellen B. Dieeriek of 3eet0n,* Keie Field, in her hegezihe Eeehihetoh, egreefi with my mother. ,, H ‘ ‘ ~ ‘ . _* / - W , **.. An, '3 * eeey other women epoke out prometly in the hegetive, "with e eiieeeg heee egeinet'thoee who took the eypoeite View tiet wee leeehhehle",* eeye fire. Etehfion in her eutobiogreehy. ‘ ; fig ,. \ x 4__ 0 The Jegkecn case eas hhiet The moment efter §kZ§_ . . ,5 _...._ ”__ _. . .. ‘‘‘_S____ . N _ ._‘l .. 1 _ _. ‘A ,3“ r*-: ‘ . ' ,“’ hr. ene ere. Jmuhfiflfi eere eerrie ie eeeme the geese wee obligee ’ ' ' »- hr N!” \ ‘-4 — - .4. 1- a"--x ,-*v- .2" 5"; ;‘ ' "K "3 J, M ir'_'; to etget fer eueerelie. ee eee gene tee yeere, ehi fiurifig fiflmfi .’ V , “%‘, eiee ehe hegen es feel e greet evereion for h‘e, ene wrote him .3 :i'v':."' ‘ “.4/" W} . ‘ ,« "gf’ . ’ §mlfla Mhu on hie severe he __ ,1 3?» ehe never eentefi fiG,$m3 hie € > ' “ ' " 3 ' - {ti ; . ~?*m~ ‘:“W, -:~~'» fiffx ,1‘. lag‘? "<’ «*3 3-~.-‘' 'vP‘* ';""w 5:’ cieimee hie hriee, hut eheieould net even eee his; e%~Q$~£i@&wy$§d h S Ct} r and kept her under eurveilleede, her friehfie, eifih e exit of heheee eoreue, eompellee him to eroeuoe her in Court. The O . K ‘ « mo --.’ 1 4 . . , - ‘ . ,1“-« W 1. ' ' Comeon Lee of~Eieleee ie thee e hueheee hee eheolute right over W Q 11% ~hie wife. The lower oouxt, in hermony eith the lee, .maihteihed hr. Jeokeoh'e right over hie eife. Her frienfie eepeeled the oeee to the higher Court end the Lord Chenoellor revereed the . eeoieion. eith regard to the right eo fheqoently eleimed, givihg huehehde' the poeer to eeize, imprison and oheetiee their eivee the Lore Cheheellow eeie, "I am of the opinion thet no euoh right exiete in law. Xxx thet no euoh right ever did exiet in lee. 32.7 I eey thet no Ehelieh eubjeot hee the right to imprieon ehother E glieh eeejeot, Whether Wife or not." Through this eeoieion the eife walked out e free women. Over one hunfired yeeee ego Lord Chief Juetioe heme- field eeve hie feeoue eeoieion ee regard the hleok men, "That no o eleve ooulfl breath on British eoil." But the fieoieion of the Lore Gienoellor in the Jeekeon oeee, heroh 18, 1891, hother ooh» /;”?§ eieered more importeht, es it effeoted not only one eeoe, hut #5 one helf-the hueen zeeily. ere. Stanton eey, "Th (8 Lord Chenoellor with e oleeeer vieion theh thoee ehout him, rieee into e purer .3 eteoeghere of thought, ehfl vindieetee the eternal erihoiplee of jeetioe and the dignity of British Lew, by eeciering ell etetueee thet meke eivee the home elavee of their huehenee, oheolete." eother remirke further on, "It ie not oohetitutiohel eeehdmehte nor etetute lees We neee, ht juegee on the heeoh of ii our Sheree‘ Court, who in deciding greet queetione of humen rights, ehell he governed hy the heeie eriheielee of juetiee tether then ipteoeeeht.” She meie vieite to verioue eerte of the Eritieh Ielee, wrote for the eepere, both Ehglieh ehfi eeerieeh, there eee e ooh» 3 g e , , V {2 "E .,. . nu» .~-. a -» V: 3% Iii ' .r"¢‘3 V‘: 3,13 {:3 5:5 eteet errieel ene eeperture of eehy of Eeglena e firee ww ro em 5% i ~ - .9 A: i » 9 l‘*‘ , ere et fire. Bletoh’e hoepitehle home. ey omother, hie eiie mfim g eeuehter oeee over on e vieit from Frehoe, ehe Mother telle hoe U. ._ 2 . 1. . .. x.,?.% 1.21: .3. _ .5 .\..Su..1:uL. .¢..I:xx..,.x _. .voyeee wee roegeo ehe wee not eee eiok e eoeeee, ehe hed e privete gee 115 ehe enterteined her two little gfeedfieughtere with etoriee. She wee e femoueeetory-teller end elweye hele children eeell bound with her telee. She reeo.§;§hehp§%theA§yoe§§§x§fl ene Bjorneone ,;g gpdleflfieg, and found both deeply intereeting. Aleo Shelly*e poeee end Keel Peereon'e ie&e pert releting to the Metrierohete meee_eueh eedeepiimpreeeion on her mine, thet E? eke wrote e erect on the eeeieot. She eleo reed Beehofen, Morgen and eilkeeoe, theee heoke ell mege e erofounfl impreeeion on her In Auguet 1891 ehe eeee her iovee ones and engiene eooe—hye for the leet time eee eeilefi for Eee York. Though the etewereeee axe took most of her eeele on fleok, or in the lefliee eeloon. She meée many pleeenet eoqueineeneee, pleyefi oheee J3 ‘ l end whiet, all the way over, wrofie leteereiehi reee Eere@ith’e i Eeoiet en’ Ibeee'e eleye. One gentlemen who oroeeed with her on this voyage eeid ehe was the eelie of the ehie. On leading, she, my youngest brother: Roeert ané I 5.4’ A ~. ,, K W ‘\._ V 13;: ‘‘’--‘’*-r '‘'..‘<«-' .41,’.*»%“~»*E.-‘%5£7v5e.w"; , »; g; ;. xvvw 3: f\,_,,« ,. , g _ A eet up houeeheepieg togeeher; my feiher hefi diea eoee yeere‘eefore 5 3 ex? {died oi % V g enfi my huehenfl\in l8§O%fout in Geliforeieg eo thee I hefl returned § East to live. Hoeher thee epeeke of her new eurrouheiege, "T? gefigéef . 5;; - ee treneportefl free the street to your epareeeee in helf e minueetx to have ell your fOOfi_&nfi.fflel eeet fio your kiiohee by em elevem ore of l"“§"; tor in the rear, to heve your rooms ell wermefi with no ef your own, eeeeed like a reelizefiion of eoee feiry fireem. With an exeeeeive outlook of the heevene above, of Centeel Perk ene the lfiouleverdieeeeethe to have a nioe tile&’roof on which you can walk; geve me e feeling of freeeom." fie eeifer how old mother grew, ehe eee alweye ready 43.4’. M M , ‘__ ,, ,,-- > - W ~ .i ., ,i V ‘ ~ __. ,_.- £ -4...’? , ,. to edoee ihe eee eee eevee elgeed for thinge ee oeey hwe eeen. fihe were he Roeheetee, econ gftee lehéiee to vieit eiee.£nthony, end there she eet for en ertiet, Afieleide Johnson, _..«m-m.........—...., ,. who wee to “ieeelizefl Sheen end me in marble for the Wor1d’e Fair.” Sheen gave a large reeeption for hoeher durihg her etey, end ehe egoke at eh ifieehee meehihg thee wee helo to try and induce the Ueivereifiy of hooheeter ho OEQM ite doore to éhe girle of thee eifiy. he the e men %ere~texed ho keey it ?OiKg they fele their '2' ,- 5 u"- 0‘ ..‘~ H‘ .i._ M, ~.:, at ,‘,«q An" , - u ‘ -.,.,”’ V3‘ . .‘ ‘ -we . 4, . . '1 §"'1‘ .:’..“'t _..«»r . mfiufimufiifi bed & flgno t0 lefl firxhllegfifi es WGL1 $8 Lflelr BORE» e morning of fine re *~ - ,4: .,. ;he wiie of the §E§Sl¢3uh of 4""? U’ "9 (3 5 F’ <2: (0 *3 W F’ ‘< V { "P 3' meeting preeentefi her huehend wieh twine, e hoy end a girl, enfi among other thinge hother eeid in her epeeoh; "That if the Creetor ooulfl riek placing the sexes in such neer reletione, ehe a :2 2"‘ ‘ 5" I 4'‘, a 5, w . 3} ,_,;v5“M,» 3"" fir‘ } ;%:'‘*~¢.~,-3£~~A~«%:“‘, " ‘g " :22 - L 2. W ' ~-=- = .a-.\= , K. thoughh they might with eefefiy walk on the ee@e{Qempge enfigfigxeuev e 3 E “T the eeme ouxrieulum to§eeher3" he Preeidehe egreed with her. E“ 22:‘; V 3 ,_ 5*‘ an , r J . 9“ ‘-.;,»"‘5§;z‘:v ‘ x L -'3 3z:,$.> e;wfo+v~ m % o ” % ~»«» “M Later the eomenjreieed several hunereé thoueene flollere end the doore of that eeet of learning were theoenhehen to ehe girleii ‘kg- **3!<¢k3?<*3$7§<={¢>!<?§<>‘I<=!<=§<$1’:<=€<=!<:§‘* ~ ***'*~*: v gr .7 .: . .. » - -» . 4''‘. ~ ‘ ' ~ The fiehh hlhheafi Mbthe:*returh e from Rooheeier 1n tlme Ehhhloh, and to oelehrete her fievehty-sixth hirthoey eieh §0§%?I*U?IOfiAL thoee of ue ohildrefih who were in flew York. GQ§¥?hiIOe OF l89§g She eeye, "I hed treveliee about oonetently E for over twehty veers in Freeee, Ehglehfi enfi 1 my own oouhery, enfl hed eo eeny frienfie, ehfi ooereeeoneente, enfi preeeine invitetiohe to e§eek before oluhe enfi conventions, thet now I fieoided to teen over e new leef ehfi reee in en eeey eheir. Bue eo oomplete e ohenge in onee life oould hoe eeeily he eeoomn pliehefi." Fer fr 3 it, ehe Wee ee buey es ever with her pen: hut as she heé hefl e fell getting in a oerriege, enfi hurt one of her knees it Wee not ee eeey for her to eelh ee of yore, eo thet Elizabeth Cady Stanton Centennial 13154915 ARRANGED BY THE WOMEN’S POLITICAL UNION TO BE CELEBRATED BY PURPLE, WHITE AND GREEN EVENING RALLIES IN CITY PARKS AND BY AN ANNIVERSARY LUNCHEON AT THE HOTEL ASTOR Saturday, Octobef 30th; One P. M.. Luncheon Tickets, $1:»5U’f€;‘ sold at Women’s Political Union Headquarters, 25 West 45th Street, Telephone, Bryant 7754 Suffrage Shop, 663 Fifth Avenue 117 she geheeelly drove wherever she eehted to go; In January 1898 ehe went to Weehington, D» O. for the Ahneel Gonweetion of the Womeh Suffrege Aeeocietion ene ee ueoel hee e heering before the Committee of the Joeiciery. For E \ l l thie ooeeeion :he wrote ehet ehe, end all her friende, ooheidered 5 dfifi heet epeech of her life. §Q§M§Q;1§§§§Wgg;§@;£, {It wee 3 §ubliehefi.in fell in the Congreeeionel Eecorfi, e lerge numher of cojiee were given her, ell fiche up in big hrowh enveloeee "end §§e§§§g,hy verioue eemhere of Congreee, end these were eent ell over the World. It wee eleo euhlieheo in full in the Woeenle Teihuhe enfl‘ite oenee etruck off eehythoueeee copiee end i theee were eeht hroedceet ell over the Ueitee S etee eed Rurohe. E Qhe of the leeeieg Aeeeioen eegeeieee in eeeekihg of thieéeeeoh, E Tee Eoliiuee ¢f,§el£J only the other deylcelleé it bath a eleeeie § , T i end en e igJ gave extracts from it, end edvieefi ell to reed it eho could find a copy. She still ehoke hefore ezhy cluhe, wrote for the eeily end Weekly eeeeee, end enmeroue eegezinee, eno puhliehed E two imevrteet leaflets Ge efixeet eleeeiee end eeeeine the Woeleie E Feirwogmundey. The letter wee a reprint of en erticle on ; oeenihe the Chioego Exposition of l8§3, on Sunee thet ehe wrote : J-' o for the North Aeerieen Review. $he felt very etroegly ehout / the eecieion of the eenegeeent to keep tie Exposition cloeed on Suneey, the ohly fiey the working people hed for enjoying ite beeetiee. By euperhumen efforts the perk and pert of the Chicego Foir eere keet open, but eoet of the eechinery Wee etopeed end builoiere closed, as e conceeeion to narrow Chrietien eecte. (IL Her erticle in the horth Amerieen Review eet one of the richeet men in Pittehurg to thinking elong e new line, end ee e result ' 118 1' he built a fine gymeneium, eurrouhded‘byathletice fielée, tennis eeurte, ehe pley grounds, theee he flmrw open to the public with the underetehdihg that Suneey wee the dey of ell eeye eeee end celled on hother J; W; *“ V. _ {K Ere. Stanton and Mr‘ Phipee hed if G thet he eehtee th e ueee. Then he end told her whet he hee done. e eoet intereeting telk on the importehee of erevieihg preper eleeee for the exuherehee of the youth of the lend ta find an outlet. :39‘ , —— m ,.- »» T -‘ . ' 41' 72;? the eeeheet eolieitetioh oi hre. Va- i In June l8E2 Rueeell Sege, whe, ee,eei1 ee my e ther, eee e gredueteof the E Emee eillerd School, hge. etehton eeht ue to Troy te eeeeh at ‘’.r a.. 1”?‘ the fiedieetien of the Gerlef hemoeiel Buileihg. It wee just } eixty yeere hefore when ee e fiirl hf eevehteen, Mother greeuetefi "\ ‘J I from thet Ihetitutieh. I eeeortefl her ue ta Trey, We hee e 5 fieliehtful time, it eeeméd like e revivel ef my own Veeeer 1 E. é’ College fieye. Her eiereee wee very fine, fell sf fun end 5 if pethoe, ite aleeihg ie eertieulerly goofi, ee it eekee eueh en .- N& .. a qt: 1%? ~ , . 9| WY. ‘ . . . "“" exeelieht eeigfi tioh to eoeeh their iey is ovee, flether was then eevehty-eeveh yeete ole, ehe eeid, "Though many cf he ere eld in yeere, ee eey etill he yeuhg in heeet. Women avd’ V -w --2 1 2» "‘;£’{"‘>s >1 ‘ ‘ ‘P .9" 4‘; trained to eoeeehtrete ell theiz thouehte eh iemily liie ere 3 "O Q ...._ _ ~ ‘V- w 1;.‘ ‘A “f fig theit shiadreh ere eroeh up, their levee Ghee eet te think ~ when geee, their eervehte teeihee to heee the eoeeetie eeehinery in motieh - thet their work ie life is done, thet no one neede new their thought and eere, quite forgetting that the heymiey of weeeh'e life ie on the ehedy eede of fifty, when the vital foreee E u » ‘_~_i‘ cg.‘ ’ 5 ‘ 1” f:‘_._v..‘ .‘‘‘r‘’’ :1,‘ 1‘: V,‘ .33 — 1 [3 7, ~1;¢v§' ' - “'ffi"f~ ' . _. up -s we ,r . 5,,‘ ' " " ‘ 7 their thoughte en: eehtimente flee out in heoeier eheheele, whee E 2 philehthroey tehee the eleee of feeiiy eelfiehheee, ehe ehen Fig eoverty ehe.eufferiLe the eeil ef hueenity from the eeethe 0 growe as pethetic to their eere ee once wee the cry of their oeh ehildren.e "Dr, eerheee, the preeeing eeeee of femily life eneed, the eoee Key eeke to eoee elumbering genius in hereelf for ext, eeienee, or literature, with which to gile the euneet ‘~59 of her life. Lengfe1lee'e heeetifel eoem, Mori+ T U , - 165%’ % eelutemue, written for e eieiler oeeeeien to this, ie fell of hope ene eromiee for ee all." She then quotefl in heeeeeee, heeutiful voice, the e linee with which ehe eloeefi her eeeeeh en The Pleeeeree pfeee, .u_...q«rsr ..«’~ 5 V ~ 9‘ 5 V we 4.4’ ...., yeu can turn heck to that end reed them. % $§;ee~ M safe ’ 1' ' " ,2 E P’ :.l:'- J’ \a% Mother epeht the eueeee of ISQS et Glen C0 Ielend with her eon Geerit fimith etenton. ,.. There ehe renewed ‘T . .. A-7 “ .1...’ * 1 M > rs — ,. ~ L ' . 4. .. her eeqeeintenee elem eeerlee e. D%fa’ owner end multOT of ehe I hee Yeek Sin, who hee e eeeutiful country piece an en ieleni 1n the Scene eloee bye She often vie'te£ hie end hie flelightfel feeily. She he& first met hr. Dene at Brook Feem Community, nee: Beeton, in 1843, whee they were yeung. He wee then e meeher of ehet Goemunity. hiee Anthony epeeeree on the eeenee eefi emereeeed eotnee into writing eeeere for eeey of the Qpnereeeegihele e+ the eoe1e'e Exeoeitien. eee During the eseeer my hreeher Theoeore,froe Perie, zen ever to eetehd the Feie, he eeeee eeme time et Glen uflvfio flee. Rueeell Sege, whoee country piece ie eloee hy on Long Ielenfi, eleo eeent e‘eey there eifih fie£hee,'ehe hegged her to write e ./‘V; - T‘? eeeer to he reed et the Emee eillerfi reuhiee et the ehieeeo ex- £2‘ é poeitien: meeher eillinely eoegliefl. _ . _ M ,, ‘.1 1"»: T. "3, 3"»: A eee Eireeeer of ?hyeiee1 Treihiee et xeeeeere eollege, vs.- Columbia Univoyoity at this time, Motho: and Era; Sage attended W» ooyorol of my lectures and exhibitions. Mothow ayoke to myoéo College girls on the importanoo of health anfi groper fireoo, she : made some wonfiorful orange cakes for some of tho gakomfiolks Wo haé up there, and came to goo my boys and girls Walk for the Cake as Well. i jg «é SE3 ooyo: "Ry time poosod yloaoontly theoe fioyo; ‘K wifih a drive in too Park, an hour in the load of nod, wriiinfi articles for tie oaily waooro and magozinoo, roafling Eenry fioorgoio ‘!“'*\V ,3 d _ ‘ . r _ t ‘ V, O I W ‘ H‘ 3 K - > - 0 I W yyoarossyoni Poverty, William Morris on iflfiflrfiflfil questions, §»r""’{: I €”#f J: 1 ~s w s L Stevonaon'o novolo,%"fiaroolla", ano “Toe Hoavonly Ewing," and at twilight, when I could not ooo to road ond write, in playing and singing the old tunes ono anngo I loved in my youth. In U4”; '3 +“o ovoningo we olayoo oheoo, book ga~mon, or ohookoro. I rm * fond of all fflm8*, also of music ondbt henna I am mayor lonou -2.» . _ , .. . . T 7._,,. 1 . “, .. .. ,1... ii ly, liso is ovor vary sweet to no and loll of lfltflféooo ‘ E , . H 3.. ., " 1 , (‘i an ‘mi 4.2. v ~ " ' ~..: 4“? "’?°" . -.3. s..2~....r..;.».t,;.:...i. U i...3.v:~'3 U&.J.‘~...v ‘T ‘--~ #70 . A ‘V F7 -3 ; ‘ er ' ~ she w1h.3r oi load-9% Wafi full of ego; oiiizouo of Ego York were to halo 3 Conotituzional Gonyoooion. Er. Kory Putnam Jooooi, firs. fioury Q; ganflaxs, Ergo Busoell Sxgo, firo. La Moymo ano many others endeavored to rouso a tow clogs of flan anfi women to action, in favor of on amondmont i‘- W ‘~ - *' -9 ‘- . ' ‘ yr‘: " ‘ °' ..*-4+ ' ‘ ' - . "W9 t ‘F’? go too Etafic Conoti mtion, glafltlflg the vote to iho women oi ids. -4» ‘Ex. I _ Cu: fi 4 -4!” ‘ : J‘ -4 1- 1: aq‘ 1 ‘ : p<J ad-5 .-«w ./mi . 1 run.‘ 0' ‘ mu‘ 5!.’ {x ,3 h 1 “'1: 2- '5 ‘$‘ ’ ‘L 3.} “ 53 , 3’:i’£:vI.?,:»7 '_'g»=7..3;=;..,;' 13 ,.-..K:’.;.-...:f H ¢«&'»3%tl§i.§%§ walk, 3 Lugs _ Q.f3.».» 0.5.. those woo halo mt tdo looo of John “. Eookofollor, in Woot oéth .»%.wu fitroot, at which my sister, firs» Earrioi S anion Elotoh, who woo over here on a abort visit, opoko. A fiine largo meeting; woo halo at Coopor union with an 3 M V W» .;‘~ ’ : ' » . "$9.3 4°. =fi opooohoo oy mooy o'otingoiohoo oeoplo, the Roy. Johm Yo Jfiofiffi ang Fathar Duoy among hem. firs. Blotoh Woo to ogook fox longer, ? E 7*. § i E 5 E 5 that ehe w Afitigj Ifevoring 121 as there wee eeme doubt of her heihe preeeet: ehe iii ea end ‘ - F‘! eeeeh. J- mefie e brilliant, eloquent e \ She and Eother he£:telked 3 M mwfimfl . ‘hie ‘ml .1. ».«s.w».2 ’-«.4. ‘i t O V 5;: T :2: G 7* 537*: 71 d *== *1“: "?:j"’r'*§ as 7*; +‘q 3;: V. i w+»‘E"~; ‘t r": e 53',» J-«"L—., ,,;-,, «y-. ,_,.z 5.: ma 4.. J..1. V9,... ’ =.J 3‘. J.-. *3... .-..,.. =...-4.. ‘q ..-.1. >::‘.£:..a. ~..; 6'.L'L;.;,;_ ...‘.‘;,\_} i,__, _v,. A 3 I 5’ ~ 3‘ _;_ A \,’£;‘*"?Lxk\,,§,v,.::g\x-““ 2”’ ehe felt equal to the exertieh of going; end eeeuhied e examin- end when flee. Bleteh eht piece in the centre of the pletferm, finiehei, midet treeend ue epyleuee, flother roee end welking to the front of the eletferm, ehe leenei on tie reeiing eeek end was ohligefi to wait for eome time $0? the ehoute -4'-" .5. . F”. . "W.-. .- — L . », ,., I .f. - oi welcome to eeiee. eke made quite a eeeech, I remember, and frienfle who eat in the far cernere of the rose eeid her wahfieew .5,“ ;ul veiee could have been heard eway out in the eorriiere — I wee on the platform. She eeid among other thinge, thet no *1 u _ their one eoulfi reereeent ehy_0ne else, no matter how geoi intentions, that’her éeughter, Ere. Bletoh had aonet but had not quite given the ehefie of meaning to her §§O‘§}.':r3l“ 1- wiehecito <3o2ivey. I ‘never sh:-all enthueieem ehfi braves that her speech eellefi forth. am e million cf nemee were signed to thie get: ion eeking the 5 etitutianel Convention to euhmit an amendment giving Votee ;=~:~' I . 4.. 3 97 1 4* ‘n .7 ‘ , ' ~ ~. -«I. ~.-~. A‘ Eeeen. “St huge to eay,‘ mOtfl3T eritee 1h hes eutahiogeephy, -; , > V W“ W” ,’ ‘ *’ h . ‘ ‘I H‘, J R R’ "Va J V” F“. ‘K I , _. 11 ”eome of the leefling women formefi e etrohi §ert* agmlflfit the emendment enfi their own .hfren3hieeeent. eThey were celled Theee women efleytei the eaee hleh of eemeeign es thoee 4 ---u. 4- _,—, A», d"v. ,1 I I x‘; J» 3‘ ‘ ’ "'1 Amenfiment. Ieeuee_~t;sele, eircuietei getitiene .- ,, ..fi ,. L... _, . _. _, ‘ as ‘ ma A13-" ‘ "V, W1 2' 4-‘ TT “ ii " aha hed hearings hefore the Oeventioh. A X K JOe$§h m. vhO&t@ enfi Ilihu Root dim their utteeecet to flefeet the emehflment, end eueseeded." >§¢>!==k*>¥<??¢‘¥§<=%<>!<>¥¢7%==§=’!$:>l= TEE eOMAE’S "Ihe chief thought revolving in my mind {I '11 fl:ELm flexing the yeere I8%4 end 1895, hed.been‘The fipmeefeifiiblei. In eelking with frienfle I began to feel ehet I mighe realize ey long oheriehed plan," é Eother eritee. fiooehe fievoted every eeere moment to reee nr oommeneetore on the Eihle enfl~eee eereriee; to flee they bed to eey on whet ehe ooneieered the eree%eee ciov,io1.i zeo%,ioen fr-1I;9+o‘6 olittleg, rm -. ‘ ' . .:'~—, - g - 3“ . . s -a"'‘' 5- '5’ -as ggeneyoomgggeefitepy. 1 She eeve eoe "founfi no explenetioo L03- 9‘! fir»-5-4-: 5""; . ("L "’ !p3._A', ' /:3 I3’ 1 the eeeeefled etetue of women unoer ei ‘~35 religione." Pert I of he Women'e eiole eeeeereo in eoeeeoer, 1895, efter the Biefififigg oelebretion eee over, it oreeted e greet eeeeetion. "flome of the flew York peeere geve e page to ite review. X X X The clergy eenounoeo it es the work of Seton.” Thouge it really wee the.work of eieet very ohereing §%e”eeeoe‘?e“ lefliee, one of them my mother} Among the otoere were the 3:;-.1 r , , ‘ ,, .4 “T7 . ' . _.-.\ "35 Rev. Phoebe ieneford and are. Devereox Bleke. extracts Lrom 0 -41% -u.. urn . a" 4;‘ =- V" 9- .-*1, . it Wfifé erintefi in neeeoeeere ell ovee eeeriae, Greet eeiiein, eee Europe. e thiri edition eee founfi neoeeeery, one fieelly "I W v C: '‘ ~ *9‘ P“: » ' — 2”‘ .~‘ . ’ : - “I "}'"I:‘ . 4" 5" an aflitiofi was publighei ifi England. The ofiViBlfi§ wOflmlot€fi eee enlarged to over thirty of tee leefiing liberel Women of .~* Aeerioe eoé Europe. Part II eepeered in l8§8. Nin- The following letter from Theooore fileon eill- tell you ehet oe thought of the e een’e Bible: 73 Avenue Kleber * I . ‘ JD‘ '3‘! .55."; fa, #5.;-1 I I eerie, France, eeroo o7, 1897 7"‘ (‘V ‘Ti 5.: ‘U9 fly oeer ole frieeé, ,‘ , I breekfeeted with your heedeoee eonfixheooore this morning. After our moéest earouaal was enied, I was aolamnu izeé into & religious frame of mind by raafling in a Boston news- W », ‘FL’; , ‘ .{JO€3.«Z 0 $‘\ gape? your recent easay on Ruth an I have kncwn you far more than 40 yaarg in more than 40 charactera - auffragist, journaliat ~ lecturer ~ hista- rian - travelfir - graphetaas ~ mafia: faxiliaa mlhouaekesper - patriot - nuraa ~ h3by—%an&er a cook - millinar ~.lo%%yist ~ garliaflentarian - atafiiatician ~ legislator ~ philaaogher - t3m-§0ur$r » storymfieller - safiirist - kifiauflyer - sheaa-§layer - amfi I know nofi what elsa «(but I now think that, after all, you hlne chiefly &s a heologlané Go on, O sac ei acribe "“"' '~ ‘. A.~u.§_. n :* .-a_ . M‘ _, H, _ h I . $fl& commenfmtor. I always finfi a 31033 satisfacticn in rsafiinw --s. ‘nun’ evxrythimg that comes from your bibliaal pen: i-~§ kw ‘7’T’;"’ ‘ H 2’ «"1 A4 . ."“2 "i- " ‘:5.--. ' -'-g H! . « .... natiy, Hlggle gmfl B02 are at present under your ‘e-g O O H) N! 9‘ (D 5”’ F" C+‘ } J F C?) G that I aenfi them my friendlieat fegards. As for youraelf, Q Eotfief ih Israel, I semi my humble wish for an interegt in your pr;yers1 Ever youraas of old, T. T. During the winter of 1895-Q6 Eothar wag very buay on her autobiogrgphy, fifighty yeara and fiore" anfi yart II of E the %oman’s Bible, &nd writing varioua lrtislea for pagars fififi magazimfis on every subject imaginable from Vanezua a flfld cu§§Q:3§$; to the bicycle! “On the laat guhjast“, she writes, "ma;y timifi souls weré greatly fiiatreased. Shoulfi women rifle? Ehat shoulfi lthey wa&r? Eaoula they lifia an Sumflay? Wéafi were gggggwggy E §e:§ggg§m_3on3§rning them? These queationa were afikeé with all E seriousneaa." fiothar wrote for a symposium on all the above questiona in one of the iaily papaya. Ska aaifi to her the 124 eneeer to ell these queetiene wee eimple, - "If women eoule (J ride 3 Eicvlee, it wee evidently fledje_ihtehtion thet ehe he eereitted to do ea." As to her dreee I eemeeher e little .\u: 5 ,, ,_ _g_ _§_ _‘.._ 3... ,.,_ .., , F‘. ',t .3, ,... .+.“f,‘-. ,~ l'k ' y 3 30&§1€b wh$fi eeteeeee, 1 flee eoe thiee 1 e this, 2: c--4 ‘.123 »~3 : E1 §i;:=“ , :12» t~<3 O "13 4 "Ankle, e:;;:,,1f , IlOE’sf}.“;8iiK7E!£@r}‘I18€ I vehet ie the length of her ekirt to be?" We hed eehy gueete fior dinner fluring thie time, ‘ 9- f’? "'1 *3’ .«-« "W ~ - .o- '‘ ("H » ' ".3; '. T ,_, W." ‘ 5, 3 .. . hr. eei ere. eueeeil eege, Annie fiwthmfl eeyer, ere. Oeeeene, ..AJeJAxwi.aa..7..,, . _“__‘uhM‘ . V’ / u " ' ‘I i" r »"" q ' > '5 ~ 5 V. ""; . ’ ! ''’. "'3! mother of Thoeee hOtt,Oeeorhe now hereee et elee eznei Lee? :5- ‘-J henxy Somereet, Freneee Willerd, hilliem eelzer, eur ex~Goverher; If"! x, u 9-. . , -- ‘'9 ,»—sn' w ', -*: . ‘E-"v ‘ .4- eeyereere fr m ell ever the eerie, the Preeiieet of Teeehere J ‘l 9 5.. 4 ‘i 4., ,«-,V ,7 . ' 4:. ‘ a - rm ‘ ‘~ -K“; ‘H M " I,‘ I. z ? "°' +' ‘.3 Coileee mfle , WlL3, ene eeverhl or the eroeeeeere fIOm the '.,__.t v‘ ;_$ to ihetitutioh, our Coueih elizeheth Smith Killer ehfi Queen B. Anthony were coheteetly flitting in end out. One gentlemen I remember pertieulerly though I am not eure juet how he eeellee hie heme, he was the heefi of the Aetor Library, Er. Eeeureggdt Esther e«hee hie hoe he took hie efter dinner eeffee, "heeeme" her geeliee "i take it ee hleek ee night, ee het ee hell, ene as ewe t ee woeeh'e kieeeei" fly eeg of e hrether, Robert, eeoke 1; eee eeie beet Wee exeetly the way he liked hie. V ' ..n, . :- " —_f,,.,. ._, . I eethe eeye her eehtel ggbulum et thie time Wee »~~ « & ~ee 5’: 4 M , . Belee3’e hevele ate hneeee D. Gonwey’e gife pf Thg§ee,§e1he, t4<=¥<=%<>!<=3!<?=?H?<7€<‘!H!<=¥=?¥==?<>!<i=§<f>k=':<>3< f"¥“3‘;’_?:‘*-.7’ T?‘ ‘T’ '”‘i..'3'""“T ‘!"«‘”"’~"3“f.., , '?.‘§‘ .-. W“: ‘"3? X‘ 5'" ' - m -4-~ 5?" . ‘ 1 ° L,g eefihaleih Oh mOV$m38I lw,.l533, in the grehe eetroeeiiu I O ‘3 V5“ ; ewre he 1’ ee ih Eee York, there wee held 1-Mwfiilnaumnqmr u ELIEeB?TE e eoet eeeekkehle hirtheee seleheetien, thet 1% ‘:5 PT‘, 7‘ -:2, "'7 , ,_ Cr1.z..s': ;:;T7‘:¢.v, .1 ,,,§.~2 Qf b,Qfl_Q’_;’%:3«,_,_ , 37., , mother. It wee given unfier the aueeieee of the Netionel Council of eomee, oomeoeed of over twety orgenizetione of Women, reereeeetine every ieeerteent of woman’e labor. The houee wee eeeutifully éeooreeed, is eee eroweed from eit to dome, the etege wee fillee with fiietimguiehed men ené Women, ene there, s in an eleboretely oerved oheir, upholeteeed in.derkred, eat ey r, orowred with her woeflerful eilvery eurle, eled K eatin gown, with eome ole leoee eeout her throat She wee eurroueeee with eeey~of her oo~eorkere, Isabelle Beecher Hooker, Fanny Gerrieon “mean E. Anthony, Tillerd, Ere. Bevereux Blake, Oherlotee Beebe eileour enfi others % M ' ' M ‘ , 9 ~. 7 . ., ehoee neeee I zennot now recall. In the aufileeoe eere lone v. 2.5.: neon‘e eons end one of her two 4” gheere. President of o? the grime movere in the oelebretion, i .55 gr ’ C; u. QL ere. eta 7" . e . V?“ . wit’ . . " 1|‘ ere. fiery LQw@ elokineon, .&v H: ‘a van a ‘ Council o Eoeen end one ‘ --> :0»: "“ ‘ 9"‘ 1% .~ 9 The Aeeee eeye eeong other tfiinge: “flo l v» ‘ > :’ ma». ,.~. 1 r .5“ 4"’ . - ' £rlfilw' of +ee a;fe1r 1e 7* ., “I. . . 1.-.\ .- .»._». I -» ,~ -' 4 ‘ -0- fie- '-'5'?‘ "“r. *7 ' 4" sent soale feil to he iepeeeeed with eoet ee oee e0 g E elo WC 335323172. $3 .<'.“‘ +“',»., (.3 .~, :. -E ("1 + 1.-~ i ,3 .~» «.~—~., _.»-5 ' .—-«, 1 lxr -F -‘F 3"} . ‘:1 “gr”: . sf*;?‘C3‘g?v"2 :73 ‘N O 3. all '?.:;:1..:;> u , :;>.....:.u. -;.» :3 :2 u l-~:.<.- ,; U0 ma 1 3.2 0*-L53 W ms-»~~~’~~*— j $ emnommd +hie ooeeeioe, eee no young we ; *3 as’:- I - ;;,_.«\.,..».,mm»u;e\r~¥- ‘ + 4;} mo «.3 _wLg W e, wee eke hoeoeee guest of . . , ‘V ‘ fl.‘ ,1 ‘ , V 2: :1 , 1"‘ ' _ ,»-L.-. ‘ desire eo foeeet the yigeuee of tele aged form m3, lfimfilflg on g l e““*en3e of ovee g W ‘ML ‘nth J- C?‘ . .._ y ‘ 1, ,"-'-I Vang; Va‘ , "fir E L S+eeton eeoee to tout §T3m O ». M , _ . * 4 . _ * .-., 5.»,-g ‘ ,.;.- * ‘ eie thoueeee, ee eee hex E§Ok@m hunireoe of tlmee lh 3%lal&tiV$ eoeulee eeeeiee w <¥I ,3 if‘. , _‘ s “I ,3; .1." _ Q .;..'!,.. 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M 1 3 +u W . .3 . 4.. .1 O 3 G a. M D... V . - - . .. - ..,. ’ - w . T:.’,.. “- A ~=.. ' m :22: ~i ,aqueatiQn 3&5 iivine insplsatlen of U a xfifirfiw wfitlflgfi ww tv thv {f l'f;.....$ (:2; ‘Q Women to be orflained.as miniafiera, alfiera, fiwwsons anm trustaes, 4 I =».d.. u.,_; {..-'‘‘n-‘ . ... .u-. . “am ‘ . PM. »‘-vi ' "3-_-R“ , .~”‘w§ "* 1 1 '4‘ h 7' . ,., . . I gag mfifiv yafira Refers she flied WOm€fi gel“ %L->% ese PO3lulGfl8, ‘w . _ V_ '1 ~)" aha aaw anofhay gfiep in progress taxen. ;* ";~.:;v . 1 ,. ‘I ‘ . -». -~ .—~ "‘ v,~».;-s:- .: - ?'.?I\ an $ :3 5: “*5 -»- Eer fourtn mlsfimke, so Jmllfifi, J¢$ méen uh», ¢u- '! a few other Jomen at bar raqueat, mafi the ?T@3um§tl0fi t0 ~ %“; O E‘ §_ 1 fi it 3 I }.J K J }......l {D £7} }....«:a (U Ho 5+ (0 Q '“..,'.‘i “ ‘T3 (0 @ *1’ { J {"9 \II 9 H) C!" {D 5% r I- ( E) M Q“ Fla *3 41+ 3” W «E L .3 (D ;......1 CD —£..,}—h Q: E ‘I ‘-\~ ». A -. ' .4-.—; -" $3 reggyflea afi a atefi in grogreaa. ‘ 4. - v<~v.«:v.‘9é?4*-"W" ~,x;'.a-k-ra.~mns:>’.~W*L , ...u.t.«.xw.'M‘t%&.-:=4,';si\<~i‘5> ._, J,” A 4 ‘ fl _ ,.. if‘ 1 up . = vs‘; 1% fiy 3 they 3lOfi€3 her aufcbiografhy with the iol¢o@1n; A «g 3 . ‘ O _ _ ‘I ‘V’. gatience with the oyyosition of wy coaugutora, Wit“ wnom on $0 mamy §Qififi$ I fliaagrea. It requires no zourgga new to iemmnfi é fiha rigfit of guffrage, temperance légielaticn, liberal fiivorcat W laws, or far wafien to fill 3hur3hJo?€i3as, ~ thase battl$$= * 5 § ‘have haen foughfi and won an& the frinciple fiovernigg fihese £3» E manfis 3onsa&eé.. But it still raquires courage to§u@§?i0é fihfifl 5 1 .3 . W 3 “ E 2 '\..-.. ‘L . ‘ ‘ ‘ V ‘ WW 1; ‘ O _:H 0, 4.. » ..L."¥ C. _ ‘ :iv1nr in’;iT&f1Qh of the Kéwbzew $131339 33 v0 bfif E°5iti0n V H ' ' In «- W , rm.-2 ' .‘ ‘ “P A1‘: of women. %;y ahoulfl the mytha, fables, aa& &Llu5OTl%3 0; Hhw um ,. 7 .~. 5' =55’ ;"‘§ r“*-'‘'' t . :2’ ~, $41" ‘ fiabrews be halfi mafia aacrefi than €hOw8 0; ufl% A%myx1¢ns wad ~ « F §- U W g a W fl » R v‘vmfl? Eflyfitiwua, fro: whoge litarature moat 0; tflfim are merlyvw. " -1- j J ,6 * . H , T! ‘ -.— 5 3;» -—,__m.«,~-.-§:*:s‘ sgging fihgt the religioafi sugeratztlcna of aomen §w&§Wt- - .. -7 . k . .. . ' ‘#1 “.%'\.‘:*-w.'::":.'t '13»?--Y tdwgir f§10"_‘f’53 0131} “;E,"}f’ .;.:2.i.§.~.7i?Tf3€‘ 111.» 7.3.3“-\.«*.,?::, I .~._,\.,'...!.. 1” is ct , ‘V 1 t V - O. ‘_ . V” n 13a to reiterate X; fiamanus for 3&wti3@:.11w31t7 wn‘ . . ~- » '1 cu .«-° ' ‘ “L1 pl"; A»i.'3 @%‘alitY in the Chursh m? we¢l afl 1n baa MtwfiVC 0 *1 ‘ .- ‘ ~ '3: :1“ —‘ "+";«'T. ‘r -’* . * +.1 V‘:-\ “:3 “The blrthxay C8l%bT&filGn fiafl to me @033 um& w 5- 1- 0‘ ( ‘.3 t 4 F .~ I ,\..e 5.? ’i‘ }.J 0 ~‘”"3 3,33 }...J ‘ . in.‘ ’ ,. ‘ U,‘ __,1 __ »..,_: 4* '3‘ egg‘ £3 Mt «:7 r‘ .fi'1 §&“&anfi$ mVr§ fihmfl m ¥“fmGflm1 ur4¢a V0 flaw u ;_ :—., ...,y' I . 4 'lLVIII1,~‘ \ Ix"\4{~ -'-. x’ -V m..- v , ‘v Fa.‘ ..r‘ ,___ > .1 . , ’ . _‘ ,,_ . n V dawn Of & 33% Qay IO? tbs kotharg of fiha Rxcefi The hgr*QniQug E'.! $4.4» 3Q~OE?I%?iOfl of so rawy fliffeyent erganizatienm, with NO , ui‘ infierests anfl oyihjcna, in one :?& i jufiilaa, Wfifi, inaeefi a heavenly viaien of peace anfl hofieg a §rophecy that with tha ex- alfiafiion of %omanhoo& woulé coma new life, light anfi liberty to all mankind." ""‘*‘~é\:~:«.m,s. I tax» ..,,~“!mim__ i am aorry all the raaéars of thig Sketch saanot garuae her book Efifiktywjeargmgmé Ecpe, it is aa fagcinating as E {E a naval, you hafie to lay it down, and Wham you have finishefi you 5 E E E3 "fael so lanaaofie", 33 she Ola gentleman aaid, to whom I loaned §; it this winter, "as if you had lost a fxiend.“ It hagga vary 5; large gala. It 1% cut of grint now, I am aorry to say, but you § flan find it in most of the large li%raries of the land. It E Wfifi edited anfi publiahefl by my youngest brother, Robert 39 2 fl 044*’: vs 4- ‘\ '2": SJ €.L£.'-an L, ’-.2(.J.5..'.. c: M ’ x (3 H (9 }.J¢ C 2 ’—..In an infierestlng little E t of hiatcrf in connectien with this book, one of the Emgeat and beat vubliahing x . a c _ ' ,,. , ,- ,2 ,- .., - ,.._ “:33; ° houses 1n thwa country was relay to acaeyt 1t, afifl told mflthfif tfiey woulfi do go, if she would change or cut out 033 paragragh. an out 5 cf their heuaa J x :1" {I} A ‘W Tfiey sair pg scald not let the imyrint that senfenoe. IQ?-'€?1r»..,_, _ H V ,,_. .‘ ,4 ‘'2 ET ' .~~- . / -r . , "" ."‘:“ '1'; '1" “V; -"' ‘ '4" ;, » Eat mother gall, R0, l’ll not 3h$n&3 th&b méfluflflflfl, M” T “"' I uhfit 13 what I beliava. I have stoofl for my heliafs all my 0 - Q . ,,,,, ./ ow ---A‘ u‘-'..--. J‘ ~ a" ' ;<.'-_ ~ i‘ ‘J 3 l 1 h»vl amllayau martyrasm xor them, anl in my 013 $33 I'l 1 34”” 2;. “ "=31 . . V V . “#4 ""*’.‘:v,xm;,;,g1;ifi4‘ fig be true. We'll fiubliah the beak -P '1‘-'~. rt ‘.1 /:3-\“" «N J. ',,.%‘c,‘ ...L<;.., V {:3 Q5 , ' i % ouraelvea, my aon§W§. And t*ey aifi. The ”Aft§r the .~..§§ aragraph in queatimn wa“ this: is w " e-e ;«~*‘’* ‘A Eva “ §w%%3 fkéfi ~«« selebratien of mj%§irth£ay, (mar 70, next O33&$iOfl .14’ of deep int@re$t to me wag tha Shi3&go Gonvwfifiiam of l&§§, mm i fig"! ., » I ,- .. .. crimgslayer sake a ‘J U} (Q the platform tiara a£0pt.d, ané the nomination ant mriiliant campaign for William J. Eryan. I h&& long been resclving in my mind questiena relating to the tariff and financ3, ané in the damania of liberal §emoc“ats, pofiuligta, sasialiata, &n& the laboring men ani woman; I haaré the clmrian nfitfifi of 3 the coming revolutien.’ N: T‘ .« ‘._ ~_ __ 4. a ‘ ‘. .- iv». 1*‘: V .-.. ; ~( It ' ,~ ,.. an . ’ -¢ fler a%to¥iogra?hi hgd @0fit lifitaring reaiawa i -4" . . ;- ,0‘ 45 .1,‘ 4, way ',v- x -. fur‘ W.‘ ‘ oyw 7,‘-: '1“ 11;}, 3. 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Ami» 0 WV .u 132 lifo, she was a philohohhor anfi, ha I haifi hefore, when 6 - ‘ V" }....3a 9-1.’ ,_ “H C- WOTri$d over anything aha i ad it from hor minfl hhfi wohl& 1 ' Q; r3};-*~~-1.?-v-3 4§~ 72»; vs 71». » lo. \»-45'.) ‘-.~.m.. :.~I'.‘1.~-:.. .m.:;.» -.;..€i.:§'.éa 1 'r'1Ef v": ' !‘°5 .1 ‘ -E Q ‘ . .‘-"V -‘H ' 8 . .-0" r"; , - fine wag ® brliilfiht COflV8f%mh10fl&llfifi,_aRa could keep a whole ro m full of hoopla hntertaihao by the hour. «'33 fiha ' The following ia what ohflmof thh oloveraafiowriterfi of his tim her go a oohvhroor: "Ear gift of fififts ih oonvhrshhioh. {av *-'.-L‘ “N homhh‘$ ($3 a‘ in I .« . . 1 Wu. .0: . "1. it — .9“-a ,. ;-~. -~ v 4- mo: throne of quoonohim is hofi the offioihl Sflmif of uh sifihfio Cohvahtioh (though aha hlwhjo prahiflee Wihh great dignity ahfi ease), hut-is 3&tfl3E a goat at tdfl oooial hoarfi, where the I ' ' :2 -3 r‘~ -- P -.‘ 9"». . aw g" ‘ -u. -. 1 ‘x. ,3» : . xx rs,- company 438 eliorly, 30nb3rV$tlV3 édfltlfimfifi, who oomhlno to hrfiuo “*"a h her lifoa Go 3...,‘ - -I . V ‘ . " A/X - .1,’*s 7?. 13 W. "‘U“ her fiown. I think she Wmfi never mraueo oown 5 R“ ihho a fruitmorohhri, §&@E the fruit laden trees one after another -»= .« - 1‘ . 4' IV ‘ - .: , . a’ s * rs“: ' s"‘*. ‘ -V ‘*- ahi not & groathr shower of §l*hs, oherrles and §0m8%Iufl¢fi@b }...Jo U will fall ahout your heaflothhh the W ttiflipfifi, hnootofiea anfl fiehavteeo which thio hounfioouh woma oheoh flown in thhle talk. «ax , ~' 1 x‘ ,1 *-._ x T . .. ‘ ,— , Ga,‘ ,3 N‘ .~v. . I .,_ ...z .- n‘1 ‘ 1 ‘.. . . t’'‘'- x‘'_ ' ‘ g i"'x aguggkggg fig 34$ Qgglfifi gfreo tfmfie, tomehoranoe &fi@ womhn - .. - .~ .1 .. .v .~-, 4 , ' 9-'.~ '9.-"'5 ‘ ‘:1 . W";- §uff°h£€ hra hor favorite themeo. Eahy h herooh, on figefimlflg '*n...J O . K ., . ,.o. ,. , . m » ,—...: .«.-. 3'43? h éeliohtful evening in ho? aociaty, n&fi gone hway $&?1fl§, well, 4_ 0 as if -«s .» 1-»; c 0 3 V -5-, 1 4, » ' ~—. -. . ,4 = «.« y "“' V V . - . — « . 2 ~:::: *‘ ; ahflt 13 mhhah he othel allffi hgalh G g gurthor oh he swyo, g . .. ‘xvi’ -f 3 ' 0 9 “ I ‘_ My ¢ ,1 » V ‘ _ . 5, ‘F ‘ ' . ”hoth1hw ih hhr outwaho omrhor, - nothing 1h her reproaohthtlvo (7.3 * r I u o u,-_ ;;~--. 5». .:-«. ha *7 ‘I’ ‘V ' «'9:-. " r *5!‘ 1 pohitioh.~ nothing in he: hxiaty and hit - nothing in the whol iv » O “ _, _ r‘ 4 _ ‘ _ . , T .,__,., ,.~ ‘1 .. cluster of those fine in olleotual ahillyiho that hhke may one - u. In mu 4-. \.~. an v-* gw K "“ “‘ _-‘W. ‘V: ‘‘.‘‘-.-W . W‘: of hha abloat women of our fimv ~ hothihh Lh any fiaft oi A33 mlho, ohhraotor oralifh 13 80 truly homirahlo as the ohh, oohtrhl ~hhrnatorih%io quality of moral ohorgy, which like & hiioen ‘-.r' is: A ‘law! ‘*. u: . _ am an 4 : ' oi-y' . :-*5 aha glowing emher, ixhiteh Wifihin lo: a fiery indigflmtififl &$&lnmt ‘gr »../ '-..»~ "~ “ V ' v - ;.~u_ ,4‘ ‘ . r . all formh of oghheaaion, a saoreo love of llhorty who Juhtzoo, a proud rhvorohoo for human nature, oven 1h lta lOW1icSt iortunos, oty to ‘~39 . F! - *‘ c *9 ’ - - pa ,:_ ‘,-.,v, “V 99%“ .,-4, 4-rt; at-V - . .7... I,-a,'l I »-,5 3,. .,._., ,,V ...,‘ i 4.. . F‘ g;‘:.5P at. (,7 .u . cm, ‘A , , ’. .,_ > __ Jam a y$;yEtM&l haflhht &§§3&l Lgflm 7A$ fa fian:m5 C: %O$ 3 fifid cf October, 1908 wa «fifiofiaevmlt T&S pxaygrinfi his 5 V V.‘ 5 nor’ ‘¢%‘i;:(gy Ilka-H: W I H ’ to the justice of God." 133 And I mighfi 3;l1%%ba1* :7‘ t ‘O I Will 3103 fiaya on earth. . ;5.'.‘.‘« ~...« fgfifié gy givimg you as e an for & lang while yet, but time“?” glimyae of her las+ grow aim, Tha laat few years 0“ her life 30 th&* bar sight aha W33 QEligefi to have her and fie west of her wrifiin all thia Q gecretarv - T , time wag 303+ /'5 ‘an ' .:§«:}'\ 3*“: a.,OL.p 1:: Lem. U‘ n-.13.-5 r chearfulneaa an Wenierfml gm fihfi was afiuyenfious, aha forge to raga fia flV%rav@ry g.. , . 1 1 "?"::; ‘km. 's.’ E..J .1 ~ .4! tkem reund the worl or ax. ary Work éke as d as of yo .§ Riva?$ide +hunfler-bolts, re. She t§o* :r of fire aw“ .3 3.3. Mg vigor, [5 I. fig fiaily pg ..— pr her health was almoat mfieffl were — Va ive, every few éays, wrote lettera, wag full ya »rfect. fihen the ta hsr ska amawered every her ufi, sent abort profiests to The Sgn, Tzfigugg, E in this 3%, j a .2. - ‘I’; ‘g;2~»~'=—“>«v .‘ i, ,, -44. nae or that fallmay. .......W.} ?r§;..,..a.i‘1fi*% P0 * *5 7/5«:4y»*§,-x!¥AwgMW«r.,*~¢ ‘L , @,¢¢fiflfi$mwg,w7~~- of both sexes, calling on her up to the 4ay before awe . Lshe always received the “am most corfiially. iflflws .L.}. 5» rifiiaa him &n ..-a V" we. - d”f§?. xpwwwaw "'5? ‘I! e‘.‘.”" .‘Z‘« 3" ~., E‘-SM»; 8 gt; Mr I‘; W .*fl§, .1... {V L O u T I , . a» *vresa, %§\mstha£ wa$ pen lettey, to Be §ubliage% in gcffl %‘ . e Wfifi gaifi to have a leaning towarfl Eoman Spffraga, put in a elauae on fiha been t%m nod. ‘T w« §&§er, uréing V -'5 1-. ._ .-0 &om&n Qucstion. hafl hafl a *2 V * ‘ ’ , to She &nd ' W we var 9- ‘ --2 :2 L V ‘ r . "' ‘ b‘ 2'3 whole flask worklng on that letter to tn» Pf88la8fit3 we goofi éaal of yaw, 7 ;}’~ 3° +9.... [ h@r aa3ret&ry hafi W compafiy for lunahecn, dinn% %1” 3 gave from all bar T"! If I*T‘£3Ll"3;”’ Shil” _.——~*‘ "'-z 73% ”'»..2€3 J, ‘:4; v -1 .—;-‘H V‘ "nu. :31? 15 .. , ‘ ‘ 5’! V or 1?“ -22 _r at V1, ,_ T P‘. . _;..:_}'f@ is. 3”‘; *3 1. 3 1.;.:, xx; 3 54 .1 L.» .5 ‘x. , Y, C? 1-2: :? uofv‘ ‘ zhfiflmggag E ‘a I I . ‘my 6’: »*':~3 I“! “.' 1 1 . P“: I “Em Va lng, 3» " .' V-3 qr: -‘ac. ..'c..~.> ‘mun 1;’ K.) 4:»; .. 1-in I V J J .yQm -an A:-xi. .A xv‘ I > C bf my @r@th@r3 war~ §nQ1an&, ‘ad 1 !...J¢ 3 cf?" it wga S%tur£ay gftarneon 3 «. L . '1 "*2 31,“ 9 , , . 4», V » ny%e1f, whixa mofihar ma ova drawing room fiilkiflfi W W -n 1 ! mo’ in the corfier by t r S C3. ir h . 4 3 3 H... .. . A 3 VJ 3 mm. .E 1 6 t E 113 R.’ {W ‘xi 0 Watég have "3 "3 ../1.. .4. 3 th&t t :j.';41"‘\1 3%.} L... 6.! 4'3‘ 0 .2. 4-3‘ V. . . 1.: ET}. {B .1 mm +,,.. 3 w% 0 ars of h , . n . 4.1 gwival £23 0 1 a ‘W11 0 : mi .+u 3 3; a «B +4 M; ,3 mm 4 3 Q. 3 .1 mm, mm H + E .3 +... 3 3 L an 3 an ...,.L. 3 .1. .E +9 5 am . O 8 8 T T. mg. 3 an fl ,3 Y +u. -~L w._.._.m M 3 E“ .1 a n 8 b an .3 m .& E am mm .,,Q m h .1 S” O 1 E. V. V vs .1 M. .1 S .n4. .4? fl . 3 pm 1 . M +.. U T .1 4 . _. U aw .1» mm 3 I 8 E n V... R .93 Ms... 0 % 3,.“ .3 Z .3 .. 3 . w . t excla rt ‘'3 J- *1 3 9""; \J I5 .4 2 -, 7 =..»;-::’a. "'5 ‘so 5} .. wva 3* 3 «Q Maw; L . . 1 a . 9 an 1 V. +..v aw L W , 3 M u 3 m .C 2‘ O .r 3 1 3 2. 1 F, 4% . mm. mm . H mm. .T.~ L .3 mfl .3.“ nm E H 3 +u T 3 mm. M E 1 ..m 8 Hi. .0 .7 ...__ % , mu 3 T an G +..H G n: .1 V. I fix M V .. g . M W. J, E G . .....W 51 WW , H .» 8 ,2 in 3 u .. ,..rW mm 4m at mm 1 3 r .3 .1 NA L “M h E “U. VW mvu J“ E . Q N.» W 3 «L M M. ,3 LL «mu mm 3 .3 1 LL. 3 a fir V mm mi .1 ma .1 O at “S T. +u %,,,._m ,6 :3 3 B C mu .3. . .4 .2 .3 ,6 .2 r n O .1 r n v. E G a «M. .C ,3 F 8 an as .3 «Q a I 3 u 0 mm ...,, S . .7 7 am 8 V T mm .3 .30 H.» H M u mt 1 mm. K «J mm “u my av aw nu . wv. . Lb, m¢ .a$ . «M mg W». V ; my mu m“ WW wk“ w& G $ 3. KW % fl mm 3 «.1 as nu F, 3 O B O af .1 m N . .5 R 1 u E E n 6.. p ._ h V. _...,..A re .3 S O S .....U r. ‘ '? ~4- ‘‘'}P’‘D .5 9"‘: I V‘ 49' w’ 118"" :3 7.?‘ r~ OH‘ 0 V8; "-.,_,:' ‘»..J :1. :3 0 Wk \/£ ""1 xi)” 4 1 1 ~ L 3. x& "F" ‘ J3’ 1. :33 {.3 -J‘ -/ 7 «Q ~h "”(\' Y’ J -3 J. :1. ‘MELE, ‘'1 fl 3 -., & '53 .4... V “dz, 5",‘ :12”? ' er...» aha l»Lcr"h me ~'- TI {'3 ‘FL 3.5. r “ov+io ."-..= ax. J on. Q h .2 1:-'- ~ " O H M . , .1 3 mm. b X f .1 3 0 as W ..u.. .3 .3 8 . W , O W.“ . mm n my E c Q 3 .3 J .2 3 M h 3 m V. Q R m .1 V, T .1 3 t. 3 mm 3 3. A d h T m E 3 K a. E +,._,.. 1 h mm. f .,fi G + M «Q as R ms nu. mu 0 , O W 3 .3 .3 3 . mm. I O h awn 3 8 E ,.,M is 4 mum 0 ma U 4 8 mg .1 ma 3 ,8 +u .1 u “H 3 .1 6 my 3 1 Q 0 X t l L W t E a E 6 E, h T Q .4“ +,.. +. T an...“ Wm, C any .1 4. na . 9 an “R .3 3 0 am U E mu a my «I 8 «K 3 N aw 0 +5.. _. ‘ fie mu 3 H; V. T. R w ,.. .3 : Am ._ 9 w... .1. 1 O r t 0 My ,. 8 e an o +... _ W n q; ‘f:-}::aou. v.o' ‘Y 3' an if .1 my C C nu M...“ ...w Lm. Sm, «Q A3 Mi. «U ? an . ‘K. um wV1u.H.v n To A ‘M $1.; % Cl %.». 9.»: m J L £ 4494» 4.. E. fl .1 a , mu, . at an pd am. Hi an . +,... O .1.“ 1.. . mi , . . N 6"‘! .. T‘; _ moeaevelfi ta ‘£9 0 "W ;eyond. ‘=30 3;‘ .3 an - :2 , Prealuent +3”, :3 1*": ‘w 3 -1 gm’ 7» 33 her wsrk, i”s».<‘::,§ 3 \o9 2 o V V, _ uzatrwct Mar 3;?‘ + 1,...’ .. 51": at . 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Title
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Ryerson, Margary A. — to father, October 3, 1905
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Creator
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Ryerson, Margary A.
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Date
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3 Oct 1905
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Text
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Vassar College April. Dear Papa, I have a few minutes before chapel, so I guess I will start a letter. The minister this morning is to be Dr Vance from the Dutch Reform church in Newark, so not that where Aunt Maggie used to go? [Is not?] it funny they are all coming East, where are they going to live and is Harold going to live with them? I went to dinner with his Bailey girl again the other day. She is queer looking, but lots of fun. Monday night I took dinner with Elizabeth Halden. Every...
Show moreVassar College April. Dear Papa, I have a few minutes before chapel, so I guess I will start a letter. The minister this morning is to be Dr Vance from the Dutch Reform church in Newark, so not that where Aunt Maggie used to go? [Is not?] it funny they are all coming East, where are they going to live and is Harold going to live with them? I went to dinner with his Bailey girl again the other day. She is queer looking, but lots of fun. Monday night I took dinner with Elizabeth Halden. Every night before chapel now the girls get together and sing. That night the juniors first sang on the steps of Strong and then when they began to march to chapel, four or Dear Papa, - It is almost time to go to bed, but I guess I will have to write to you. Our lessons have really begun now, that is we have been to all our classes, but we can’t do much work until our books come. Please don’t think I am crazy if I ask for your old Latin dictionary, but all the girls have big ones and I thought Mama could put it in the hamper when she sends it up. They say the old ones are nicer than the new, because they give more idioms. Please tell Mamma to put my old blue bed spread and my blue curtains in the hamper too. I want to put the curtains over the trunk. Then if either you or Mamma will look in my book-case, in the top left-hand shelf, you will find my “Minna von Barnheim”, I think it is by [Lessing?]. It seems that we have got to read it. I think it is daughter here. She comes from somewhere in Pennsylvania and never speaks that everybody does not laugh. Her name is Beatrice Daw. The other evening Marie Kays, Beatrice and myself were hunting up some rooms in the main building. And whenever we would ask where anyone roomed, they would laugh so hard that they could not tell us. Then a senior has come into the room across the hall from me. She has just graduated from a [train crossing course?] and is awfully cute. She is very nice to all the girls, although they are several years younger than she. Marie Kays is awfully nice and every body likes her. Last night, after dinner most of the College girls sang college songs for about an hour and then we studied. Yesterday morning we all had a hygiene lecture and sometime within the next few days we have all got to be examined. We are on the campus all day and just go back for our meals -- [moved from fourth page] We can study between times in the library and that is where I am now. Mamma will be glad to hear that for our second lesson in English we had to write a composition. Our English instructor is quite pretty and does not look a bit sarcastic. The other evening after chapel, Mrs Kendrick got up to address the girls, and had hardly begun before the electric light wire broke and the whole chapel filled with girls was left in pitch darkness. Some had to hold hands so they would [...] get separated and come out that way. It was quite exciting. I was with one of the girls I met in Physics. I think Physics is going to be quite nice. The professor is terribly stupid & slow but there are some awfully nice girls in there and we have two hours experimental work every two weeks. I have just found a note on my door from a senior who used to be at Dana’s, Miss Newell wrote to her about me and she has invited me to a big entertainment. I am going to get dressed and go out rowing [moved from top of first page] with Marie, Jane (the ranch girl) & another girl. So Good Bye - Give my love to Mamma Margery --- Colonel David [Q?] Ryerson 22 Prospect S[treet?] South Ora[nge?] New Jersey
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Title
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Page 37
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Description
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Included in Ross, Caroline (Barnes). Scrapbook, 1901-1905
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Date
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From scrapbook dated c. September 1901 - July 20, 1906
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Title
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Williams, Ellen -- to mother, Jan. 1866:
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Creator
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Williams, Ellen
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Description
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VC Spec 1865-1866
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Date
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January 9, 1866
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Text
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Vassar College Po'keepsle Jan. 9th 1866 Dear Mother. I am so tired I can hardly sit up this evening but I know you will be anxous to hear of my welfare so I will exert myself to write a few words at least. You will of course e'er this imagine we are here all right without further information on my part. We suceeded very well in making all the changes and hardly suffered from the cold at all. The only place where I was really uncomfortable was in crossing the river. We reached...
Show moreVassar College Po'keepsle Jan. 9th 1866 Dear Mother. I am so tired I can hardly sit up this evening but I know you will be anxous to hear of my welfare so I will exert myself to write a few words at least. You will of course e'er this imagine we are here all right without further information on my part. We suceeded very well in making all the changes and hardly suffered from the cold at all. The only place where I was really uncomfortable was in crossing the river. We reached Newburgh about eight o'clock this morning and found the Hudson solide with no means of taking us across. So we had to walk. Mr Bartlett bundled Mollie and I up so we did not feel the cold very much but we were very glad to reach the station at Fishkill. Mr Bartlett rode out to the College with me but did not stay promising to come again soon. The girls seem delighted to see me. Jennie got here this morning and Nellie that evening. We are having a very unfortunate time here at present which I have been almost inclined to think is because I said so much while home about the delightful way in which the building was heated. The very cold weather and direction of the wind has changed all that and our rooms in common with all the rest Is below freezing temerature. The girls are allowed to go wherever they can make themselves comfortable and 1 am now in the library and Emily studying near. They hope to have it arranged in a few days so that we may be more comfortable but as it now is it add still more to the lonesome, homesick feeling which I will this once at least confess to be very strong. Oh Mother I can hardly realise yet that I have left you for so long except by the choking sensation which has been in my throat all day and whichwould show itself through my eyes sometimes. But I am going to try and stand it six months more though I believe if you should say the word I should be strongly tempted to come home at the end of the five weeks, when the half year will close. Many of the girls think of leaving then I believe if possible. But I might better be in bed than writing what I suppose will do me no good and make you feel worse. I have beea studying this after- noon and expect to go in my classes though 1 can't expect my lessons will be very well prepared for X am so tired that I must go to bed now. I hear Anna Dickinson lectured in P— last week so X shall be disappointed in that. Please send that Photo of myself which I promised Mary Cornell as I forgot it and she has asked for it. Please write soon and as much as you can for my letters will be my greatest consolation. Love to Aunt Emily and all enquiring friends and believe Your ever loving daughter EUen Mollie wanted me to send ever so much love to you all when I wrote.
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Title
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Page 14
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Description
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Included in Janish, Jeanne (Russell) and Lucile (Cross) Russell. Scrapbook, 1887-1938
"Notes - February 8 -- Posters - 'Chavenet Tomorrow!!!!!' -- Programs - VC Trig Ceremonies, 'A Departure from the Parallels of Precedent,' February 25 1892 -- Concert programs - VC Department of Music, 'Students' Concert,' February 10 1893 -- Concert programs - Collingwood Opera House, 'Anton Seidl and His New York Metropolitan Orchestra,' February 4 1893 -- Letters - [from family], March 20 1893 -- Concert p...
Show moreIncluded in Janish, Jeanne (Russell) and Lucile (Cross) Russell. Scrapbook, 1887-1938
"Notes - February 8 -- Posters - 'Chavenet Tomorrow!!!!!' -- Programs - VC Trig Ceremonies, 'A Departure from the Parallels of Precedent,' February 25 1892 -- Concert programs - VC Department of Music, 'Students' Concert,' February 10 1893 -- Concert programs - Collingwood Opera House, 'Anton Seidl and His New York Metropolitan Orchestra,' February 4 1893 -- Letters - [from family], March 20 1893 -- Concert programs - VC Department of Music, 'Recital,' April 14 1893"
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From scrapbook dated June 3, 1887 - March 1, 1938
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Title
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Page 71
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Description
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Included in Janish, Jeanne (Russell) and Lucile (Cross) Russell. Scrapbook, 1887-1938
"Admission tickets - VC Commencement, June 8 1924 -- Notes - 'Carmen' -- Poems - 'Whatsoever things are noble' -- Programs - VC Tree Ceremonies, Class of 1896 reunion, June 9 1924 -- Invitations - VC Tree Ceremonies, Class of 1896, June 8 and June 9 [1924] -- Drawings - Trees"
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Date
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From scrapbook dated June 3, 1887 - March 1, 1938
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Title
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Page 201
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Description
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Included in Mansfield, Adelaide (Claflin). Scrapbook, 1893-1897
Blank
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Date
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From scrapbook dated c. September 1893 - November 27, 1901
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Title
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Page 108
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Description
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Included in Babbott, Elizabeth (French). Scrapbook, 1910-1912
Manuscripts - "'Happy' French Her Memory Book" [Elizabeth B. French, VC 1914]
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Date
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From scrapbook dated August 12, 1910 - June 22, 1912
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Title
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Aaron, Fannie -- to Mother, Father, and Pete, April 21,1921
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Creator
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Aaron, Fannie
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Date
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1921-04-21
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Text
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Dear Mother, Father, and Pete: I have the honor to announce an A in my midsemester in Spanish and a flunk on the last ten-minute Monday written in Ec. Most of the "good" members of the class flunked it. That is not to be taken seriously. Millsy seemed much amused when I told him after class I hadn't been able to figure the answer to the question out yet. I went to the Amalgamation Meeting last night. We reduced the nominees for the big offices for next year to two, listened to...
Show moreDear Mother, Father, and Pete: I have the honor to announce an A in my midsemester in Spanish and a flunk on the last ten-minute Monday written in Ec. Most of the "good" members of the class flunked it. That is not to be taken seriously. Millsy seemed much amused when I told him after class I hadn't been able to figure the answer to the question out yet. I went to the Amalgamation Meeting last night. We reduced the nominees for the big offices for next year to two, listened to songs for Alma Maters to replace the awful old one, and discussed the possibility of having our meals served decently. I worked on history for three hours yesterday afternoon. That is the first real work I have been able to accomplish. I am gradually getting caught up with my work. I am eagerly awaiting your Princeton letter, Pete. If you haven't written it yet, please write it. How long does your vacation last? Love, Fannie Hamburger AaronDear Mother; Will you please ask the doctor to give me something effective for my bowels as soon as possible. I have been trying Maltine + Cascara + vaseline, vegetable pills, + what not, ever since I am back, and with no effect. It makes me feel like the dickens and good for nothing all the time. R.S.V.P. as soon as possible. Mother
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Wyman, Anne (Southworth) -- from family, July 22, 1882:
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Description
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Date
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22 Jul [1882]
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Text
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July 22 Dear Anne When you go from Chicago to see [Harry?] I want you to get him some peaches about as many as you think he can eat before they spoil. Do not get those large nice looking ones that never ripen but I think you can pick out some I should think 1.00 ought to buy enough but you can judge I think. Mr. Pulsifer has annother job for you out to Columbus Ohio to teach English branches in some big school 1000. per annum said they wanted his wifes sister but she cant go because dont want...
Show moreJuly 22 Dear Anne When you go from Chicago to see [Harry?] I want you to get him some peaches about as many as you think he can eat before they spoil. Do not get those large nice looking ones that never ripen but I think you can pick out some I should think 1.00 ought to buy enough but you can judge I think. Mr. Pulsifer has annother job for you out to Columbus Ohio to teach English branches in some big school 1000. per annum said they wanted his wifes sister but she cant go because dont want to go so far west & because she is to open a school in Auburndale etc. but they know you could take the place &c. Your father says once a teacher and always a teacher If you wanted a place you could’nt find one to suit & now you dont want one plenty offer. I looked for a postal from you tonight (Wednesday) but did not get any. Shall have one in the morning I am sure. Sent a letter to Mechanicsville and one to Seneca Falls. Took me plenty of postal cards I wont trouble you to write much for you can tell me all when you get home but [crossed out: two or] three ^or four postals a week wont be much trouble to you & every day seems a month till I hear. I went to Canton today & got your silk. Will send some in the letters I [direct?] to Chicago. I imagine you leave Thursday for Seneca Falls. & on Sat shall look for another postal from there. Sat I must close this letter now or you will hardly get it at Jackson. Got your postal [crossed out: from] ^written at Eva’s on Thursday night. Shall look for plenty of postal cards I wont trouble you to write much for you can tell me all when you get home but [crossed out: two or] three ^or four postals a week wont be much trouble to you & every day seems a month till I hear. I went to Canton today & got your silk. Will send some in the letters I [direct?] to Chicago. I imagine you leave Thursday for Seneca Falls. & on Sat shall look for another postal from there. Sat I must close this letter now or you will hardly get it at Jackson. Got your postal [crossed out: from] ^written at Eva’s on Thursday night. Shall look for --- annother tonight. With love Mother Wrote to you care of Lilly White at Senica Falls. Stoughton Mass. Jul 22 Anne C. Southworth 702 Francis St Jackson Mich Care C. R. RussellIf not delivered within 10 days, to be returned to Mary C Southworth Stoughton MassCarrier Jul 24 [5?]AM
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Worthing, Margaret (Fletcher) -- to mother, March 19, 1911:
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Creator
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Worthing, Margaret (Fletcher)
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Description
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Date
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17 March 1911
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Text
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1911? Friday [...]. Mar. 17th St Patricks Dearest mother; - I just remembered this is St. Patrick’s - The storm Wednesday was not local - we had it too - the cold still asts. The gale of 60 miles an hour ceased with last night’s sundown - Your coat which is very good looking - with underware etc- came yesterday, also Daddy’s apparel which quite pleases him. Grandmother says she hasn’t written you for she expected you home last Sat. night - your [...] alloted time, and has not [known?] since...
Show more1911? Friday [...]. Mar. 17th St Patricks Dearest mother; - I just remembered this is St. Patrick’s - The storm Wednesday was not local - we had it too - the cold still asts. The gale of 60 miles an hour ceased with last night’s sundown - Your coat which is very good looking - with underware etc- came yesterday, also Daddy’s apparel which quite pleases him. Grandmother says she hasn’t written you for she expected you home last Sat. night - your [...] alloted time, and has not [known?] since what your address was. She has been looking daily for your needles for her by express! There is a [...ss?]- supper at the church tonight which as Mrs. Beginty is here, is the most strenuous exercise for me for the day. We had a letter from you yesterday and [m…?] [...e?] this A. M. Grace writes that Isabelle is not any better - I was terribly sorry to hear it - Have just as good a time, just as long [crossed out: a time], as you possibly can! We are getting on famously and hope you will wait till Grace comes. With best love, M’g’t -
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Page 14
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Description
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Included in Babbott, Elizabeth (French). Scrapbook, 1912-1913
"Objects - Dried flowers -- Concert programs - VC Choir, 'The Christmas Music,' December 15 1912 -- Letters - to family -- Letters - to father"
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Date
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From scrapbook dated August 23, 1912 - July 10, 1913
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Title
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Vassar College Main Building ca. 1865
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Creator
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Slee Bros. (Poughkeepsie, N.Y.)
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Description
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Picture of drawing of Main building of Vassar College with paths, lawn, shrubs and people.
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Date
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1865?
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Title
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Page 21
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Description
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Included in Janish, Jeanne (Russell) and Lucile (Cross) Russell. Scrapbook, 1887-1938
"Objects - Thread captioned 'Party...for Joss. Freshmen, October 31 [1920] -- Printed materials - 'Vassar College, Schedule of Classes, First Semester,' 1920-1921 -- Forms - 'Choir Notification' [from Professor Harold E. Geer] -- Printed materials - 'Regulations of the Vassar College Choir,' September 26 1920"
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From scrapbook dated June 3, 1887 - March 1, 1938
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Title
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Aaron, Fannie -- to Mother, Father, and Pete, December 12,1920
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Creator
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Aaron, Fannie
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Date
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1920-12-12
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Text
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December 12, 1920 Dear Mother, Father, and Pete: It was certainly great to see '20 back for First Hall Reunionr yesterday. Tfey seemed to feel the same way about it. I was very much disappointed in the play. It was Bernard Shaw's "You Never Can Tell". I did not care particularly for the play and I did not think that the acting was very good, either. We had debate practice all Friday evening and all yesterday morning. We have it this afternoon again. I cut chapel this...
Show moreDecember 12, 1920 Dear Mother, Father, and Pete: It was certainly great to see '20 back for First Hall Reunionr yesterday. Tfey seemed to feel the same way about it. I was very much disappointed in the play. It was Bernard Shaw's "You Never Can Tell". I did not care particularly for the play and I did not think that the acting was very good, either. We had debate practice all Friday evening and all yesterday morning. We have it this afternoon again. I cut chapel this morning and spent the morning in bed trying to selep[sic] and rest up a little for tomorrow. It's a great life! I spent the afternoon in the libe yesterday, working on the weeks English. I am strongly tempted to cut lab tomorrow afternoon. Four classes and lab is a little too much to go through and expect to feel fresh that evening. Please preserve the enclosed clipping in alcohol. I want it back. Love, Fannie[ca Dec 1920] Dear Mother, I think it will be a very good idea to get the brief case for Father. I have been wondering what to get, and hadn't thought of anything so far. I like to vary it occasionally, and not get books every year. And I do want to get him something, because he is such a kid about his birthday. Can you attend to it at home? I imagine you can do better than I can here--besides which I am some rushed. R. S. V. P. Did you get Lester's note sent through me?Fannie Hamburger Aaron-------------------------—-------------TREAS. Mother Mother[enc for ca Dec. 1920]
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Mansfield, Adelaide (Claflin). Scrapbook, 1893-1897
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Creator
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Mansfield, Adelaide (Claflin)
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Descriptor(s)
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Ditkoff, Andrea
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Description
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VC 1897
This scrapbook covers Adelaide (Claflin) Mansfield’s years at Vassar, from 1893 through 1897. She provided materials about Vassar traditions such as Thanksgiving, Founder’s Day, the Sophomore Party, the Senior Parlor, Halloween, Trig Ceremonies, Tree Ceremonies, Commencement, Field Day, the Mohonk trip, Junior-Senior Excursions, Class Day, and songs for a variety of occasions. She also described protests over the College’s decision to stop giving Washington’s Birthday as a holiday. Cla...
Show moreVC 1897
This scrapbook covers Adelaide (Claflin) Mansfield’s years at Vassar, from 1893 through 1897. She provided materials about Vassar traditions such as Thanksgiving, Founder’s Day, the Sophomore Party, the Senior Parlor, Halloween, Trig Ceremonies, Tree Ceremonies, Commencement, Field Day, the Mohonk trip, Junior-Senior Excursions, Class Day, and songs for a variety of occasions. She also described protests over the College’s decision to stop giving Washington’s Birthday as a holiday. Claflin pasted photographs of campus into the volume as well. During her time at Vassar, Claflin participated in the Young Women’s Christian Association (saving documents from prayer meetings, receptions, and attending the Convention of the Young Women's Christian Association of the State of New York in 1895) and the VC Teachers’ Club, debated for T. and M., and enjoyed student athletics like basketball and the annual tennis tournament. She also included programs from plays and concerts on and off campus, including by the Philalethean Society, Exoteric Society, and Glee Club. Claflin preserved memories of her social life at Vassar, such as visiting cards, invitations, place cards, poems, valentines and correspondence from friends, and friends’ wedding announcements (the end of the scrapbook lists some engagements, marriages, births, and deaths for her class). She also saved receipts for board and tuition, laundry, and her subscription to the Miscellany. In terms of her academics at Vassar, Claflin kept examinations, notes, and her class schedules. She included some correspondence with librarians, professors (such as Susan B. Franklin, Lucy Maynard Salmon, and Abby Leach), and Lady Principal Kendrick. She transcribed a lecture on rhetoric by Professor Manuel J. Drennan as well. Claflin also depicted Vassar’s political climate during the presidential election of 1896.
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c. September 1893 - November 27, 1901
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Title
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Page 18
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Description
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Included in Babbott, Elizabeth (French). Scrapbook, 1910-1912
Invitations - "Juniors bring the Freshmen down" -- Objects - Dried leaves -- Booklets - "Catalogue of the Deep Sea Land Queerium"
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Date
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From scrapbook dated August 12, 1910 - June 22, 1912
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