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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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“Virtue founded on fear is only vice in a fit of dejection” “Will is the thing in - itself, the inner content, the essence of the world.” Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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Stanton, Robert Livingston
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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15 April [no year]
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Alma Lutz Gallactian Naw Y@?k April léfih MP9 Narapff, Knawing yaar imtarasfi in th@ amfyfimmhigemant gf wamam I samfi ygu tfifi gall ta Qur gaming ammivawgary. $113 yam plfiaaa maka Kma mafiiaa Qf ifi if yam hava mat fiaam far Eta gntive pubiicatiang Y@mP$ %ifihM?&$p§$t Eiizabafih Cafly §§am%@fl
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S'l‘A;'\”l‘0;\. Fl-lZ.\l$l;l‘ll iC.\l)Y. former, was born at johnstown, New York, November 12. 1815, daughter of Daniel and Margaret (Livingston) Cady. Her father was a judge of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals of the State of New York. and her mother was a daughter of Colonel Livingstone of Washington 's staff. From her mother she inherited the spirit and vivacity which dis- tinguished her long career of public speaking ....,....,,ro:,...ai (5., or AMERICAN WoMr.N V, , p...
Show moreS'l‘A;'\”l‘0;\. Fl-lZ.\l$l;l‘ll iC.\l)Y. former, was born at johnstown, New York, November 12. 1815, daughter of Daniel and Margaret (Livingston) Cady. Her father was a judge of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals of the State of New York. and her mother was a daughter of Colonel Livingstone of Washington 's staff. From her mother she inherited the spirit and vivacity which dis- tinguished her long career of public speaking ....,....,,ro:,...ai (5., or AMERICAN WoMr.N V, , p. 47):; 3. girl literary work in behalf of the movement 4322:? woman suffrage and other radical reforms 1;“? her day. She said of her father that while hewas sober and taciturn in manner, his keen .«;c:-=nse of justice moved him to modify the smnewhat military rule which her mother msistetl should prevail in the household. Elizabeth Cady Stanton owed much in her (;»;3i‘ly girlhood to the friendship and guidance ,3_+ Reverend Simon Hosack, who was Pastor ctr the Scotch Presbyterian Church which her -£<gmily' attended in Johnstown. This was a .5?-:atch settlement, in which there prevailed fire old feudal ideas regarding women and ;m;perty'. Elizabeth Cady, as a girl, spent 771$/LC.i1 time in her father's ofiice, and there, in wugh the complaints of unhappy dependent ~.v':::2ieii, became well acquainted with the in— \'Jb~Sll(.‘€ of the common law. Consequently she v'€5:»lv'ed to do what she could to free her sex «rmrii the disabilities under which they were Then living. In her childish indignation, 'i’V‘llI1l{lI‘lg that her father and his books were -the beginning and the end of the law, she marked obnoxious statutes with a pencil, and }3r:w[)OS€d to cut them out and thus end them. ti;-itteii she was ten years old, her only brother, who had just been graduated at Union College, cited and left her father inconsolable; for, like his neighbors, he believed so firmly in ~tlme Blackstonian theory of the headship of ‘(fire man, that the loss of his only son was a *’?'€;f-*’E‘ll)l€ blow to his hopes. Elizabeth, desiring fr t1<)IlS()l€‘ her father, resolved to do all that i«~;wl»rothc-r had done. Immediately she began uzml/er Doctor Hosack the study of Greek, (;\JillCl] she continued at the Academy with such success that she secured one of the two prizes offered for proficiency in that language. With her prize she went at once to her father, expecting that he would praise her as he would have praised his son, but she records pathetic- ally that he merely remarked, “Oh, my child, if you were only a boy." This incident was a bitter disappointment to the ambitious girl, and, mortified by the inequality in the condi- tion and the treatment of boys and girls, she i , v 5 l J ! ,4 ed ncl int ‘re, int in- she sex 'ere IOH, /ere she and em. her, ege. fon y hi p of as;1 irhtg that egan reel; with 5 WVO uage. Ither, vouhi aetky child, was a 5 girl, :ondi- s, she BIOGRAPHICAL CYCLOPAEDIA or AMERICAN WOMEN 65 determined to make herself the equal of men in courage and ability. She became proficient in Mathematics, Latin and Greek. On being graduated from the Academy, she was amazed to find that the hope of study at Union College, which she had secretly cherished with the idea of filling her brother's place, could not be carried out. Her chagrin was intensi- fied by her being sent to Mrs. VVillard ’s Girls’ Seminary at Troy, New York, where, as she records, she spent “two of the dreariest years” of her life. The next seven years she passed at home, reading widely, and under her father's direction devoting special attention to law. In this way she fitted herself to be- come the able opponent of oppressive legis- lation regarding women. In the spring of 184() she married Henry Brewster Stanton, alrezidy well known as a leader and a lecturer in the anti-slavery move- ment. Since Mr. St.Inton a delegate to the World's Anti—Slavery Convention to be held in .London in June of that same year, they went to London on their wedding trip. Mr. Stanton became Secretary of the Conven- tion. Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s indignation was stirred anew by the imputation of inferiority cast upon women by the refusal of the majority of the Convention to admit Mrs. Lucretia Mott and other American women who had been regularly appointed delegates. In Mrs. Mott she met for the first time a liberal-minded thinker of her own sex. The friendship thus begun continued through forty years, and assisted in determining Mrs. Stanton to devote her life and energies to the social, political and moral betterment of women. For six years following her return home she lived in Boston. During this period she made a thorough study of the position of women. As a result, in addition to the woman 's rights claimed by Mrs. Mott--remunerative work, property rights after marriage, ad- vanced education, and independent judgment in religion-—Mrs. Stanton demanded the removal of woman ’s civil disabilities by mak- ing her political status the same as that of man. In 1846 she located at Seneca Falls, New York. With Mrs. Mott and others, she issued the call for the first Woman's Rights Convention. It was held at Seneca Falls,- July 19 and 20, 1848, and marked the in- auguration of the Woman Suffrage movement. Although the object of the Convention was defined to be the discussion of the social, civil, and religious rights of women, no allusion being made to women’s political rights, yet in the declaration of sentiments which was prepared as a basis for discussion Mrs. Stanton introduced as the Ninth Resolution a state- ment that it was “the duty of the women of this country to secure to themselves their sacred right to the elective franchise.” Neither her husband——~who had prepared for the Con- vention an abstract of the laws that were unjust regarding the property interests of women-——nor Mrs. Mott approved of Mrs. Stanton’s demand for the ballot. They argued that it would only bring “ridicule on the cause.” Mrs. Stanton persisted, however, and spoke vigorously and eloquently at the first session in defense of the proposal. The resolution was adopted, though not unani- mously, by the Convention. This new departure in the movement had few adherents outside the convention. In fact, of those members who signed the Declaration of Senti- ments, many later requested to have their names withdrawn. Judge Cady, alarmed at his daughter’s radicalism, hastened to her home, where he urged her earnestly, but in vain, not only to forego her convictions but to abandon public life. From 1848 to the time of the Civil War, Mrs. Stanton devoted herself to the anti- slavery, temperance, education and woman suffrage causes. She was founder and Presi- dent of the New York Woman '3 Temperance Society, in its early years, and Chairman of the Woman Suffrage Committee of her state. As early as 1854, she spoke before the New York Legislature in advocacy of a higher status for women. In 1863 she founded the Women's Loyal League, and was elected its ..,......_.—-..~.—_.-mouq-. .<....--.., ~v-p_--—ac-y.—.....—...,.-.,¢.w...—. * 66 BIOGRAPHICAL CYCLOPAEDIA OF AMERICAN WOMEN President. The classic address from this society to President Lincoln, signed by Mrs. Stanton, came from her trenchant pen. It is printed in full in the History of Woman Sufirage. In 1866, believing women to be eligible to public office, she offered herself as a candidate for Congress from the Eighth New York District. In her announcement, she said: “Belonging to a disfranchised class, I have no political antecedents to recommend me to your support, but my creed is free speech, free press, free men and free trade——-the cardinal points of democracy.” She received twenty- four votes. With Susan B. Anthony and Parker Pillsbury she established, and was Editor-in-Chief, of the Woman's Rights jour- nal called The Revolution. During the two years of its existence, it was the most vigorous and the most quoted of any suffrage journal ever printed before or since. A The Civil War made the people of the United States think nationally, and leaders of the Woman Suffrage movement naturally adopted still broader lines of thought. The National \Noman Suffrage Association was founded in 1869. Mrs. Stanton was its Presi- dent almost continuously until 1893. At the suggestion of Mrs. Stanton and her co- workers, the Honorable George Julian intro- duced in Congress, on March 15, 1869, a joint resolution proposing a Sixteenth amend- ment to the Constitution. It read as follows: “The right of suffrage in the United States shall be based on citizenship, and shall be regulated by Congress; and all citizens of the United States, whether native or naturalized, shall enjoy this right equally, without any distinction or discrimination whatever founded on sex." From 1870 Mrs. Stanton lectured for twelve years throughout the country, eight months each year. She was one of the most popular speakers who ever appeared under the auspices of any lyceum bureau. To her credit is attributed the liberalizing of divorce laws, the opening of higher institutions of learning to women, and the marked growth in Woman Suffrage senti- ment. Throughout this period, Mrs. Stanton was the Samuel Adams of the woman move- ment, for her pen produced all the “State Papers" issued. She it was who drew up the calls to conventions, the addresses to Legis- latures, the appeals to learned bodies, and she it was, also, who made in person, for nearly fifty years, the chief arguments before con- gressional and legislative committees. In 1878, the annual convention of the National Woman Suffrage Association was held in Washington, District of Columbia. It had been arranged that Mrs. Isabella Beecher Hooker and Mrs. Lily Devereaux Blake were to conduct the convention, as Mrs. Stanton and Miss Anthony felt they must continue their speaking tours in the West. Mrs. Stanton had urged upon her co-workers the introduction in Congress of a new resolution calling for a suffrage amendment to the Na- tional Constitution. Between 1869 and 1878 the efforts of the suffragists had largely con- sisted of appeals to courts for interpretations in favor of the enfranchisement of women under the Constitution as it stood. After a meeting in St. Louis, about this time, Mrs. Stanton received a telegram saying that it was imperative that she come to the National Capital and carry out her proposals. She immediately went to Washington and, before both the National Woman Suffrage Conven- tion and the Judiciary Committees of Con- gress, made a plea for a suffrage amendment to the United States Constitution. She persuaded her old friend, Senator Sargent, of California, to introduce the Amendment. This was the first time a suffrage amendment had been introduced, the same in form as the Nineteenth Amendment, adopted in 1920. During the years of reconstruction, she and other suffrage leaders had systematically made every effort to amend the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments when they were under consideration by Congress. Their endeavors to influence this legislation in the interest of women, however, met with no 2 \ :3}, .. 3 >1 ,1 i. .« 2 i as It l 61' ere ton iue Irs. the ion Pia- 878 :on- ions . en .fter Wrs. Vvas onal She zfore ven- Con- nerit She 1t,0f nent. Inent sthe 1920. : and icahy eenth vvere 'Then‘ n the 11 no BIOGRAPHICAL CYCLOPAEDIA OF AMERICAN WOMEN 67 success, so that the changes initiated by Mrs. Stanton in 1869 and 1878 were the first I VVoman Suffrage amendments per se. She never laid claim to having “drawn” these amendments. In 1878, as in the later efforts of the suffragists for a national amendment, the Fifteenth Amendment, securing suffrage for colored men, was copied except that the phrase “race, color, or previous condition of servitude” merely gave place to the word “sex.” Although Mrs. Stanton never af- firmed that the wording of the suffrage amendment was other than a copy of the Fifteenth Amendment, it may be claimed for Mrs. Stanton that to her is due the credit of first demanding the passage of a VVoman Suffrage amendment to the United States Constitution, and of carrying out the prac- tical details of its introduction in Congress. In 1888 Mrs. Stanton suggested the forma- tion of the Interna.tional Council of \Vomen. Her suggestion was acted upon, and she pre- sided over the first convention. From 1880 to 1886 she devoted her time to the colossal labor of bringing out the first three volumes of the History of VI/oman Suflrage. Her co-editors were Miss Anthony and Mrs. Gage. This work was followed by The Woman's Bible, which caused more newspaper comment than any other work fromher pen. In 1897, her reminiscences were published under the title I Eighty Years and Illore. During the closing years of her life she was adding to and re- writing these memoirs. This work, together with her Letters and Diary, edited by her son, Theodore Stanton, and her daughter, Harriot Stanton Blatch, was published in 1921 by Harper and Brothers. Mrs. Stanton con- tributed many articles to the Forum, the Arena, the Westminster Review, and the North American Review. She was also a constant writer for reform papers and for the daily press. The day she died there appeared in the New York American an article which she had written twenty-four hours earlier, and on her writing desk ready for her signature lay open letters to President and Mrs. Roosevelt urging that a recom- mendation for the consideration of VVoman Suffrage be put in the President's then forth- coming message to Congress. It may be said of her that when she died, on October 26, 1902, she was in the full vigor of her powers. Her ready wit and broad nature, her sympathy with the oppressed, her scorn of wrong, her catholicity of spirit, her love of justice and liberty, her intellectual ability, moral courage, and physical energy, together with her unusual opportunities in youth for wide and sound culture, gave Mrs. Stanton a unique place in the history of American women. It may be recalled, in evidence of the universal esteem in which she was held, that all the great na- tional organizations of women united in doing her honor at a meeting in the New York Metropolitan Opera House on the occasion of her eightieth birthday, and that the centenary of her birth was celebrated in New York City, in 1915, at the largest banquet ever held to do honor to the memory of a citizen of the United States. t 3 I 5
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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fl‘fl“Z/Z/</’”V~/:’*~7 L ’ /7 I Gapy Qf Qviginal 13 Alma Ruiz Gallectimm 22 River Streetfifigstamfiwaaag / (CQZPY) Elimflbfith Gaflg Stamtmng man & fiaman a aimultanaug gr§ati@n%% fienésis Shag, IE 27¢ 1%‘
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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kiff If :2?“ 2 .»;;1' 4» r” . , If 15‘ - ‘«*_»«4-'«*a;é' ‘ ’A;“/ 5 W ..¢«-:~‘-*" ‘ 1‘ .fn~g‘v’§/' > f‘ 27 A?’ 3.? n 1 < ,. A 9 I E q.. 3. »f" .49 I5 \ P’ COPY Original in Alma Lutz Collection Dear Mr. Underwood I enclose what is left of Swing (?) for your wife, if she thinks what is left of him is worth further bombarding. I think the time has fully come for us to pass resolutions everytime in our commentary against woman's contemplated status in the...
Show morekiff If :2?“ 2 .»;;1' 4» r” . , If 15‘ - ‘«*_»«4-'«*a;é' ‘ ’A;“/ 5 W ..¢«-:~‘-*" ‘ 1‘ .fn~g‘v’§/' > f‘ 27 A?’ 3.? n 1 < ,. A 9 I E q.. 3. »f" .49 I5 \ P’ COPY Original in Alma Lutz Collection Dear Mr. Underwood I enclose what is left of Swing (?) for your wife, if she thinks what is left of him is worth further bombarding. I think the time has fully come for us to pass resolutions everytime in our commentary against woman's contemplated status in the Bible & church. It would certainly serve the purpose of agitation, as the Patton matter proves. I received your letter & contents & wrote my son what you said & urged him to send you more articles on French affairs. with kind regards for yourself & wife, Sincerely ever Elizabeth Cady Stanton Mrs. Underwoods article on Patton was good. His falsehood & contradictions are pitiful.
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( /7 W‘ _.;,,'K-% Q Q . _.~/:7 4/ x /.1, _v_4I_:_W £/ ///.9’ / A/ /f) t ‘ “W? / WK CV,4,,\-. 1;!!! ;_/a 435%/2?; ’Z“”Z’~f"/// W ’ / " I />2 " / é / , A * ~ / / /%/, W ///M% “ 5 % W ' / .... T / /7/_,, / / ’, ///_ K 2 / , ‘ / / / // ww /’ fl , /374 -4, I7’? .///¢/%/ ¢/Q/// * ' //F P 4 my ’ ‘I L I ‘ W // ‘ I/'// A firm’-A NV \ Original in Alma Lutz Collectio n Toasts at Ellen Walter's Christmas Dinner (Written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton) Mrs._Smith 0, where is the woman so pure & so true So upright, & holy, as Nancy Fitzhugh She has been a good balast, all her lifeg To that “high flntin'" Gerrit,he needs such a wifee Dr.Bayard Here's to him.who with prophetic eye Looks beyond the mysterious sky, In eommuning with spirits, he never is tired so lofty and true is our own good Bayard. Mrs. Keneys Petruoie had a charming Gate the starved into a humble state, Obeyed her Lord.& Master Our Cate though feasted, & living in ease, Is gentle, & kind, & sure to please, and thus her Lerd doth.master. Mrs. Barclay Cornelia grand & dignified, Brightest in affliction tried With her jewels, pure & rare No Roman matron can compare. Mt. Stanton The stump orator, who helped give the nation, A rail spliter, with his grand proclamation; Is worthy of our thanks & toasts, Although he don't believe in ghosts, It is not given to the Stantons To spend their time in chasing phantoms. Mrs. Wa1ter Ho longer tied to David's salter, Born again is Ellen Walter Into the world of truth.&thought And doctrines, such as Jesus taught. Mr. Smi th Oh touch.my tongue with celestial fire Te praise his of fame, who can aspire Enough to say, perchance, he is no myth World K110“ immortalaeerrit Smith. Mr . Keeys The Gods all assembled in council one day, To pour out their gifts in the same piece of clay and forth there spring as by magic power Arman equipped for this sad hour. With a noble great frame & a big heartto match Courageous & bold without flaw or scratch Then what to name him, some discussion arose But soon all agreed to call his “Big Nose". Mrs. Stanton Here is dear Lizzie Stanton, plump & sound Would she were with.manhood crowned So lofty are her thoughts & wishes, So much she dames & dishes. Cousin Gerrit Trudy Walter with graceful gestures, soft dark eyes; Who is that fair one silent by? a Who hears not, speaks not, the earth born tongue, whence came, where goes, that blessed one? the mingles with.us, feels each thought, As if by inspiration caught, She seems a link ‘tween us & Heaven A.mystic life, our hearts to leaven. Cousin Lib Trudy Walter Dear Trudy a girl of our choice She hears; but it's only God's voice, She speaks; but with only the finger around this dear girl our hearts love to linger. Uncle Gerrit Horace Greeley Smith Here's Horace Greeley nh Who still is really an unsophisticated.man On what other politician Of his high position So great a praise bestow you can. Horace Greeley Stanton Where is the man not proud to commuc With the Hercules of our Tribune? Who has done more to rouse this nation and reinstate the Declaration. "That God made all men free Endowing life with liberty”? Than Horace Greeley good.& great Felt alike,in chnrch.& state.
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The Birth of an Idea "Elizabeth Cedy Stanton has told us exactly when and where the idea of the Seneca Falls Eguel Rights Convention was born. It came to her and Lucretia Mott as they walked together down Great Queen Street, London, on the afternoon of June 12, 1840, just after the first World's Anti~Slevery Convention had refused to seat eight American women delevetes on account of their sex. Mrs. Mott was one of the rejected delegates. Mrs. Stanton was attending the convention as...
Show moreThe Birth of an Idea "Elizabeth Cedy Stanton has told us exactly when and where the idea of the Seneca Falls Eguel Rights Convention was born. It came to her and Lucretia Mott as they walked together down Great Queen Street, London, on the afternoon of June 12, 1840, just after the first World's Anti~Slevery Convention had refused to seat eight American women delevetes on account of their sex. Mrs. Mott was one of the rejected delegates. Mrs. Stanton was attending the convention as a guest. Their husbands were delegates... The convention had opened that morning in the Freemasons’ Hall. Mrs. Mott ene hrs, Stanton, sitting in the railed—off space assigned to women, had listened to e long debate on the question of admitting women as members of the convention. They had heard, the last thing before adjournment, the overwhehming chorus of “noes” that barred women out. They left the hell together, "burning with indignation,“ and resolved on their way back to their lodgings that when they went home they would cell a convention to take up just one thing, - the rights of women." From Lucretia and Elizabeth, by jfietherine Fisher
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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2 x/, ’(\"{'11» / CQPX Qriginel in Alma Lutz Collection Jan. 26th Mk. Weed- Dear Friend.%&M I am very éesiroue to see you. WhenV & where can I have an interview, Please fiireet, E. Gedy Stanton 75, 45 Sta, & let me hear as soon as possible. Yours truly.
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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27-May
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i / @%L/ « %/ ,/// 3‘ W% L / ‘ / 1/ o /M / ,/ , » //I ( “‘7‘-~ lu’{ai§,r 27th Dear Mrs Darlington I have such pleasant meeories of my visit to you that I should indeed be glad to see you.in the leafy month of June but I do not see my way clear just new & hesitate topromise what I feer I shall be u — able to perform. Having tested your hospitality I feel assured you could make me comfortable. But my chief care is in leaving home as four of my sons are at home & I K, expect three more...
Show morei / @%L/ « %/ ,/// 3‘ W% L / ‘ / 1/ o /M / ,/ , » //I ( “‘7‘-~ lu’{ai§,r 27th Dear Mrs Darlington I have such pleasant meeories of my visit to you that I should indeed be glad to see you.in the leafy month of June but I do not see my way clear just new & hesitate topromise what I feer I shall be u — able to perform. Having tested your hospitality I feel assured you could make me comfortable. But my chief care is in leaving home as four of my sons are at home & I K, expect three more children from school the last of June. ll am looking over summer clothes, house cleaning & c, e c. an‘.- The W ardrotes of nine persons & £f the same is not a small circumstance & keeping the peace when together needs a governing power such as women onlyxMH%<$With kind regards e my best wishes that your meeting may be pleasant & profitable I Yours ever Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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4-June
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Z%:::%/A / Alma Lutz Collection ( C O P Y ) Highwood Park Tenafly N.J. June nth Dear Mrs. Smith, In my recent speech on Divorce I made some qzotations from you which I put in quotations but in the publication in The World the marks were in the wrong place. So you see here I am jerkede up. If I am not very much mistaken all your facts are correct as I recognized your statements at once as familiar, having heard and read the same before. Where did you learn what you stated in regard to Clay a...
Show moreZ%:::%/A / Alma Lutz Collection ( C O P Y ) Highwood Park Tenafly N.J. June nth Dear Mrs. Smith, In my recent speech on Divorce I made some qzotations from you which I put in quotations but in the publication in The World the marks were in the wrong place. So you see here I am jerkede up. If I am not very much mistaken all your facts are correct as I recognized your statements at once as familiar, having heard and read the same before. Where did you learn what you stated in regard to Clay a Franklin. some paper denied the fact of Theodore’s insanity & published his death three days after stating that he had laid in the asylum fifty years. The entire press of the cpuntry are pointing at me but as I weigh 175 lbs. I think I can stand it. How is my namesake. Give her my blessing & a kiss. One of these days I hope to hold her & kiss her for myself. I assure you I appreciated the compliment you paid me in naming your only daughter after me. I hope in all the ups and downs of life that I may remain trued to principle so that you may never regret having dubbed her Elizabeth. with kind regards to your handsome husband, Mrs. Johnson &for yourself, Your friend sincerely Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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19-Jul
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Life Sketch of czgawt can Slcudan by her Granddaughter NORA STANTON BARNEY Civil Engineer and Architect rd‘! Published on the 100th Anniversary of the day that 4 ex.-Quart eat, gfaafoa submitted the first resolution in the world demanding the Elective Franchise for Women Seneca Falls, N. Y., July 19, 1848 Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born in Johnstown, New York, on No- vember l2th, 1815. Her family was wealthy, judged by contempo- rary standards, and she could have lead a life of ease and...
Show moreLife Sketch of czgawt can Slcudan by her Granddaughter NORA STANTON BARNEY Civil Engineer and Architect rd‘! Published on the 100th Anniversary of the day that 4 ex.-Quart eat, gfaafoa submitted the first resolution in the world demanding the Elective Franchise for Women Seneca Falls, N. Y., July 19, 1848 Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born in Johnstown, New York, on No- vember l2th, 1815. Her family was wealthy, judged by contempo- rary standards, and she could have lead a life of ease and luxury, but the seed of divine discontent was A within her. The sad lot of most women penetrated her soul at an early age, and she chose, instead, a life of continual work, hardship and battle. She had to contend with op- position within the family, also. Her determination to speak in public, and her stand for the enfranchisement of her sex caused her father to disin- herit her. Yet she was never hitter , and her dignity, humour, unbounded health and energy carried her through the ocean of ridicule, frus- trations, prejudice and intolerance to the ripe age of 86 years. She was ageless, , and could en- _ thrall my English and French cous- ins and me with stories of her youth as easily as she could move a vast audience with her oratory and logic. Her lectures and writings covered the whole field of human progress———— “Motherhood”, “Sex”, “Our Boys”, “Our Girls”, °‘Woman Suffrage”, “Dress Reform ”, “Woman, the Church and the Bible”. She was a diligent Greek scholar and a great student of the Bible. She inveighed against the degraded position accord- ed to women by the orthodox churches of her generation. She was a Unitarian, and a firm believer in the brotherhood of man and the right to political and economic equal- ity of all human beings regardless of color or sex or race. Seneca Falls was her home for 16 years from 1847. The little town seethed with activity from the day she set her foot there, and on July 19 and 20,1848, the long-discussed plans of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott to hold a Woman’s Rights Convention were realized. One hundred well-known men and women attended and signed the “Declaration of Sentiments”, but it was Mrs. Stanton who moved the reso- lution that women should be granted the elective franchise, a motion sec- onded by Frederick Douglass. A storm of protest arose, but the motion was carried by a small margin. Over the cries of ridicule and denunciation heaped on the Convention and its sponsors by pulpit and press arose the clarion voice of Wendell Phillips. ————“This is the inauguration of the most momentous reform yet launched upon the world, the first organized protest against the injus- tice that has brooded for ages over the character and destiny of half the human race”————, and Frederick Doug- lass in “Lone Star” and Horace Gree- ley in New York Tribune published the only editorials in praise of the Convention and its objectives. Often reformers of one generation _ become the conservatives of the next. , Thiswas not true of Mrs. Stanton. She wrote a letter which was read at the celebration of the 50th anniver- sary of the 1848 Convention, which ended as follows: “. . . My message today to our coadju- tors is that we have a higher duty than the demand for suffrage. We must now, at the end of fifty years of faithful ser- vice, broaden our platform and consider the next step in progress, to which the signs of the times clearly point,———name- ly, co-operation, a new principle in in- dustrial economics. We see that the right of suffrage avails nothing for the masses in competition with the wealthy classes, and worse still, with each other. “Women all over the country are working earnestly in many fragmentary reforms, each believing that her own, if achieved, would usher in a new day of peace and plenty. With woman suf- frage, temperance, social parity, rigid Sunday laws and physical culture, could any, or all, be successful, we should see changes in the condition of the masses. We need all these reforms and many more to make existence endurable. What is life today to the prisoner in his cell, to the feeble hands that keep time with machinery in all our marts of trade, to those that have no abiding place, no title to one foot of land on this green earth? Such are the fruits of competi- tion. Our next experiment is to be made on the broad principle of co-operation. At the end of fifty years, whose achieve- ments we celebrate here today, let us reason together as to the wisdom of lay- ing some new plank in our platform. “The co-operative idea will remodel codes and constitutions, creeds and cat- echisms, social customs and convention- alism, the curriculum of schools and colleges. It will give a new sense of jus- tice, liberty and equality in all the re- lations of life. Those who have eyes to see recognize the fact that the period for all the fragmentary reforms is ended. “Agitation of the broader questions of philosophical Socialism is now in order. This next step in progress has been fore- shadowed by our own seers and prophets, and is now being agitated by all the thinkers and writers of all civilized coun- tries. “The few have no right to the luxuries of life, while the many are denied its necessities. This motto is the natural out- growth of the one so familiar on our platform and our official paper, ‘Equal Rights for All’. It is impossible to have ‘equal rights for all’ under our present competitive system. ‘All men are born free, with an equal right to life, liberty and happiness’. The natural outgrowth of this sentiment is the vital principles of the Christian religion. ‘Love thy neighbor as thyself’. In broad, liberal principles, the suffrage association should be the leader of thought for wom- en, and not narrow its platform, from ‘year to year, to one idea, rejecting all relative ideas as side issues. “Progress is the victory of a new thought over old superstitions!” If she were living today, she would no doubt be a champion of civil rights and just as many unpopular causes as in 1848. She would be de- manding the full emancipation of woman and equality of rights under law, inveighing against intolerance and bigotry, imperialism and monop- oly, and championing the rights of the common man throughout the world. Until 1900, she held, the pre-emi- nent position in the feminist move- ment, not only in her own country but throughout Europe too. During the last years of her life, she was uni- versally known as “The Grand Old Woman of America”. Some of the high lights of her long life were: In 1848, was the principal organ- izer of the first Woman’s Rights Con- vention, and moved the woman suf- frage resolution. In 1854, the first woman to ad- dress the New York legislature from the speaker’s rostrum. She was president of New York State -Woman Suffrage Society in 1854. She helped form the first National organization for woman’s rights—— The National Woman’s Sufirage As- sociation, and was its president from its inception almost continuously for 20 years (1869-1890). When later the American Woman Suffrage Association merged with the National Woman’s Suffrage Associa- tion to become the National Ameri- can Woman Suffrage Association, she was elected president. She made the principal address at the great Cooper Union mass meet- ing in 1861, calling on Lincoln to free women as well as the Negro, and enfranchise both. She ran for Congress in New York State in 1866. In 1869, when the family finances were at a low ebb and the education of the five younger children in jeop- ardy, she registered with the Lyceum hureau, and toured the country from Maine to Texas on the famous Or- pheum Circuit, earning from $100.00 to $200.00 per lecture. She did not stop this arduous work until Bob, her youngest, was graduated from Cornell University in 1881. She and Packer Pillsbury edited the periodical, “The Revolution,” from 1868 to 1871. She made the principal address when the W7oman Suffrage Amend- ment was first introduced in Congress in 1878. She wrote her coworker, Su- san B. Anthony, who was lecturing in the West, an account of it. This amendment was identical with that finally passed in 1919 as the 19th Amendment (sometimes erroneously named the Susan B. Anthony Amend- ment). s The three first volumes of the “His- tory of Woman Suffrage” early edi- tions, bear the legend, “Edited by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Matilda, .1 oslyn, Gage.” She initiated the International A Woman Suffrage Committee in 1882, in England. On her 80th birthday in 1895, there was a huge celebration at the Metropolitan Opera House of New York City, with memorials and pres- ents from every state, anddmany from abroad. In the Smithsonian Institute at Washington, there stands a large goblet presented to her by the Wom- an Suffrage League on which is en- graved, “Defeated Day by Day, but unto Victory Born”. The reforms she advocated and for which she was ridiculed have largely come to pass: Higher education for women; won1an’s political enfranchisement; dress reform; short skirts; the aban- donment of corsets; the abandonment of swaddling clothes and tight ban- dages for babies; the abandonment of seclusion for women during preg- nancy; getting up soon after child- birth, and continuing one’s duties; liberal divorce laws; a single stand- ard of morals; equal guardianship; property rights, etc. But some of her demands of 1848 still remain unaccomplished, as for instance, complete emancipation of women so that they may have equal- ity of rights under the law, and the full protection of the Constitution. And with all this public activity, she bore and reared seven children, five boys and two girls. There is a letter from an admirer of hers, my grandfather, writing from Washington, January 16, 1857, to my aunt Margaret Livingston Stanton, then five years old. He said: “Tell your mother that I have seen a throng of handsome ladies, but that I had rather see her than the whole of them :————hut I intend to cut her acquaintance unless she writes me a letter.” My memories of my Queenmother, as all of us grandchildren called her, are of a delightful person to live with and play with. Backgammon, chess and checkers were our almost night- ly amusement. I have memories of men and women, colored and white, of high and low estate, seeking her counsel and advice. The mornings she spent writing endless letters and articles. During those years, 1897 to 1902, she wrote her autobiography, “Eighty Years and More”, and also “The Woman’s Bible” (her delight- ful commentaries on the women characters of the Bible and her inter- pretations) . Indefatigable to the end, the day before she died, she wrote a letter to Theodore Roosevelt urging him to include sponsoring woman sulirage in his inaugural address. A great writer, author, feminist, philosopher, orator and reformer, friend of Phillips, Douglass, Carri- son, Greeley, Whittier, the Brights and McLarens and feminists through- out the world, passed on into history the 26th day of October, 1902. The author lived with her during the last years of her life, at 26 West 61 st Street and 250 West 94th Street, New York City. Additional copies can be obtained by writing Box 436, Greenwich, Conn. Price 25 cents, postage paid.
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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27-August
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La_Fayetta Ind Aug 27th Dear Friends I want very much to meat you & talk over tha situation. 1 shall be at the Sherman Houaa Chicago on Saturday % Sunday reaching there Friday evening about six o*olook. I want you if possible to spend a few hours with me there. This is the fiost opportunity we have ever had of meeting & I do hope noéto make your acquaintance, Gordially yours Eliazbethtcady Stanton
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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19-September
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x. S » M....\E.. v-4. r-2 my .1 i :5, 8. :'’’;g _7"’*s ‘W’ , . ‘ ‘ ‘:4 kw ‘§<..«*‘ ‘rad *1‘? 4'72". ’;:J‘_,; L ‘H-.5 <. A... . .C1.~.vw mrcfi . M 4 , éw 13732 ‘ 2 ‘:3 1;" 35 J ‘ N»: Na &\" *§‘£‘ ,
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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film L318 91*‘ k¢_fif§VTQ fgg F éS:3¥w§ In July, 1%, hi stry me:-as ‘ first maver at aazzezmg %* di s<:zms~in f téizeir litisal, * Swami wrrzggs. th A ga hm ext and mz<% my mother, firm ‘the zm:;2.fa? aauzrzt ri as and Ems ha :2 g V 3, in and and Erzer cl Elissa , :2; st M , 21% $8 % ?§'::3_it‘d Stat up , ":2. azld Sir? Saut h $13. we» Emva vtacf. by pmxy mveral M" ‘blew Md éfiarlé far years. hi stry of fimmean’s m'e.r.1g3 “i2:f3.@3S'@ :*1.eve2? haufg b@$3t; M...
Show morefilm L318 91*‘ k¢_fif§VTQ fgg F éS:3¥w§ In July, 1%, hi stry me:-as ‘ first maver at aazzezmg %* di s<:zms~in f téizeir litisal, * Swami wrrzggs. th A ga hm ext and mz<% my mother, firm ‘the zm:;2.fa? aauzrzt ri as and Ems ha :2 g V 3, in and and Erzer cl Elissa , :2; st M , 21% $8 % ?§'::3_it‘d Stat up , ":2. azld Sir? Saut h $13. we» Emva vtacf. by pmxy mveral M" ‘blew Md éfiarlé far years. hi stry of fimmean’s m'e.r.1g3 “i2:f3.@3S'@ :*1.eve2? haufg b@$3t; M fvarabl a “time ‘ta dam her lie e%L ‘E:$’:1i‘I:M iat i an in first tima in tfzizigs Raublie a far W ham fer 3 $1 it i 91 sidmt wh. ?;2.a3 riolam himself in favtzr sf °w% Ysrk hag We 2:1 Pmsidant Eassvalt was Gmmr f K tlfii ajzzfmmhi :3! int t}::s..*%ama:: f the t e in hi 8 :.%$§§ ?% gismm m, and ublia aoaagim. k fm°t?%,%1isa wt if ju% éefrmde f their mast cred ri gght , m that umderl ms all thaw , V6106 in ‘km laaa. am», aa aataara aaia “He . faraaé‘aitaaui aha sanaant af taa gav » aaaaahaaada b tha.Praaidant at Fitahburg am.L* aaa “ia.favar af an aaid that aa taa Uaitaa Stataa, aaafarriag additiaaal g ~ra1 gavw A1‘ tlrexj. f araaaai ta daal aaaa ca aaratiana.“ for taa aaat iataraata Ta aaaaral and raatraia_gia t aanapaliaa af all aha paaala ia af vaat iapart, but sf far waster iaaarfiamaa ia aha aataaliahmaat and prafiaetien.ef taa rights and libartzaa pbfir 3ay, ha eaa half taa paapla of the United Stataa —~ the aaat aaral half, tae ~» aaaa1y,*aaaaa. Suraly ta ra ia as gratarvmmn9pa1y'%haa.taat sf all aaa.ia daaying ta all aaaan a voioa ia.tha laws the ara aamaallaa taaby. Gatabara20, 1932. i1izabath.Cady Sta if ta 1 - «ms :5’ I“ '°’ ' ‘V ' 7: ,,x 1 V f('..=».~ -.=>—. ‘ A ' A Original in COPY Alma Lutz Collection Please Copy WOMEN APPEAL TO THE PRESIDENT. In July, 1848, history records the first movement among women for the discussion of their political, religious and social wrongs. Since then the demand for the right of suffrage has extended over many countries and has been granted, in one form or another, in the United States, in England and her colonies, in Australia, New Zealand, the Isle of Man and New South Wales. I Tax-paying women have voted by proxy in several nations of the Old World for many years. In the long history of woman's srongs there never has been so favorable a time to demand her complete emancipation in the United States as now, for we have for the first time in this Republic a President who has declared himself in favor of woman‘s political equality. When President Roosevelt was Governor of New York he recommended the enfranchisement of the women of the State in his message to the New York Legislature, and expressed the same opinion on several public occasions. Now is the opportune time for leading women to ask the President to make the same demand in his coming Message to Congress for this act of justice to thirty~six million American citizens new defrauded of their most sacred right, one that underlies all others, a voice in the laws. For, as the Fathers said long ago: “No just government can be formed without the consent of the governedg“ & In a speech made by the President at Fitchbnrg on Labor Day, he said that he was “in favor of an amendment to the Constitution of the the United States, conferring ndditionel power upon the fefierel government to deal with corporations." To control end restrain giant monopolies for the best interests of all the people is of vast import, but of far vaster importance is the establishment and protection of the rights end liberties of one half the people of the United States ~« the most moral half, too ~ namely, women. Surely there is no greater monopoly than that of ell men in denying to all women a voice in the laws they ere oomoelled to obeye Qotober 203 1902. Elisabeth Gndy Stanton. Note: This is a copy of the appeal written & prepared for mailing to the press by Mrs. Stanton e few days before her death. October 26, 1902. An envelope addressed to Oswald Villerd, Editor of the Nation is attached.
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1840-11-03
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I \ >_, r,/ /4“ , »(;1‘r 3;,» ’,/ ‘>1 / Z‘ J/I’; 4, all //r ,/,—4./&—1_-. / /’ x / // t D / (J7 I X K,/::, »» « :5 “T7 , ,4 7/ _ :7 ,. / /2;//,;./«//’»::.a L,» /~ A ~ , / ,4 '_ ,.—-V/'1 /» 1 V 45, /J ’/K, M /C»x,./—«z:// _: g<_'iA/5-'”'.[:,;’{/V ~ 3 /4. .. < 4 " '//ikv .,> ,. - 5/ ’ f /'1" ,4»;>//2x664?’/-" ‘(/--é/Z%.,,[,7/J , Q/.4/«-Z...€_ » -~ Q1:/2-:z.».,//",'/«° I/' ' — ’ I Original in Alma Lute I Collection Lendon Novafirfi (1840) fieer friend. fled I the control of my own movements or even of Henry‘e I ehould have been with you now, but the feet ie Joseph aturge commands and we obey, I have nothowever yet given up the hope of eeeing you at Qerlingtone We did think of eeillng on the ?th but it ie how poetponed indefinitely» Temorrow we go to Nerwieh where we ehall have a meeting on Friday night there is to be e gathering of the cevilteationiete there et that time. I spent a week at Dublin very pleasantly and received your note there. I wee glad to find that Gerrieon bee ee many were friends in Ireland, Richard Webb and I hed much pleeeere in ooepere ing notes of the past: A James G. Birney ea%le in the Go We the 7th, we parted with him at Birmingham where we spent a dey with that deer good men Jeeeph stereee What do you think of the Belfast breekfeet? Net e einele ehe wee admitted. Had I been there I would have gone, though expreee ordere eeme from London that on that morning the Lore of Greetioneuet breekfeet elone. The women of Belfast were indienente aha well they might bee I do hopeeooo to get time to write you a long letter but this evening K em in heete having many notes end eome emerieen letters te write before I leave LQfldOfle Geod night ~ Henry geine me in kind regerde to youreelfe Father, Mother and all those whom we know in Derlingtone Adieu your einoere friend Elizeheth G. fitentee Te Elizabeth Peeee Derlingten
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1852
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//‘“" 1//. //V ‘ /7 / J’ M4”/4W4 - , 2 ///%%W2/7‘/, /% ZWZ ;/ % /MK W %Z/ ;% // % /%é%/%t/ Zr V //:////C 574% // 4% % fly xmmm‘ , amwwz x&mmm»\mmMmw» \mw _§mMMwmmwmMw@\m&mmmw_£mmMmwp\p .\mmww\\ J\\\\ \\@%; N \\§fl\. \ . C \ \\A.\h%. % \$ 9; :«:;;:;x mmw %\ 3 ,,. as "“?"&§.e«'g_ ‘f § Sunday evening: (1852) Dear Susan p I will gladly do all in my power to aid you. Work down this way, then you come a stay with me, & hiss Clarke with Mrs Bloomer a I will assist...
Show more//‘“" 1//. //V ‘ /7 / J’ M4”/4W4 - , 2 ///%%W2/7‘/, /% ZWZ ;/ % /MK W %Z/ ;% // % /%é%/%t/ Zr V //:////C 574% // 4% % fly xmmm‘ , amwwz x&mmm»\mmMmw» \mw _§mMMwmmwmMw@\m&mmmw_£mmMmwp\p .\mmww\\ J\\\\ \\@%; N \\§fl\. \ . C \ \\A.\h%. % \$ 9; :«:;;:;x mmw %\ 3 ,,. as "“?"&§.e«'g_ ‘f § Sunday evening: (1852) Dear Susan p I will gladly do all in my power to aid you. Work down this way, then you come a stay with me, & hiss Clarke with Mrs Bloomer a I will assist you in getting up such a lecture as you desire. We will get up a meeting here a dot shat we can to advance the interests of the society. I think that you a hrs. Eallowell a I have as good as right to infuse what we make of the radical principle into the proceedings of the society, as the miserable time serving conservatives have to infuse their principles of policy & expediency. I think that address of Mrs. V. is altogether too small namby— pamby to go forth from any society claiming the reason we as a society do. Let the thing drop. I will address the women of the state as an individual, in due time, but this is be» tween us. I am not astonished at what you.srite me of Mrs. Gould. The church is the great engine of oppression in our day & you will always find church members trnckling & politic. If my address would serve you as a kind of skeleton for a lecture I will send it to you & you can fill out the heads, more fully. I am hoping to hear a good account of Miss Clarke. i have no doubt a little practice will make you an admirable lecturer. I will go to work at once & write you.the best lecture I can. Dress loose, take a great deal of exercise & be particular about your diet & sleep enoug, the body has great effect upon the mind, In your meetings if you are simple a truth loving no sophistry can confound you. Try and get subscribers for the Lily wherever you go, & make hrs. B pay you something for your trouble. I will talk to her about you an agent for the Lily, she needs an agent & you seelyou could easily attend to that in your meetings. I have a book just adapted to your wants a prize essay in temperance going over the whole ground, which I will send you if you tell me where, or keep it until you come. I sent you the report of the temperance anniversary read it clearly & you will see that many are already prepared to carry this question sith the churches. You.sill see in Clarke of Boston Brainerd and of Philadelphia, the idea hinted at. Shell our society lead or follow public sentinent~. ~ I say lead. Have you read Emersons speech to hossuth? read it and note what he says of majorities. I A Good night E.
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1853
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X , T F f g_’..L {W L, ,>4 6 2. ../ /N ' ’ \\ \ Em ~ 4*‘ ¢———~<,.a. xx .:» .1 I « / H gay N " / J , s -45,, / _/ 27 L J *4‘ V 7 5, (.7 f‘ K K ‘ Q / , .. 6" no /2?‘ /,.r’{ ,_ /. , . / . 9” ‘£7: h/./ w L // /. n ,f;// [x L V V _ ca n 1 I . ». /w .. , A 1, X L ‘V 4 e\\// 2 7 / / A, W ; ,\ . a /ad”. «L a H, / ‘_,., L c4 ,.. '1 9 ~ ,. In‘ ...s..<a ,. 4. /. M a 4“ / If flw / /w / T l . .. iiiriittlll . hhuieiiii . ' . M lititi vi ‘ PHRENOLOGY AND Clinton Hall, 129 and 131 _ ' .3. Nassau street, PHRENOLOGICAL CABINET‘- ii i- II “ V ELLS -—r~ . Z I I . P i I H 0 G ii on llllll~‘mIllhIIt|I ‘_ - _ ' "lam" _ - .. -- I" ' ‘ . "‘ ‘ QIIIIIL- ' ’ E" \ -iiuiiii‘ Hull“!'&g!m"“"“fl!|¥|u " ' _.. _» . , iiiiiimniiiiiiillll'''fl5L—-/”v<s» ; , -::" “ ,_ . *2 3. \--‘:-}§.:7‘'—£*’-~‘ ' l’ W.’ __-...t=*' -—~' Price. Price. Familiar Lessons on Astrono- Tobacco: Its liheci on the my : Designed for Children and Youth in Schools and Fiiiiiilies. Beautifully illustrated, - - 25 ' I Education Complete : einora- ' cing Pliysinlogy, Animal and Mental, Self-CuL 0 ture, and hleinory, in one large volume, a. 00 Moral-and Intellectual Science. ;By Combe, Stratton, Cox, Gregory, and oth- - pl ‘ers. Illustrated, - ~ - ‘ 2 00 V I . * ; 'fil,i "enology Proved, Illu Ell’p,.. ell Body and Mind. The best work on the sub- ject. By Joel Sliew. M. D., - Maternity: or the Bearing and Nursing of Children, inclu iing Female Ed- ucation. VVith appropriate engravings, - - The Principles of Physiology. Applied to the Improvement of Physical and lIIe.'«\ltlllF-Lll1C3.tlOIl. By Andrew Coinbe, - ‘ , ii on Infancy; » or thlw ‘ c liysiological and Moral Management of Chi!-\ dY€ll.,~1llL;\g{.T2lted, ,I,.?,:,”,~.g-‘-:-.2 ll V‘ l ;',',-,&;;V',-' .. "I .‘_t.- y 50 l l l 3l]1_t.Applied. Embracing a concise ta!‘_,3f . \_ V19‘! ol‘Plireiiology. Tliirty-seventld edition, \ . I Alhel an Phrenological Jour- “‘‘l and liscellaiiy. Devoted to Phrenology, Pliysiolo y, and Se1f—Improvement. A year, 1 00 .’ l.-is-re Journal and Her- tliiéiiiiitifiiii.:‘?::j,?,::3,‘<3 “eir°Pe}“’ rd 1 oo Comhe-‘s Lectures , on P1mi,n01- ogy. By George Combe. as delivered in the United States, ‘i,-T .-'=-,~; : q -. " . \, ,. ‘ I 0 0 ‘V l l A ' l The Constitution of Man, con- sidered in Relation to External Objects. A new, revised, enlarged, and illustrated edition, - Education, Founded on the Nature of Man: containing an illustrated de- scription of the T emperanients, - - Human Rights, and their Po- litical Guaranties: Founded on the Moral and llltellelitflilll Laws of our Being, . - - Water-Cure in every Known Disease. By J. H. Rausse. Translated by C. H. Meeker, from the German, - - ‘ M ,. Water-tui°e Manual ; A Pop-. ular work on Hydropatliy. By Joel Shew, M. D. 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A new and improved edition, - - - Physiology, Animal and Men- tal : Applied to the Preservation and Restoration of Health of Body and Mind. Illustrated, - Self-Ciilture and Perfection of. Character; including the Management of Youth. Improved stereotyped edition, - - - : Memory and Intellectual Im- provement: Applied to Sell‘-Education and Ju- venile Instriiction. ' - Twentieth edition, - 0 0 ‘ ' Religion, Natural and Re- vealed; or the Natural Theology and Moral Bearings of Phrenology, - - - - A Home for All: Or a New, , Cheap, Coiiveiiieiit, and Superior Mode of Build- in’g, with appropriate Diagrams, - 50 6:2 -50 50 A good work for 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 50 New York. 1’ rice. Fascination, or the Philoso- phy of Charming. (Magnetism) Illustratin the Principles of Life. lllustratet, - Woman: Her Education and Influence. \Vith a General Introduction, by Mrs. C. M. Kirkland. VVith thirteen portraits, Marriage: Its History and Pliilosophy. \Vitii a_ Phrenological Exposition of the Functioiislor Happy Marriages, - - ’1,;‘,he Water-Cure for Woman in Pregnancy and Cliildbirth. ‘Illustrated with numerous cases. By Joel Shew, M. D., - Lectures on the Philosophy of Mesmerism and Clairvoyance. \Vitli instruc- tion in its process and practical application, Matrimony: or Phrenology and Pliysiology applied to the Se1ectioiiol'Congenial Companions for Life. Illustrated, ~ - - Love and Parentage: applied to the Improvement of Otlspring, including_im- portant Directions to Lovers and the Married, Symbolical Head and Phreno- logical Chart in Map Form: Designed to con- vey the. Natural Language of each Organ, A Sober and Temperate Life. \Vith Notes and Illustrations by John Bur- dell, Dentist. Read this book, - « - The Errors of Physicians and Others in the Application of the VVater-Cure. By J. H. Rausse. 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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1855-01-03
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1856-01
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V l ‘,1 4/ /»fZ‘é%W?~z,s. W;/a L (- I I K I ~“_../ '2? gr y 5 /?://w<::_ /{W A // %‘ / A ///Zz /éz w 2 /§’———fi~ ' / / 1 /,9,/;/’ -6 /%n/ I ¢ C /4: [ T) , ,§ i % J .7 . ‘Ar’ -5 - ' . 4»: -e. 0. ’ ah’?-‘,:,5/y.,, ,,.§1 __ _ / C O P Y Thursday eve (Jana Deer Susan, what has been the fate of my letter. I corrected it, sent it straight back as you directed but I have never got the promised copies. The errors in Douglass paper were dreadful, & I did hope to have a few...
Show moreV l ‘,1 4/ /»fZ‘é%W?~z,s. W;/a L (- I I K I ~“_../ '2? gr y 5 /?://w<::_ /{W A // %‘ / A ///Zz /éz w 2 /§’———fi~ ' / / 1 /,9,/;/’ -6 /%n/ I ¢ C /4: [ T) , ,§ i % J .7 . ‘Ar’ -5 - ' . 4»: -e. 0. ’ ah’?-‘,:,5/y.,, ,,.§1 __ _ / C O P Y Thursday eve (Jana Deer Susan, what has been the fate of my letter. I corrected it, sent it straight back as you directed but I have never got the promised copies. The errors in Douglass paper were dreadful, & I did hope to have a few corrected copies to send to friends. Where ere you, Susan & what are you doing Your silence is truly appalling Are you deed or married? Well I have got out the sixth edition of my admirable work, another female child is born ihtb the world! Lest §g§d§E afternoon, Harriet Eaton Stanton. Oh the little heretic, thus to desecrete that holy day, opened her soft blue eyes in ttisifiohdeyis sphere. Eeggie’e joy over her little sister is unbounded. I am very e i I”& very happy that the terrible ordeal ¢ is past E30 3 that the result is another daughter. ,%~i E. C. Stanton
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1857
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1857-08
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fl /‘ ,,ff _ / , X ' ifézfl N 3 ;z% £5 -‘ (9? 4; L / K /4’ Xjm ,5 g 2'1 /4 115 ‘i i )-“I . ,1. 4% 131. ‘i —' . ' > /E’ Z‘ .a / 4? V V if Q‘ :21 24" ,x ,/ M ,/‘ /3 f,«;,;fjj? zi-79“"'”“‘ (I if ' '/’”"”“ ,;r.“‘.'é,Z” fl’ 5 ‘ ’ K 4‘: .4! / K 2 ; Ag. & f 6 f 6' “Mk . , /3 ..fi ' .1 r » Iggy ' =/v*;.<y ,5 “ 3 . V /11* r,;.’ /2 " (1,, V: % fly’ I ,, .. __‘,;, V _ ‘ It ‘ , /“:7” ,, ,,,. ‘.4 2 ,«:»<‘«-*“"’““ ./N...
Show morefl /‘ ,,ff _ / , X ' ifézfl N 3 ;z% £5 -‘ (9? 4; L / K /4’ Xjm ,5 g 2'1 /4 115 ‘i i )-“I . ,1. 4% 131. ‘i —' . ' > /E’ Z‘ .a / 4? V V if Q‘ :21 24" ,x ,/ M ,/‘ /3 f,«;,;fjj? zi-79“"'”“‘ (I if ' '/’”"”“ ,;r.“‘.'é,Z” fl’ 5 ‘ ’ K 4‘: .4! / K 2 ; Ag. & f 6 f 6' “Mk . , /3 ..fi ' .1 r » Iggy ' =/v*;.<y ,5 “ 3 . V /11* r,;.’ /2 " (1,, V: % fly’ I ,, .. __‘,;, V _ ‘ It ‘ , /“:7” ,, ,,,. ‘.4 2 ,«:»<‘«-*“"’““ ./N 49" ..,«3¢ /’ * X» \ ._.r,« ..;~ game 7-... ,. /3 (:€’(/ *2, .a»,§‘ I § ‘J 6 V» 1» ‘ ;‘:";*"€¢’ L “C /Z4‘, /Zrvm /i Z2 2 ; «2«\~ , neg /‘ /L / f /%z—~*fl“7«¢L. @%»¢~z.m \ . a)\~x\ 1v$N\ A u 7 ,u . x \\\_§m» \.M N _s\.k.1 , ., km. . \ C 2.... 5,. E M} mg». wk“ .§.».»j:, qgavlt .3 ‘kw? azafifiiw (Aug. 1857) Deer Susan I did indeed see by the papers that you had once more stirred that pool of intellectual stagnation the educational convention. whet wen infssnsl set of fools these school~g§3§§ must beil well if in order to nfleese men they wish to live on air let them. The sooner the present generation of women die out the better. We have jeckesses enough in the world now without such women proptegsting eny more, The fines was really quite complimentary. Henry amused me very much. He brought every notice he could see about you. Well my dear he would say another notice of Susan. "you stir up Susan & she stirs the world” I was glad you went to torment those devils. l guess they will begin to think their time has come. I glory in your perserverence. Oh! Susan I will do anything to help you on. If I do nose thing else this fall I en.bound to help you get u sn anti- slevery address. I will write a letter to the Convention of course. This month lg friends all visit me efter they deport I will give you notice then you.nust come here a week or two e we will do wonders. Courage Susan this is my last baby & she will be two years old in January. Two more & & & time will tell whet.-X You & I have s prosneot of a good long life we shall not be in our prime before IQ fifty & after that we shall be gaod for twenty years at least & if we do not make 01& Davies shake in his boots or turn in his grave I am mistaken ~ I wish I Knew what was in that letter that Z wrete ta Lucy for the last convention. I do not know w;at the subject was. Write soon & often 300$ night Yours As ever E; Cady Stanton
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1859-04-02
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Show moreK, 4’ \/ ,4 / z 3 _ K g: :7 ://7' ,v;.»f« ‘ ' N « ’ ‘ €;~ /fr‘, '5,» :3: J . " W .. «i 1‘ as E § :<-—/4 .e*-<z»/t,‘:-/’/ ~ . ,, ) 5./~y¢~é— 7/X/"‘“"“7 C =~ ;,ji‘j—\ I v A ../I /’ ;/(5/5 31/ ..ziA~;/ LLLLL “ ‘ ,4 * :9 A :2/, 1» 2/u—«¢ 4% 4 y fl\\\\\a,.\ ,/,_.{.../ .‘ .... . 1 .. \ x \\1\ \ \\I A xxm.m\»§\v _\\... \. .. .. j . \\\\w\~\\h mvx ,( ,,,,,, , . \ \X_.\. ix. ,\\.. \.. . N1. \%\fi\x,\\.. \ V Efi . x \ . . W ....,.n?A!i,.\,.,.T,....i .A ‘ .._//9 ‘ :3... 5 . 1 x . xx.‘ , 5. iv 1 . v r April 2nd (1859) ‘Dear Susan I have a great boy new three weeks old. He weighed at his birth without a particle of clothing l2%~lb. ey labour was long ervery very severe. I never suffered so much.before. I was sick all the time before he was born, & I have been very weak ever since Ee seemed to take up every particle of my vitality soul & body He is a great specimen so every body says. He looks like Gattie & Maggie Think However! I am through the eeige once more! But oh! Susan what have I not suffered for the past year. It seems to me like a long painful dream. I eent your letter to Peterboro I thought best to let you speak for yourself, especially as your letter came when I ccule not sit or or write. I send you Gerrit's and Lizzie'e letters, of course they are for no eyes but yours. Write econ. Yours es ever E. Cedy‘Stenton
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1859-04-10
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1859-07-15
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1867-06-24
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_ .\ _x\._ .._.V\\ x\ ‘ \. \\ Original in Alma Lutz Collection. 464 West 54th Dear Maggie June 24th(;8673 I have just sent the Johnstown petition to George W. Curtis with strict injunctions to make a swell in that 204 names. Miss Anthony went up to albany last week to talk to the members & they say the question shall be thoroughly discussed. We are having 10.000 copies of John Stuart Mills speech printed. as soon as they are finished I will send you some to sell. We must raise money for...
Show more_ .\ _x\._ .._.V\\ x\ ‘ \. \\ Original in Alma Lutz Collection. 464 West 54th Dear Maggie June 24th(;8673 I have just sent the Johnstown petition to George W. Curtis with strict injunctions to make a swell in that 204 names. Miss Anthony went up to albany last week to talk to the members & they say the question shall be thoroughly discussed. We are having 10.000 copies of John Stuart Mills speech printed. as soon as they are finished I will send you some to sell. We must raise money for printing. Ask your father to send us a donation. We have spent over a thousand dollars in printing this spning. The report of hills’ speemh in our papers was very meagre. We sent to England & got a verbatim.report in one of their papers. .The work goes on finally. Beecher is to make a grand speech for us on the 4th of July in a grove in Westohester. Lucy Stone says we shall undoubted~ only carry Kansas. Then if they do not take the word “male” out of our Constitution we will shake the dust of the Empire State off our feet & all go to Kansas & leave these “white male fossils" all to themselves. Kind regards to the “white males" of the household & ask your Father to lobby a little for us if he knows any of the Suffrage Committee. Ymmstmfly E. Cady Stanton.
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1867-11-30
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‘~ ...-=' .«r”’f w V n ’ s 5. ' M «*2 ' 3*’ -V.“ F” , ‘J / .1‘ .. (\‘.‘\ V,’ 3 «st ,7 ~ J § 34 /2? ’ / // w i /é ’ / /%;M M/. ‘flw /4/z,/Z4 /1 / f 74/; A /1% J/¢<.,, A r T %7?%*”/M~v //4 wk / ’ T % 4 I 1 V I \\—"s. . 3 *3, ‘ F ,/ /1, W T J -~- -—~—-~» Buffalo sov so 1867 as Studsell Dear Friend Your letter to miss Anthony surprizes me Because as are members of an Association is our individuality ssalloaed up in that association. We are speaking for the cause of Woman. sr...
Show more‘~ ...-=' .«r”’f w V n ’ s 5. ' M «*2 ' 3*’ -V.“ F” , ‘J / .1‘ .. (\‘.‘\ V,’ 3 «st ,7 ~ J § 34 /2? ’ / // w i /é ’ / /%;M M/. ‘flw /4/z,/Z4 /1 / f 74/; A /1% J/¢<.,, A r T %7?%*”/M~v //4 wk / ’ T % 4 I 1 V I \\—"s. . 3 *3, ‘ F ,/ /1, W T J -~- -—~—-~» Buffalo sov so 1867 as Studsell Dear Friend Your letter to miss Anthony surprizes me Because as are members of an Association is our individuality ssalloaed up in that association. We are speaking for the cause of Woman. sr Train is doing the same. We are satisfied that no is a pure minded noble man who neither smokes chews drinks gambols his esofi.or swears, & an ardent & eloquent ad~ vocate of our idea. He lays his talents & wealth at our feet, giving us a triumphant journey through the states, papers re- porting three a four columns. Now you must suppose we lack common sense to drop the only influential man in the nation who is ready to stand by our guns. No! no! I love the cause of women too well. toasesaisgch a power. I shall not forget how, our reformers haveetésfieethemselres in the past on this qnes~ tion hos, in our Constitutional conrention,.not one leading man in the state pleaded our cause before its members. Beecher even turned a deaf ear to all our pleadings. Greeley betrayed us. Tilton & Phillips silent, & but for that grand speech of Curtis history aould.have taken no note of our demand. We are traveling as individuals, in no say compromising the A. E. R. leaving you free in N. Y to inaugurate what work you see best While we raise the money to help you do it. Miss Anthony & I shall work in the future as in the past as individuals, right in one line totthe accomplishment of our object a if the Devil steps forward ready to help I shall say good fellow come on! With kind regards Yours sincerely E Cady Stanton
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1869-01-29
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C O P Y Dear Sir, In View of thé infamous laws on our statute books for woman can she trust man to be Judgé Juror, Law-giver and representaw tive? Elizabath Gady Stanton. January 29th 1869
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1869-03-01
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Alma Lutz Gellecticn {GOPX) “Two heafls in caunfiel Twa besifié the haarth Twe im the tanglefi buainass 3f the warld Twa plummets érappeé to mama the abyfis Of science an@.tha mamas“ Elizabefih Caay Stantan
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1869-04-10
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@ flfi/ / / V ‘V / , /7 /* I ., w; l \ I / / /,/Q,//fl\ /»z1, .A 4%“/4 1}’ I /24/’ ffiléfi 5% /W ;fl%»///4” ...“__‘fi7'_;.;$? _,._, ..*, .. A.NNIVERSAI%Y OF THE égqaal ggfimfihi §£EEENEflima. 0 Cr) 0 LA yj tires. raw? ___3\_3 raw Hi‘ 5 A :——r 7 77 THE AMERICAN EQUAL RIGHTS ASSOCIATION will hold its Anniversary in New York, STEINWAY HALL, VVednes— day and Thursday, May 12th and 13th, and in Brooklyn, ACADEMY or MUSIC, On Friday, the 14th. A After a century of discussion on the rights of citizens...
Show more@ flfi/ / / V ‘V / , /7 /* I ., w; l \ I / / /,/Q,//fl\ /»z1, .A 4%“/4 1}’ I /24/’ ffiléfi 5% /W ;fl%»///4” ...“__‘fi7'_;.;$? _,._, ..*, .. A.NNIVERSAI%Y OF THE égqaal ggfimfihi §£EEENEflima. 0 Cr) 0 LA yj tires. raw? ___3\_3 raw Hi‘ 5 A :——r 7 77 THE AMERICAN EQUAL RIGHTS ASSOCIATION will hold its Anniversary in New York, STEINWAY HALL, VVednes— day and Thursday, May 12th and 13th, and in Brooklyn, ACADEMY or MUSIC, On Friday, the 14th. A After a century of discussion on the rights of citizens in a republic, and the gradual extension of Suffrage, without property or educational qualifications, to all white men, the thought of the natiOI1 has turned for the last thirty years to negroes and women. And in the enfranchisement of black men by the Fourteenth a11d Fifteenth Amendments to the Federal C011- stitution, the Congress of the United States has now Virtually established on this continent an aristocracy of sex, an aristocracy hitherto unknown in the history Of nations. \Vith every type and shade of manhood thus exalted above their heads, there never was a time when all women, rich and poor, white and black, native and foreign, should be so wide awake to the degradation of their position, and so persistent in their demands to be recognized in the government. VVOman’s enfranchisement is now a practical question in England and the United States. VVith bills before Parliament, Congress and all our State legislatures—~—with such able champions as John Stuart Mill and George ‘William Curtis, women need but speak the word to secure her political freedom tO—day. \Ve sincerely hope that in the coming National Anniversary every State and Territory, east and west, north and south, will be represented. ‘We invite delegates, too, from all those countries in the Old \VOrld where women are demanding their political rights. . Let there be a grand gathering in the metropolis of the nation, that Republicans and Democrats may alike understand, that with the women of this country lies a political power in the future, that both parties would do well to respect. I The following speakers from the several states are already pledged: Anna E. Dickinson, Frederick Douglass, Mary A. Livermore, Madam Anneke, Lilie Peckham, Phebe Couzens, Mrs. M. H. Brinkerhoff. LUCRETIA MOTT, President. ViCe'P1'eSidentS° Recording Secretaries. ELIZABETH CADY STANTON, New York. FREDERICK DOUGLASS, “ HENRY VVARD BEECHER, “ MARTHA C. VVRIGHT, “ FRANCES D. GAGE, “ OLYMPIA BROWN, Massachusetts, ELIZABETH B. CHASE, Rhode Island, CHARLES PRINCE, Connecticut, ROBERT PURVIS, Pennsylvania, ANTOINETTE B. BLACKWELL, New Jersey, JOSEPHINE S. GRIFFING, Washiiigtoii, D. C._. THOMAS GARRETT, Delaware, ‘ STEPHEN H. CAMP, Ohio, EUPHEMIA COCHRANE, Michigan, MARY A. LIVERMORE, Illinois, MRS. I. H. STURGEON, Missouri, AMELIA BLOOMER, Iowa, MARY A. STARRET, Kansas, VIRGINIA PENNY, Kentucky. HENRY B. BLACKWELL, HARRIET PURVIS. Treasurer. JOHN J. MERRITT. Executive Committee. LUCY STONE, EDWARD S. BUNKER, ELIZABETH R. TILTON, ERNESTINE L. BOSE, ROBERT J. JOHNSTON, EDWIN A. STUDWELL, ANNA CROMWELL FIELD, SUSAN B. ANTHONY, THEODORE TILTON, MARGARET E. WINCHESTER, ABBY HUTCHINSON PATTON, OLIVER JOHNSON, MRS. HORACE GREELEY, ABBY HOPPER GIBBONS, ELIZABETH SMITH MILLER. Corresponding Secretary. MARY E. GAGE. @‘ Communications and Contributions may be addressed to JOHN J. MERRITT, 131 William street, New York. Newspapers friendly, please publish this call. ( 12.u.¢.a.— Bag Griigeiaa New York April iothgieea} Edward Baines m.r. Honored Sir Knowing your interest in "Womans Suffrage" I take the liberty of asking a letter to the coming anniversary. If it does not come in time to be read at the Convention, it will be published in our leading Journals. Yours with respect Elizabeth Cady Stanton ( €3r“ éET¢u%pT?'fiLJQ, Cissoepglaéma Cin<u41QL»r)
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1870
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flow, €.C?Za::.4T Q ’Z~—a" o(a2::) 4 D/u,€7 *2, 1:‘ W 9 _ ‘I’ ""~§’f7 I 5 5 ,. (‘:2 CD *’ {.4 4 fir. Mumford, I received your letter. Unless you think it decidedly better to ge West later my feeling is in favor of an early trip. You might say in yeur next circular & in your private letters that my beet lectures will be Marriage, Divorce ‘The True Republic The 16th Amendment
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1870
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~ “.- . _ . ’ _ — /- . k _ .,‘ . ,; , ./ ., k , F .5 0,. ,1 ;- ' /4 /‘7 , , I ’,..— ~ ’ ’ r , - - ’ ‘ " F ’ . ,.-' / / /' 4,, - y 4.- 5*. ~' 5’ 4. »» ~ 1' f _ - I " _ — - » 4. < V ,5 I L» ' _ / .4 1 I ‘r / a r v ~ .~”‘ z - ,— "3 ’ / I , ‘ aw ~ .5, . / *4 2? \ r * .- / .a
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Creator
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1870
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Z} // /v 4/ V X % 5 4 x MQLK /1 ,/ / F , .. 5-134* ewhou 12th ? Dear Olive, when I entered Detroit this morning, the first thing that caught my eye was your name good said I as the night is free I will stay & hear the “Bright-nite“ of humanity, but lo! on inquiry I found you came the 18th when I am engaged & so I shall not hear or see you But I write a line to say that my intenest & sympathy are With.you wherever you.go. Heard Anna's "Men's rights” in N.Y. the night...
Show moreZ} // /v 4/ V X % 5 4 x MQLK /1 ,/ / F , .. 5-134* ewhou 12th ? Dear Olive, when I entered Detroit this morning, the first thing that caught my eye was your name good said I as the night is free I will stay & hear the “Bright-nite“ of humanity, but lo! on inquiry I found you came the 18th when I am engaged & so I shall not hear or see you But I write a line to say that my intenest & sympathy are With.you wherever you.go. Heard Anna's "Men's rights” in N.Y. the night I left. I believe the games next here. Susan tells me how much ehe enjoyed meeting you at Rochester & the pleasant impression made by your speech. I hope we may meet in our wanderings with much love Your friend sincerely Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1870-02-28
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ELIZABETH CADY STANTON, E(z’z'z‘or. F . ‘ B. ANTHONY, Prop;/~z‘eto7v‘. _ 4-9 East 23d Street, (Woman’s Bureau) / QM, 5/,A/(97;/: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Editor. The Revolution, Susan E. onthony, Proprietor. Now‘York Feb 28thol37O fir. fiodpath Mr Cartor sands me a long list of appointments for the West & I do not think it boot to promise tolo to Row England for one, unloss others offer. miss Anthony can fill that. My’%W&$deforo all I have on hand two weeks which will keep me busy...
Show moreELIZABETH CADY STANTON, E(z’z'z‘or. F . ‘ B. ANTHONY, Prop;/~z‘eto7v‘. _ 4-9 East 23d Street, (Woman’s Bureau) / QM, 5/,A/(97;/: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Editor. The Revolution, Susan E. onthony, Proprietor. Now‘York Feb 28thol37O fir. fiodpath Mr Cartor sands me a long list of appointments for the West & I do not think it boot to promise tolo to Row England for one, unloss others offer. miss Anthony can fill that. My’%W&$deforo all I have on hand two weeks which will keep me busy until nearly the lot of May. I wish you could write usifioog Boston letters for The Rev. What would you ask for such letter Yours Sincerely Eifiady Stanton
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1870-03-18
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Alma Lute Collection C 0 P Y Wt V? 4”)‘ "_<"-' I J” 5 3; »..~'«' 137* ;f'"’§,"'g,,,-1 " ~o Private Dr. H. Hayes Ward Dear Sir: ’ “ The men of my family are all unwilling to heve me go before that committee es every witness in these oeeee heve been eoerified more then the parties. Mr. Stanton thinks my effedevit ee to ell I know woula enewer every purpose. Before a committee I might I might answer some question, or accidentally make some...
Show moreAlma Lute Collection C 0 P Y Wt V? 4”)‘ "_<"-' I J” 5 3; »..~'«' 137* ;f'"’§,"'g,,,-1 " ~o Private Dr. H. Hayes Ward Dear Sir: ’ “ The men of my family are all unwilling to heve me go before that committee es every witness in these oeeee heve been eoerified more then the parties. Mr. Stanton thinks my effedevit ee to ell I know woula enewer every purpose. Before a committee I might I might answer some question, or accidentally make some remark, when I might not have exact knowledge to eubstentiete my ooinioee I have tolé you all I know about this eooiel eerthquehe, eo you can judge whether it ie of any reel velue to your ceeee And this much I may add that es I have meter eeeh fir, Bowen, he is not “the lake“, where oelm wetere have reveeleé whet I heve seen or lheerd. Sincerely youreyt Elizabeth Cedy Stanton Jfiénafly, N.JI March 18th EW1‘ Undoubtedly refers to the Beeoher_Tj1ton case and Plymouth Church oommittee*e inveetigetion of ohergee egeinet Henry Nerd Beeohefg
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1870-05-21
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Creator
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1870-07-09
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Show more.,x x &.; 7 /a 4, I /J / iv A I 7;» ‘f 1/ I 4 “ K .r K V 3 Na -8, ,« 9 «/30 4 J ‘ / 5% /5 /' ,, \. x; w N f‘ 0:; > /7 . 4‘ . 9 ’ » fix I) ¢ . /' / /1 / / “N W /. -1 ,,,,,;,.,_7.«« k./\§>{ /« '14:} ,.. x,::,z::I’fi 3?’ M ,, <5’ ,, T / /I/‘ I’ ,2’ K1,. ' ’\ 6 N \\ \\ 9 F” ‘R $3.: 3 \\ Q $X \ J \\ J K h) ‘\ ~, \ /,7“ M E if r/ , f ‘I ’~ $3 4' /7 a / /' J ’ ,y /,7 4 /; X / //' / /ff ifl A, /‘ /H K ‘V? 4/ }g. if X 44: Q \ C) /, (9 1/ & I n V I a fl é 4 ‘ ca, A y / 424/ A , / /t M IT A’ If / ‘V V; V I 1/‘ 77,7 V)\\ /qr, Kg /5‘ 7‘ \ ‘fix ’ is / :5; 13:?‘ A‘ :5 /1 =4 é. 4;‘ 7/? » \ V ‘ 47 V a :2 /V . A ' ’ . MA W MLut%wQ@1ie3tion Q Q 3 3 %fl%§§f~ . 9 ‘*4. Jahngbown JuL§ 9th ; ?&‘w% Dear Eaulima *3. V .3» .~. a . 59*“: *1: ya. *3 , W,‘ .» . .,,.. ,. . .. I enc$Q$e yam a lfiufibf fram Lfgg Raaker whiah yaahar aurgriaeg me of?‘ ., J. ,. 1“ .3 .. I M _... ,. W,‘ M, , 3 . Y N 0 Q ;or I was told what fihfi saifl aha &id mQL Wlfih me invitfifi into I .. . * “ .... °.\ . _s.- .. ..v... oi; ,. - C0flfl@CtlQEto as I have mare lflviiamlflflfi ab ;1OG¢ 8aQh,fllghfl than .,€”“*..‘ "1 " -1 -in ‘-J '1 Q‘ , -1; ”:" ".- .. , > - _ - u'’''\_ »_ v I gag ¢¢¢¢, tge Lflfiflflfi gameyafily neafl mat fawl mmmcermad abaut my thrugtina mygalf wheye 2 am mat wanteflfi Yhare avfir I mg I am 7 W31 *4’: rxf-°; d '51? *3**}*~ “ ml ‘-7’ W '7' c-» «Q .- “ ‘ya’ a-,1 " me; ;ebe@ve .$J MJQ geag 6% m ag ; Cmfl Q0 am lfldllléuam molg Qeyond tfifi jealgugiea & criticigmg sf aid friemflg 1 ahail eaahew canvantiamg & ®?$%fii%8fiiOnfi altawgthar. .« €:‘:::A-..r' w-. awn as . ~\ Q -...~. - v E h&ve haen gweaxima on Saxmemaemant Qcaagiwna fer fihfi lagt twa weakg in flea Jeraey & Tegtern figfig & have Qnly jmat raeaivefl year ,.t - ‘ . «= W . . ‘ , 3, ., x . - ~ .z. _ ;. _ , , _ ,,. ..::% 2 .. lmttar, I am Vifllmlflg Q3 mganer & hega ufl ae Kama tge Lagt Q; Julga I have had a gleagamfi Viaifi with Sougin Qerrit fimifhw I went with aim ta a saad tamyeramse celabraiian in fiyracuaa on the @th wuere w@ an@k@ he twa =hou§and gaowle. 51 tsld the:.tk@ Qma thing he bé d@n@ an «arc- «- --.. «_;- "- ,r »~. Va‘ 4 } I -5 4~‘?>- .~x, »- «fan ‘'5'. “' . V’ ..‘Lo 4»; 3" "“'.,"7:u.,f, 4' ‘wxz - ‘, fay ieggeraga; wag hm gAV@ woaafi uhfi ba,lQu, ; Vlfilgmfl N33. hlmflflfifi ‘e’-“:‘.-* w _ A M “M ‘_ ’ . V 1,,“ _,E_,‘_ E ,,', W ,3” ". 457‘ , ~ — ‘. .. V . ‘)1 ,5? *3!“ ‘__,.VA ,.,w {my 3.. J in mLmifme mgfi ~g & ®K@&t wegam. In $aa I @m grsma ©$ umw wumgm E fin} growimg my everywherag It 13 hL@§~e1 he gas w&&t a lafiy no 1 . ~ g . 7,» ~¥~~ 1?? “ -1' 7 ._. l “< * 4" ’, * ""’ V" “.5” - .‘ *3“ ‘‘.-‘”u ‘L ‘fir. , farmarm amp gex gag uaflam ln age QSL aamuufiy w Lg $39; umiu gau m ‘*3 ‘__‘ ” _§ _‘ __ H‘ mm, __~ fl ,, ,9 , , . ‘A, ' ,.,r., .,y ,..__ .1. -,, 131"“ :.fi. ., 1‘ ‘Fl 3;‘ K W, _ gavg fiemg aemezfixmg La hagten nha QwEb@§ dai. gem Leg ma $m gaaae 1“ V 9 T7‘ U‘ 3 4,. fig [L V)K..: f""";m . 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' ’MF’ '5 " '%‘° "0. > '1 am * cm *Qu§h Lha riwhfi flfiwfifig WEQ &y@wa, m0 our Q mL@r flfl¥hffl hfiuL& we Z M _‘ n . 3+ "33 x T "if £3? CL {:3 ~, 30-‘ I, -, {NI 1 ‘tr #4:; 4:-v\ véc an, A -S 1 ‘,1 ';*M& f"~3 I““«‘ , .# {:11 -if = _ «L - in E '..,'-3. Q; '1'? 2 ..‘. ix’ J. ..u E: Qua‘ (D ‘L-vi. 3;, C:i.' L~'~’7""~ Lei in-= 1:;- ‘r—.‘.:'4J ?s~.:-‘ :.< ‘Li ,1, 4.‘. ‘~—-‘’ 57? W .._» . '1 .... 4... L 1"" -4-> v V M "7 *- N"? , ‘a: Q '} M a§&v@¢; uQ bfiafi uh@ mQm%eq,@uQ$&. sag 3 "1 “H” mm‘: IN‘ ‘W H’ _ M ,0“ (3: ..,.,. 9 :1?‘ _g__ 1”) i__‘ __,~r_ . ‘ *1 {W 1 qr!‘ F} /f if,‘ V -fig” ‘g *V~_«,v\ 1,»; J;”“’ :»""‘;3 “F”; (3 {:22 Q? ii’: kw} Etéta $9351 :1 {.22 .§..:.,«'.:¢,:f1.,,.'. iQ:f1:L Q11, as L: i. J.::; 1; M73 and La. - A ‘*3’ 01:‘ V Q <;..::;» ‘x..,.? :5, .50 * ,5.5.,i,=.:;.: 1.,» xtfmis. .-,4’ ww W W W, V ,.,. .53 . .1 4.. .3 .€>. W ‘V , V , ,.., 3 . V J. . . ufl Qurgeiaea. I mavay ifilfi a fim§Um§€f awmara go ’ '2 .. , <-¢ W =. -p °" , . < «na '7”? "T “ « “V - -' ~ ‘ fig '~' ‘*",,=r “ ’._., "‘ ‘ %§mamim0us§ Eflmfi I fig toaag & yak maay ;au;;na hgw aw¢m@m_mw Qfiwt -":4-'v._ "vv">»,'-‘ °'-"‘ 1 , ‘J ‘ ‘ «_ f, ' w *7 . W.’ p@Ow;8 wma lmg; W 1 .72.» wk. V ?‘ 1, ., .( av. us», 0r J. -v_ _ V’ *7‘ A ~»_- g’ at» '3 'n- 1 " ig aaimafl Qff unéer the gmiae Qf 3a1mtL3 alggomg I ma _ gm , “"3"” W3 ., .21. ., , 1044-:I\u,a\, .4“. 2*‘ ‘gr _ I‘ _° .11,‘ -. ,_ M!‘ V ; ,,., 3 Q ,.Y., w,;.,a4(.3’L__/, M .2.. K.» 31:1} 1, .2 <.; .;.a e M. 9 Q 4- 4 -Q &fil€U Qea? frifimfl ~. .5 F 3 .1 -oi L.2g‘\-.Jm>»...vs «'71 *».e *':....-r..‘:. "< §mllh&fl&$fi baa, z-...! is L.aC:3.I,3...
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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1870-11-12
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I .5 '4» @”Z27fi”% « /12% /z fl . “ % fit; W5 /M %‘yW/$2/roux %z4/,.Z%’M/ ‘ ’« I *‘ A 2:44 ¢,,74,.,¢J 444/r»z,<_.,/w»%%_ Originsl inf? Alma Lute Collection. My birthday * s 2 55 We've decked thy chamber love for thee with evergreens & flowers With drapery of white We've shut out the nights oAnd each brought a token Be it softly spoken To celebrate the time with you when earth received sweet Ann Fitzhugh Celmly & bravely, you've lived & loved Through all life...
Show moreI .5 '4» @”Z27fi”% « /12% /z fl . “ % fit; W5 /M %‘yW/$2/roux %z4/,.Z%’M/ ‘ ’« I *‘ A 2:44 ¢,,74,.,¢J 444/r»z,<_.,/w»%%_ Originsl inf? Alma Lute Collection. My birthday * s 2 55 We've decked thy chamber love for thee with evergreens & flowers With drapery of white We've shut out the nights oAnd each brought a token Be it softly spoken To celebrate the time with you when earth received sweet Ann Fitzhugh Celmly & bravely, you've lived & loved Through all life's joys and sorrows Like flowers in summer When soft Zephyrs blow And green trees in winter when buried in snow 4 In gladness, in sadness thou'st ever been true Reflecting God's glory; good Nanny Fitzhugh. Good night to thee angel we have thee alone May loyal celestials welcome thee home A May eherie spirits enter, And kneel round thy bed So thou tell us tomorrow All all they have said And tell us moreover if in that whole train There comes one more noble than Gerrit of fees. General John Coohrane A void is in our feast tonight Where‘s Gen.John the brave He's gone to point the northern light To the anxious shipwreck slave When he comes back we'll deck his bros with leurels ever green. The figurehead on the old ship of State Shall be Gen. John Coehrane. (Verses written for her guests by Elizabeth Cedy Stanton)
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1871
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1871-02-18
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Creator
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1871-04-29
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1 /5. '//~//,.:/ t / _ If /,:2 7 /‘ ,/ I z %//%t/ .//////%/%%///m// L‘ / 7’ /// K V’ / ...’ ,y/ / ‘5 7 ’_ /,fj/ ’ / \-v / ‘ s i a 2 / / / C ( /20 K x / W2 /, \ K /I ./ / / // /’ , 1/ /I ,/ X /, V C j // ‘ ; / W J '.\.v / 1 ,AV/ ‘/ ,0’ // /' :r/ / ' v,/’_// /~ Bighwood Park 3%? r~ 1" Apr-3.1 2:Ii’th Chas. fiumford Dear Sir, I hope youvwill call at Mr. Stanton’s office and setole our account for I am sure I have no desire to deprive you of your just duos. Your account in...
Show more1 /5. '//~//,.:/ t / _ If /,:2 7 /‘ ,/ I z %//%t/ .//////%/%%///m// L‘ / 7’ /// K V’ / ...’ ,y/ / ‘5 7 ’_ /,fj/ ’ / \-v / ‘ s i a 2 / / / C ( /20 K x / W2 /, \ K /I ./ / / // /’ , 1/ /I ,/ X /, V C j // ‘ ; / W J '.\.v / 1 ,AV/ ‘/ ,0’ // /' :r/ / ' v,/’_// /~ Bighwood Park 3%? r~ 1" Apr-3.1 2:Ii’th Chas. fiumford Dear Sir, I hope youvwill call at Mr. Stanton’s office and setole our account for I am sure I have no desire to deprive you of your just duos. Your account in its present shape is not fair. I hope you will make it satisfactory at once as I am ready to pay you. ‘Yours rospt. In C. Stanton 3 34». Among other blunders I notice you olaoo $88. opposite Madison for which I roooivod moth: g. I did not notioo this before.
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Creator
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Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 1815-1902
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Date
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1872
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H . .4; % iwatimnatfl mm1m bmttfiiragt Ewmtiattmnt, Auburn, N. Y. ’ 4 _ \ Vice Pre.vz'de74z‘, LUCRETIA MOTT, ” / ’ Philadelphia, Pa ’ _ -. r ( 4.‘? ‘A m ’ '1’ (I ( / C07/. Sec’;/, ISABELLA BEECHER HOOKER, // ' // Hartford, Ct. , / V ‘ Rec. 5683/, LILLIE DEVEREUX BLAKE, 106 East 55th St., New York. Trerzsz/:7’e7*, ELLEN C. SARGENT, - 308 F. Street,'N. \V., VVashington, D. C. //‘//fl /, // //f//’ r €¢// / r , L 4/C//W%~ ’/0‘ LL ” ” //V ( ° ‘I / 2 ' // //A’ / C‘/in Ex. Com....
Show moreH . .4; % iwatimnatfl mm1m bmttfiiragt Ewmtiattmnt, Auburn, N. Y. ’ 4 _ \ Vice Pre.vz'de74z‘, LUCRETIA MOTT, ” / ’ Philadelphia, Pa ’ _ -. r ( 4.‘? ‘A m ’ '1’ (I ( / C07/. Sec’;/, ISABELLA BEECHER HOOKER, // ' // Hartford, Ct. , / V ‘ Rec. 5683/, LILLIE DEVEREUX BLAKE, 106 East 55th St., New York. Trerzsz/:7’e7*, ELLEN C. SARGENT, - 308 F. Street,'N. \V., VVashington, D. C. //‘//fl /, // //f//’ r €¢// / r , L 4/C//W%~ ’/0‘ LL ” ” //V ( ° ‘I / 2 ' // //A’ / C‘/in Ex. Com. SUSAN B. ANTHONY .« C . / /'1//’ 4' / a 9 7 / 1 / 3 _/ / Rochester, N. Y. /’ [I / " C . :7 t M ‘ %é(/— ‘ M’-'7‘ E’ /“Z7 //53 6? // ” //5 A5‘ ,w22ZcZ¢*~ 7 ;g§j22¢i2é%2:/»~A /§3;7/;é%2:>c:// .-94‘ x .15 ¥ r“‘\’ "4 £272. .m . are r ifif 1', .3 ~ ,. r M's; .;.~.. .;§.. '>n~-4‘ -n. .2 ‘\ I
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