Table of Contents: Dedication. Announcement. List of illustrations. Preface. The Introduction Preparations. Education. Literature and the dramatic art. Science and religion. Charity, philanthropy, and religion. Moral and social reform. The civil and…
This weekly paper was affiliated with the Woman's Journal and edited by Alice Stone Blackwell. The goal was to convert and recruit women to the cause. In this issue, articles included: Why Should Women Vote?
Are women represented?
Men and women…
The Woman's Advocate was among the first publications focused on issues related to women's equality. The mission of the Woman's Advocate was to "labor for the legal and political equality of women . . . . also consider the questions of woman's work,…
The Oneida Community, founded by John Humphrey Noyes, was a religiously based, socialist group of about 250, dedicated to living as one family and to sharing all property, work, and love. The Community disbanded in 1880 and formed a corporation,…
Circular 2 of 3 distributed by the Equal Suffrage League of Baltimore to study the city and the ways in which the League might engage women in its political activities. This questionnaire asks for details about the wards in Baltimore, including…
This card, Number 4007, is part of a sixteen-card series, featuring attractive women attempting to act as men. In this illustration, a woman has her feet up on a table, leaning back in a chair and smoking a pipe. She is blowing smoke rings in the…
This card features a full color illustration of a group of girls marching with signs that read: "No more school for us!" "Hubbies to be home by 8 p.m." and "More kandy more jam."
Reprint of Julia Ward Howe's address on suffrage at the May Festival of the New England Woman Suffrage Association. The New England Woman Suffrage Association was formed in November, 1868, with Julia Ward Howe as president. The Association's annual…