Woman --Suffrage --Massachusetts]]>
Hoar was a Massachusetts lawyer who was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives (1869-1877) and then the U.S. Senate (1877-1904).]]>
New England Woman's Suffrage Association (Boston, Mass.), Meeting, (1873 : Boston, Mass.)
Politics and government
Political parties
Republicanism
Woman's journal (Boston, Mass. : 1870)
Women--Suffrage--Massachusetts
Women--United States--Political activity]]>
Hoar examines the idea of what makes a cohesive "Republic" and argues that the participation and influence of women is necessary for the church, state and community to be successful and happy.

The address was printed and distributed in several different formats.

The Woman Suffrage Tracts series was comprised of ten issues, including: "Ought women to learn the alphabet?" by Thomas Wentworth Higginson; "The legal condition of women in Massachusetts" by Samuel E. Sewall; and "Woman's right and the public welfare" also by George F. Hoar.]]>
American Woman Suffrage Association]]>
New England Woman Suffrage Association
Republicanism
Women--Suffrage--Massachusetts]]>

Hoar examines the idea of what makes a cohesive "Republic" and argues that the participation and influence of women is necessary for the church, state and community to be successful and happy.

The address was printed and distributed in several different formats.]]>