Clipping : "Suffragists Open to Publishing Concern." [1913]
Belmont, Alva, 1853-1933
National American Woman Suffrage Association. Convention
Women--Suffrage--New York
Shields, John Knight, 1858-1934
United States--Tennessee-Chattanooga
Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage (U.S.)
National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company
Brief article summarizing some of the issues addressed during the 1913 National American Woman Suffrage Association convention, including the creation of a suffrage publishing house, moving the headquarters from New York to Washington, D.C., and the location of the next convention.
[1913]
English
Tract : The patriarchal institution, as described by members of its own family. 1860
Abolitionists
Antislavery movements
Fugitive slaves--Legal status, laws, etc.--United States
Slavery--United States
Slavery--United States--Controversial literature
This compilation, pulled together by abolitionist and author Lydia Maria Child, makes an anti-slavery argument through quotes pulled from Southern newspapers, fugitive slave notices, laws, political figures, authors, religious figures, abolitionists, and other prominent figures, according to various subject areas, including: <br /><br /><ul><li>Southern Prophecies</li>
<li>Southern Fulfillment of the Preceding Prophecies</li>
<li>Southern Statements of the Happiness of Slaves</li>
<li>Southern Proofs that Slaves are "Happy and Contented"</li>
<li>Southern Proofs of the "Chivalrous and High-Minded Character" Produced by Slavery</li>
<li>Southern Proofs that "the Physical Condition of Slaves is Better than that of Northern Laborers"</li>
<li>Southern Prospects for Northern Laborers and Mechanics</li>
<li>Southern Testimony Concerning the Effects of Slavery on the States</li>
<li>Southern Opinions Concerning the Extension of Slavery</li>
<li>Southern and Northern Democrats Now Leagued for the Extension of Slavery</li>
</ul>
Child, Lydia Maria Francis, 1802-1880, Compiler
New York : American Anti-Slavery Society
1860
55 p.
DOCU-1860-03