Browse Items (8 total)
- Tags: Julia Ward Howe
Boston Radical Club
HILL, Mrs. Eliza Trask
Tags: 1831-1840, 1840, Business/Banking, businesswoman, Education, Eliza Trask Hill, Ellen Henrietta Richards, Julia Ward Howe, MA, Mary Ashton Livermore, May, orator, Orators, Politics/Government, prison reform, Prohibition Party (MA), public schools, Public Speaking, Reform, reformer, teacher, Teachers, Temperance, temperance reformer, Warren, woman suffragist, Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Women's Rights, Writing/Publishing
CHENEY, Mrs. Ednah Dow
Tags: 1821-1830, 1824, Amanda L. Aikens, Anna Garlin Spencer, author, Authors, Autobiography, Boston, Boston School of Design for Women, Christian Examiner, Concord School of Philosophy, Ednah Dow Cheney, Elizabeth Buffum Chace, Free Religious Association, Freedman's Aid Society, Harriet Mulford Stone Lothrop, Horticultural School for Women, Index, James Freeman Clarke, journalist, Julia Ward Howe, June, lecturer, Louisa May Alcott, MA, Margaret Fuller Ossoli, Martha H. Mowry, Massachusetts School Suffrage Association, Mount Vernon School, New England Hospital for Women and Children, New England Women's Club, North American Review, philanthropist, Philanthropists, Philanthropy, Public Speaking, Radical, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Seth Wells Cheney, suffrage, Theodore Parker, Woman's Journal, Women's Medical College, Women's Rights, Writing/Publishing
Association for the Advancement of Women
Tags: Alice Cunningham Fletcher, Alice Stone Blackwell, Amanda L. Aikens, Antoinette Brown Blackwell, Catharine A. F. Stebbins, Charlotte Emerson Brown, Ednah Dow Cheney, Eliza Read Sunderland, Elizabeth Boynton Harbert, Elizabeth Buffum Chace, Ellen M. Gould, Emma Curtiss Bascom, Frances Fisher Wood, Graceanna Lewis, Julia Holmes Smith, Julia Ward Howe, Margaret Abigail Cleaves, Maria Mitchell, Martha H. Mowry, Mary Ashton Livermore, Mary Blair Moody, Mary Elizabeth Blanchard Lynde, Mary Emilie Cobb, Mary Fletcher Rogers, Maud Howe Elliott, May Wright Sewall, Nancy H. Adsit, Nellie V. Mark, Phebe Anne Hanaford, Rebecca Naylor Hazard, Sarah Burger Stearns, Sophia Curtiss Hoffman
STONE, Mrs. Lucy
Tags: 1811-1820, 1818, Alice Stone Blackwell, American Woman Suffrage Association, Anne Whitney, Anti-Slavery, August, author, Authors, Education, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, George William Curtis, Henry Browne Blackwell, Isabella Beecher Hooker, Julia Ward Howe, Lucy Stone, MA, Mary Ashton Livermore, Mary Barr Clay, Oberlin College, Olympia Brown, orator, Orators, Priscilla Holmes Drake, Public Speaking, Reform, reformer, Samuel Joseph May, Sarah Burger Stearns, teacher, Teachers, West Brookfield, William Lloyd Garrison, Woman's Christian Temperance Union, Woman's Journal, women as authors, Women's Rights, Writing/Publishing
AIKENS, Mrs. Amanda L.
Tags: 1831-1840, 1833, Amanda L. Aikens, Andrew J. Aikens, Association for the Advancement of Women, editor, Ednah Dow Cheney, Ella A. Giles, Evening Wisconsin, Johns Hopkins Medical School, Julia Ward Howe, MA, Maplewood Institute, Martha H. Mowry, May, Milwaukee, National Conference of Charities, North Adams, philanthropist, Philanthropists, Pittsfield, Politics/Government, WI, Wisconsin Conference of Charities, Wisconsin Industrial School for Girls, Women's Republican Club of Wisconsin, Women's Rights, Writing/Publishing
ALCOTT, Miss Louisa May
Tags: 1831-1840, 1832, A. M. Barnard, Aaron Kimball Loring, Amos Bronson Alcott, Atlantic Monthly, Authors, Commonwealth, Concord, Education, Edward William Bok, Elizabeth Powell Bond, Fiction, Flora Fairfield, Franklin Benjamin Sanborn, Germantown, Henry Chandler Bowen, Henry David Thoreau, Henry James, Independent, James Redpath, Julia Ward Howe, Louisa May Alcott, Lucy Stone, MA, Mary Ashton Livermore, May Alcott Nieriker, Moncure Daniel Conway, Moods, Norwalk Reflector, November, Old-Fashioned Girl, PA, pseudonym, Putnam's Monthly, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Roberts Brothers, Rose In Bloom, teacher, Theodore Parker, Thomas NIles, William David Ticknor, Women's Rights, Writing/Publishing