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         Shaw Anna Howard:     more detail
  1. The story of a pioneer. an autobiography. By Anna Howard Shaw. w by Shaw. Anna Howard. 1847-1919., 1915-01-01
  2. The story of a pioneer. by Anna Howard Shaw with the collabo by Shaw. Anna Howard. 1847-1919., 1915-01-01
  3. A Voice From the Wilderness: The Story of Anna Howard Shaw by Don Brown, 2001-09-24
  4. Anna Howard Shaw: Suffrage Orator and Social Reformer by Wil A. Linkugel, Martha Solomon,

41. Leaders In The Women's Suffrage Movement: Women's History
top. Shaw, Anna Howard (18471919). Anna Howard Shaw was an Americanleader in the campaign for women's rights. She lectured throughout
http://www2.worldbook.com/features/whm/html/whm013.html
Carrie Catt Alice Paul Martha Carey Thomas Ida Wells-Barnett ... Victoria Woodhull Leaders in the Women's Suffrage Movement
Many women fought for the right to vote
during the 1800's and early 1900's. Biographies with links to web pages of some of the more prominent suffragists are listed below. (Picture above: Harriet Stanton Blanch exhorting a Wall Street crowd.)
Library of Congress photos)
Catt, Carrie Chapman (1859-1947) Carrie Catt was an American leader in the campaign for woman suffrage. She served as president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association from 1900 to 1904, and from 1915 to 1920, when Amendment 19 to the United States Constitution was passed, giving women the right to vote. Catt began her suffrage work as an organizer of clubs in 1887. She became one of the suffrage movement's most effective lecturers and organizers. Her work extended to Canada and Europe. From 1904 to 1923, she served as president of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance. In 1920, Catt founded the National League of Women Voters (now called the League of Women Voters) to teach women an understanding of public affairs so they could vote intelligently. In 1925, she founded the National Committee on the Cause and Cure of War. This became the Women's Action Committee for Victory and a Lasting Peace. Carrie Clinton Lane was born in Ripon, Wis., and attended Iowa State College. She taught school and became the first woman superintendent of schools in Mason City, Iowa.

42. Anthony, Susan B. (Susan Brownell), 1820-1906. Papers, 1815-1961 (A-143/M-21, M-
Howard, 18101885; Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919; Stanton, ElizabethCady, 1815-1902; Education of women19th century; Family records;
http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/sch00169.html
A-143/M-21, M-42
Anthony, Susan B. (Susan Brownell), 1820-1906. Papers, 1815-1961 (A-143/M-21, M-42): A Finding Aid
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women
Radcliffe College
February 1980
REQUEST AS:
Call No.: A-143/M-21, M-42
Note: CLOSED. USE MICROFILM. REQUEST AS: M-21, M-42
Repository: Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute
Creator: SUSAN BROWNELL ANTHONY, 1820-1906
Title: Papers, 1815-1961
Quantity: 2 file boxes, 1 oversize folder, 1 folio+ folder, 3 reels of microfilm (M-21 and M-42)
Abstract: Diaries, correspondence, speeches, etc., of Susan B. Anthony, suffragist and reformer.
Administrative Information
Processing Information: Reprocessed: February 1980
By: Bert Hartry
Acquisition Information: Accession number: 812 The papers of Susan Brownell Anthony were given to the Schlesinger Library by Charlotte Lyman Clark in 1964. The collection had been in the possession of the Anthony family and was bought at a Parke-Bernet Galleries auction. The typed transcripts of two of the diaries, 1837-1838 and 1839, were the gift of Alma Lutz in 1964. Access Restrictions Access. Unrestricted. Originals are closed; use microfilm M-21-reel 1 and M-42-reel 2

43. Foley, Margaret, 1875-1957. Papers, 1847-1968: A Finding Aid
Ryan, Agnes, 18781954; Sanders, EH; Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919; Tillinghast,Anna Churchill Moulton, 1874-1951; Upton, Harriet Taylor;
http://oasis.harvard.edu/html/sch00004.html
MC 404
Foley, Margaret, 1875-1957. Papers, 1847-1968: A Finding Aid
Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on theHistory of Women in America
Radcliffe College
October 1990 (c) 1990 Radcliffe College
Descriptive Summary
Repository: Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute
Call No.: MC 404
Creator: MARGARET FOLEY, 1875-1957
Title: Papers, 1847-1968 [Bulk, 1909-1929]
Quantity: 2 cartons; 3 folio, 2 folio+, 3 oversize, and 1 supersize folders
Administrative Information
Processing Information: Processed: October 1990
By: Kim Brookes
Acquisition Information: Accession numbers: 81-M58, 81-M72
The papers of Margaret Foley were given to the Schlesinger Library in February and March 1981 byMary Goodnow White (niece of MF's friend, Helen Elizabeth Goodnow); in April and July 1967, January 1969, and October 1973 by Leo R. O'Neill; and in January 1990 by Foster M. Palmer. The collection was microfilmed as part of a Schlesinger Library/University Publications of America Project.
BIOGRAPHY
Suffragist Margaret Foley (one source only gives her the middle name Lillian) was born on March 19, 1875, in Dorchester, Mass., the daughter of Peter and Mary Foley. She had a sister Celia. MF grew up in Roxbury, then an Irish-American neighborhood, and graduated from Girls' High School in Boston. To finance voice lessons, MF worked in a union hat factory until a family matter called her to California and ended her aspirations as a singer. While in California she taught swimming and gymnastics at resorts. After MF returned to Boston she put her voice to work for the Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Association, which employed her from 1906 to 1915 as a speaker and manager of organization work. She was also active in the Margaret Brent Suffrage Guild, a Massachusetts Catholic organization, and was its state chairman of organization in 1919.

44. Somerville & Howorth : Biography, Scope And Content, Added Entries
Tilghman, 1896 Kendall, Mary Louise Kross, Anna Moscowitz Nugent, William Lewis,1832-1897 Rawalt, Marguerite, 1895- Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919 Smith, S
http://www.radcliffe.edu/schles/libcolls/mssarch/findaids/Somerville-H/SomervBio
A-50 SOMERVILLE-HOWORTH PAPERS, 1850-1974 2 cartons, 10 file boxes, 2 folio folders, 2 folio+ folders, 1 oversize folder, 2 supersize folders, 1 folio volume, 6 oversize volumes, 7 reels of microfilm Processed: 1979 Accession numbers: 52-60, 53-20, 54- 60, 54-73, 54-79, 55-75, 56-12, 56- By: Eva Moseley 30, 56-93, 57-17, 57-73, 57-83, 57-95, 59-22, 59-52, 118, 321, 375, 384, 426, 430, 448, 571, 574, 575, 577, 928, 1238, 74-97, 74-138 The Somerville-Howorth papers were given to the Schlesinger Library by Lucy (Somerville) Howorth beginning in 1952. Most of Series I and II was reprocessed in 1979 and microfilmed by the Northeast Document Conservation Center; this microfilm (M-52) is included in the Schlesinger Library/University Publications of America project. An expanded biography and scope and content note were added in October 1989 by Jane Ward. Addenda to the collection received since 1974 have not been processed and are not included in this inventory. BIOGRAPHY The Somerville-Howorth papers span six generations of Mississippi women, but are primarily the papers of Nellie (Nugent) Somerville (1863-1952) and her daughter, Lucy (Somerville) Howorth (1895- ). Nellie Nugent Somerville was born September 25, 1863, on a plantation in Mississippi; her father was serving in the Confederate Army at the time. Her mother died two years later, and her father was widowed again after a brief second marriage; NNS was raised primarily by her grandmother, S. Myra (Cox) Smith, until her father's third marriage in 1870. NNS spent two years at a Mississippi boarding school and graduated from Martha Washington College in Abingdon, Va., in 1880. She married Robert Somerville in 1885; they had four children: Robert, Abram, Eleanor, and Lucy. NNS became active in suffrage and temperance work in the early 1890s, becoming corresponding secretary of the Mississippi Woman's Christian Temperance Union in 1894 and organizing the Mississippi Woman Suffrage Association in 1897. By 1915 she was a vice president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. In 1923 she became the first woman to be elected to the Mississippi legislature, serving until 1927. NNS died in Mississippi in 1952. For additional biographical information, see Notable American Women: The Modern Period (Cambridge, Mass.: 1980), which also includes a list of sources. Lucy Somerville Howorth was born July 1, 1895, in Greenville, Miss., the youngest of the four children of Robert and Nellie Nugent Somerville. Educated at Randolph-Macon Woman's College, LSH did postgraduate work at Columbia University and received her J.D. from the University of Mississippi in 1922; she was admitted to the Mississippi bar the same year. LSH practiced law in Mississippi, 1922-34, and was admitted to the bar before the U.S. Supreme Court in 1934. In 1928 she married Joseph Marion Howorth; they had no children. LSH served as the chairman of the Mississippi State Board of Law Examiners, 1924-28; the U.S. commissioner of the Southern Judicial District of Mississippi, 1927-31; a member of the Mississippi state legislature, 1932-36; associate member of the Board of Veterans' Appeals, 1934-43; legislative attorney in Virginia, 1943-49; general counsel to the War Claims Commission, 1949-54; attorney, Commission on Government Security, 1956-57; and a member of the President's Commission on the Status of Women, 1962-63. She has maintained a private law practice in Mississippi since 1958. In 1977, LSH co-edited Dear Nellie: The Civil War Letters of William L. Nugent, correspondence between her maternal grandparents. LSH has been a member of the Federal Bar Association, the National Association of Women Lawyers, the Daughters of the American Revolution, the Mississippi Historical Society, and numerous other organizations. For additional biographical information, see Who's Who of American Women, 1987-88 (Wilmette, Ill., 1986). SCOPE AND CONTENT The collection includes biographical material, diaries, letters, speeches, memorabilia, clippings, and photographs, and is divided into five series. Only Series I and Series II were microfilmed in 1979, and only those two series are included in the SL/UPA microfilm. Series I, Genealogical and early family records, contains a genealogy of Nellie Nugent Somerville by Keith (Frazier) Somerville, daughter-in-law of NNS; the diaries (1852-68) of S. Myra (Cox) Smith, NNS's grandmother; correspondence between NNS's parents, Eleanor (Smith) Nugent and William L. Nugent; and miscellaneous family papers and newsclippings. Series II, Nellie Nugent Somerville, is divided into four sections: Biographical, Correspondence, Writings, and Organizations. The Biographical section (folders 19-24, vols. 7-18) contains scrapbooks of clippings by and about NNS, notebooks, and diaries. Correspondence (25-35) includes letters to and from family members, as well as from Anna Howard Shaw, James O. Eastland, the United Daughters of the Confederacy, the American Association of University Women, the Mississippi State Democratic Party, the Methodist Episcopal Church South, and the First Southern Methodist Church (Memphis). Also included here are letters of condolence to NNS's children after her death. Writings (36-49) includes ts. and ms. speeches and articles on such subjects as suffrage, religion, prohibition, and democracy, as well as letters to the editor. Organizations (50-69a+, vols. 19o-25) is arranged alphabetically, and contains material from the DAR, the Democratic National Convention of 1924, the Greenville M.E. Church Methodist Industrial Association, the Mississippi Woman Suffrage Association, NAWSA, and other organizations in which NNS was involved. Series III, Lucy Somerville Howorth, is divided into eight sections: 1. Biographical (71-96), including personal items, photographs, clippings, etc. of LSH. 2. Correspondence (97-117): letters from family members (including one folder of letters from NNS), and from others (arranged alphabetically by correspondent). 3. Legal Work and Women in the Law (118-129) includes work record books of LSH, and material from the Federal Bar Association, the National Association of Women Lawyers, the United Nations League of Lawyers, and other lawyers' organizations. 4. Organizations (130-147, alphabetical) includes minutes and some correspondence. 5. Business and Professional Women's Clubs (148-154) concerns the various state, national, and international branches of the Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs. 6. Speeches and Articles (155-222) is arranged chronologically. 7. Memorabilia (223-227af+, vol. 26o) contains invitations, souvenirs, dinner programs, clippings, a scrapbook, certificates, licenses, family trees, etc. 8. An eighth section (228-260) contains additional LSH speeches, articles, and correspondence, all arranged chronologically; these were received after Sections 1-7 were organized. Series IV, Other Family Members, contains clippings about LSH's two brothers, Robert and Abram Douglas, her sister-in-law, Keith (Frazier) Somerville, and the Shands family (NNS's granddaughters). Series V, Photographs, includes photos of NNS; her parents and earlier ancestors; her children, grandchildren, and great- grandchildren; and miscellaneous photos. Much of the material in the collection is accompanied by LSH's comments as to its value or the reason why it is included. Additional catalog entries. The following catalog entries represent persons, organizations, and topics documented in this collection. An entry for each appears in the Harvard On Line Library Information System (HOLLIS) and other automated bibliographic databases. American Association of University Women Bilbo, Theodore Gilmore, 1877-1947 Dewson, Mary Williams, 1874-1962 Donlon, Mary Edwards, India Harrison, Ella, 1859-1933 Howorth, Lucy (Somerville), 1895- Hughes, Sarah Tilghman, 1896- Kendall, Mary Louise Kross, Anna Moscowitz Nugent, William Lewis, 1832-1897 Rawalt, Marguerite, 1895- Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919 Smith, S. Myra (Cox), 1822-1887 Somerville, Keith (Frazier) Somerville, Nellie (Nugent), 1863-1952 Thomson, Amelia Lewis, 1799- United Daughters of the Confederacy Woodward, Ellen (Sullivan), 1887-1971 Assembly of Women's Organizations for National Security Buck, Pearl (Sydenstricker), 1892-1973 Business and Professional Women's Clubs of Jackson, Miss. Business and Professional Women's Clubs of Washington, D.C. Daughters of the American Revolution Democratic National Convention, 1924, New York, N.Y. Diaries Edwards, India Faulkner, William, 1897-1962 Genealogy Greenville (Miss.) First Methodist Episcopal Church Howorth, Lucy (Somerville), 1895- International Congress of Working Women International Council of Women International Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs Methodist ChurchMississippi Mississippi. House of Representatives MississippiSocial life and customs Mississippi Woman's Suffrage Association Mississippi Woman's Christian Temperance Union National American Woman Suffrage Association National Association of Women Lawyers National Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs Nugent, Eleanor Fulkerson (Smith), 1844-1866 Randolph-Macon Woman's College Temperance United StatesHistoryCivil War, 1861-1865Personal narratives, Confederate United StatesOfficials and employees United States Veterans Administration Woman's Centennial Congress, 1940 WomenSocieties and clubs WomenSouthern states WomenSuffrageMississippi WomenSuffrageUnited States Women in church workMississippi Women in politics Women in the civil serviceUnited States Women lawyersUnited States Young Women's Christian AssociationMississippi - Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Massachusetts

45. Lutz : Biography, Scope And Content, Added Entries
Rankin, Jeannette, 18801973 Sanger, Margaret (Higgins), 1879-1966 Severance, CarolineMaria (Seymour), 1820-1914 Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919 Sigourney, Lydia
http://www.radcliffe.edu/schles/libcolls/mssarch/findaids/Lutz/Lutzbio.html
A-110 ALMA LUTZ, 1890-1973 Collection, 1775-1943, n.y., n.d. 1 file box, 1 folio folder Reprocessed: January 1986 Accession numbers: 55-82, 56-89, 370, 430, 1164, By: Bert Hartry 70-12, 70-61 The papers in this collection were purchased by Alma Lutz and given to the Schlesinger Library in 1955, 1956, 1958, 1961, 1962, 1967, and 1970. The collection was reprocessed and microfilmed with the support of the Friends of the Schlesinger Library. BIOGRAPHY Alma Lutz became involved in the woman's suffrage movement when she returned home to North Dakota after graduating from Vassar College (1912). She continued to work for equal rights for women all her life and was the author of many articles and books, including Created Equal: A Biography of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Susan B. Anthony. AL was an active member of the National Woman's Party, the Massachusetts Committee for the Equal Rights Amendment, and many other organizations. During 1951-73 she served on the Advisory Committee of the Schlesinger Library. For additional biographical information, see MC 182, the Alma Lutz papers in the Schlesinger Library, and the AL biography file; see also Who Was Who in America (1974-76). SCOPE AND CONTENT This collection consists of letters, and a few other items, purchased by AL and reflects her interest in women in American history, particularly those active in the abolition and suffrage movements. The items in the collection are arranged alphabetically by writer, and chronologically when there is more than one item by the same writer. The inventory names the recipient of each letter, when known, and the index that follows the inventory includes the names of all recipients. In the inventory each letter except short notes, fragments valuable only as autographs, and items with trivial contents is described as follows: name or title of recipient, date, topics discussed. Letters of one or more pages with either the salutation or the signature missing have been listed as fragments. Dates and/or other information have been written on some items by persons unknown; some dates and other information have been supplied by researchers. In organizing the material the processor accepted and used this information. Everything added by the processor is in square brackets, but some dates and other information in square brackets were previously added by persons unknown. The bulk of the letters are ALsS (autograph letters signed); only a few are TLsS (typed letters signed). There are typed transcripts of some of the letters; these were prepared by persons unknown. Corrections, some by persons unknown, others by the processor, appear on many of these transcripts. The researcher is cautioned that the transcripts are not always accurate. Three folders of papers that were in A-110 (#64, 69-70) have been moved to MC 182. This material (mainly Florence Kitchelt and Rose Arnold Powell correspondence re: Equal Rights Amendment, National Woman's Party, and Susan B. Anthony) derives from Alma Lutz's work with the National Woman's Party rather than her autograph collecting. Two portions of the collection were previously filmed and have not been refilmed with this collection. The Lydia Maria Child letters (#8-9) were filmed as part of the microfiche edition of her correspondence (Kraus Microform, 1980), available at many libraries; at the Schlesinger Library the call number is Mf-3. (The folder numbers on the Child fiches are those of the original A-110 inventory.) The Mary Grew diary (in #12) was filmed as part of the History of Women microfilm project (Research Publications, Inc., 1976); the call number at the Schlesinger Library is M-59, reel 973, no. M13. Additional catalog entries (a card for each of the following appears in the card catalog): Adams, Abigail (Smith), 1744-1818 Adams, Hannah, 1755-1831 Addams, Jane, 1860-1935 Alcott, Louisa May, 1832-1888 Authors' Guild of American Women Avery, Rachel (Foster), 1858-1919 Barton, Clara, 1821-1912 Beecher, Catharine Esther, 1800-1878 Blackwell, Alice Stone, 1857-1950 Blackwell, Antoinette (Brown), 1825-1921 Blackwell, Elizabeth, 1821-1910 Blackwell, Henry Browne, 1825-1909 Bowring, Sir John, 1792-1872 Catt, Carrie (Lane) Chapman, 1859-1947 Chapman, Maria (Weston), 1806-1885 Child, Lydia Maria (Francis), 1802-1880 Comstock, Ada Louise, 1876-1973 Crandall, Prudence, 1803-1890 Dall, Caroline Wells (Healey), 1822-1912 Dodge, Mary Abigail [pseud. Gail Hamilton], 1833-1896 Elliott, Maud (Howe), 1854-1948 Fern, Fanny, see Parton, Sara Payson (Willis) Foster, Abigail (Kelley), 1810-1887 Fuller, Margaret, 1810-1850 Furness, William Henry, 1802-1896 Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879 Gerry, Elbridge, 1744-1814 Gilman, Charlotte Anna (Perkins) Stetson, 1860-1935 Grew, Mary, 1813-1896 Grimke, Sarah Moore, 1792-1873 Harper, Ida (Husted), 1859-1931 Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 1823-1911 Holley, Marietta, 1836-1926 Hooker, Isabella (Beecher), 1822-1907 Hopper, Isaac Tatem, 1771-1852 Hosmer, Harriet Goodhue, 1830-1908 Howe, Julia (Ward), 1819-1910 Hunt, Harriot Kezia, 1805-1875 Hutchinson, Abigail Jemima, 1829-1892 Johnson, Adelaide, 1859-1955 Johnson, Oliver, 1809-1889 Larcom, Lucy, 1824-1893 Lippincott, Sara Jane (Clarke), 1832-1904 Livermore, Mary Ashton (Rice), 1820-1905 Long, John Davis, 1838-1915 Longfellow, Alice Mary, 1850-1928 Love, Alfred Henry, 1830-1913 McKim, James Miller, 1810-1874 Martineau, Harriet, 1802-1876 Owen, Robert L Parton, Sara Payson (Willis), 1811-1872 Philleo, Prudence Crandall, see Crandall, Prudence Phillips, Wendell, 1811-1884 Pillsbury, Parker, 1809-1898 Prang, Mary Amelia (Dana) Hicks, 1836-1927 Purvis, Robert Rankin, Jeannette, 1880-1973 Sanger, Margaret (Higgins), 1879-1966 Severance, Caroline Maria (Seymour), 1820-1914 Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919 Sigourney, Lydia (Huntley), 1791-1865 Smith, Abigail (Adams), 1765-1813 Smith, Elizabeth Oakes (Prince), 1806-1893 Solis-Cohen, Solomon, 1857-1948 Stone, Lucy, 1818-1893 Wallace, Zerelda Gray (Sanders), 1817-1901 Warren, Mercy (Otis), 1728-1814 Washington, Booker Taliaferro, 1856-1915 Weld, Theodore Dwight, 1803-1895 Weston, Caroline Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892 Adams, John, 1735-1826 American Anti-Slavery Society Anthony, Susan Brownell, 1820-1906 Authors Baldwin, Hannah Baldwin, William Booth, Mary Louise, 1831-1889 Bowles, Ada Chastina, 1836-1928 Boyer, Ida Porter, 1859- ? Claflin, William, 1818-1905 Clarke, James Freeman, 1810-1888 Cleveland, Grover, 1837-1908 Colby, Clara Dorothy (Bewick), 1846-1916 Diaries Garrison, Francis Jackson, 1848-1916 Garrison, Helen Eliza (Benson), 1811-1876 Garrison, Wendell Phillips, 1840-1907 Greeley, Horace, 1811-1872 Lazarus, Emma, 1849-1887 Lecturers Loring, Ellis Gray, 1803-1858 May, Samuel Joseph, 1797-1871 Mott, Lucretia (Coffin), 1793-1880 Mott, Lydia Pankhurst, Christabel Harriette, 1880-1958 Pankhurst, Emmeline (Goulden), 1857-1928 Plummer, Charles H Sanborn, Franklin Benjamin, 1831-1917 Sargent, Mary Elizabeth (Fiske) SlaveryAnti-slavery movements Spiritualism Stanton, Elizabeth (Cady), 1815-1902 Suffrage Temperance Tubman, Harriet, -1913 Voyages and travels19th century Wallcut, Robert Folger Ward, William Hayes, 1835-1916 Wells, Charlotte (Fowler), 1814-1901 Whiting [Eliza Rose (Gray)?] Woman's ministerial conference Women's rights World's Anti-Slavery Convention, London, 1840 MICROFILM OF COLLECTION -The pages of some items were numbered by the processor (in square brackets) to aid the microfilmer, the proofreader, and researchers. Blank pages were not numbered. -All reels were proofread by the processor and corrections were made where necessary. These corrections may disrupt the sequence of frame numbers. -Some items in the collection were difficult to film due to such problems as flimsy paper with text showing through or faded or smudged writing. The film was carefully produced and proofread to insure that these items are as legible as possible. -There are some letters with the text on the two inside pages written in two different directions, and some letters that have the final lines of text and the signature on page one. In these cases letters were microfilmed as they appear; pages were not turned and first pages were not refilmed. REEL GUIDE For a list of the contents of A-110, see the inventory that follows. When requesting microfilm, please use the microfilm number and the reel number. For Mf-3, see The Collected Correspondence of Lydia Maria Child 1817-1880, Patricia G. Holland and Milton Meltzer, Editors, Kraus Microform, New York; the call number at the Schlesinger Library is 322.44/C53h. A-110 M-133,reel #1-7, 10-21.......................................A12 #22-30............................................A13 #8-9............................................Mf-3 #12 (Mary Grew diary only)...........M-59, reel 973,no.M13 - Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Massachusetts

46. Shaw, Anna Howard
Shaw, Anna Howard. 18471919, American woman-suffrage leader, b. England.She emigrated (1851) to the United States in early childhood
http://www.slider.com/enc/48000/Shaw_Anna_Howard.htm
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    Shaw, Anna Howard 1847-1919, American woman-suffrage leader, b. England. She emigrated (1851) to the United States in early childhood and grew up on a farm in Michigan. She received a degree in theology (1878) and one in medicine (1885) from Boston Univ. Although the Methodist Episcopal Church refused to allow her to preach, she was ordained (1880) by the Methodist Protestant denomination. She had filled several pastorates in Massachusetts when, in 1888, she met Susan B. Anthony and from then on devoted her life to working for woman suffrage. She was vice president at large (1892-1904) and president (1904-15) of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. In Anthony's last years, she was her constant associate. Dr. Shaw campaigned in every state where a suffrage measure was under consideration; she was one of the most effective speakers of the movement. See her autobiography
  • 47. "Michigan Stained Glass Census Featured Window Of The Month For June, 1998"
    Anna Howard Shaw (18471919), who grew up in Michigan near Big Rapids,was a Methodist minister, physician, and prominent Suffrage leader.
    http://museum.cl.msu.edu/museum/msgc/jun98.htm
    Michigan Stained Glass Census
    Window of the Month for June, 1998
    Christ Church Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills, MI
    Detail views of the "Women's Window," showing the two lower tiers and portraits of Woman Suffrage leaders.
    The great West Window or "Women's Window" at Christ Church Cranbrook depicts sixty women from biblical times to the 1920s, symbolizing women's contributions to church missions, social and humanitarian service, education, and the arts. The full-length figures are shown in sixteen panels arranged in four tiers, with each panel representing one area of women's contributions. Inscribed at the base of the window is a biblical quotation: "Her children rise up and call her blessed, and her works praise her in the gates" (Proverbs 31:28,31). Among the twenty American women pictured are Mary S. Francis, Julia C. Emery, Bertha Sabine and Anne C. Farthing, church missionaries; Maria Mitchell, astronomer and Vassar professor; Alice Freeman Palmer, President of Wellesley College; Mary Lyon, founder of Mount Holyoke College; Dr. Mary E. Glenton, missionary nurse to Alaska, China and North Carolina; Clara Barton, founder of the American Red Cross; Mary Cassatt, painter; Amy Lowell and Emily Dickinson, poets; Louisa May Alcott, novelist; Lucretia Coffin Mott, abolitionist and advocate of women's rights; Harriet Beecher Stowe, abolitionist writer; Dolly Madison, women's rights advocate; Susan B. Anthony, Anna Howard Shaw and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Woman Suffrage leaders; and Mary Anderson, actress.

    48. Index S
    Adrian, Michigan), 690 Shaw Family (Shiawassee County, Michigan), 689 Shaw, Alexander(18541892), 689 Shaw, Anna Howard (1847-1919), 65, 321 Shaw, Brackley
    http://www.si.umich.edu/HCHS/HCHS-GUIDE/indexS.html
    Introduction Help Index Guide HomePage
    [S] Index Terms
    Terms are presented in groups of approximately 20. The first short list of terms can be used to jump rapidly down the Index listing. Navigational links to return to the top of this Index are provided at the end of each group of Index terms. Individual citation numbers following Index terms provide links to the text of each citation. Sabin Sanford Schneider Sewage ... Surline Sabin, Marden, 667
    Sackner Foundation, 469
    Sager, Abram (1810-1877),
    Sager, Evie, 669
    Saginaw County Hospital,
    Saginaw County Medical Society, 239
    Saginaw County, Michigan,
    Saginaw Valley Medical College, 324
    Saginaw, Michigan,
    Saint Mary's Hospital, Grand Rapids, 491
    Sakada, Harry S., Saline Community Hospital, 808 Saline, Michigan, 310, 439 Salk polio vaccine, 273, Salk, Jonas (1914- ), 273 Salmonella typhosa, 245 Salt, iodization of, 177, Sample, Chester Harris (1850- ), 673 Sanatoria, Sanborn, ?, [Top of Index] Sanford, Amanda, 674 Sanford, Mrs. M. L., 674 Sanitarians, 915

    49. Anna
    Her life became the basis for The King and I. Anna Howard Shaw (18471919) Americanfeminist. Leader of the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
    http://www.geocities.com/edgarbook/names/a/anna.html

    50. Free Biography E-Books
    Biography Story of a Pioneer, The. Shaw, Anna Howard, 18471919 Women Suffrage Story of Burnt Njal the great. Biography
    http://www.usmchq.com/ebookcategories/biography.htm
    Marines, USMC Families, and Marine Corps Organizations Online Free Biography e-Books Community Features: Marine Corps Chat USMC Book Club Free Marine Web Sites Directory Search USMChq Books Search USMChq Books: U.S. Marine Reading List By Series Commandant's Favorites Heritage Series Small Wars Sinews of War ... Create An Ebook FREE e-Books Over 2,500 Free e-Books! Download eBook Reader Biography Children's Classics Classics ... All Books We've partnered with the leading eBook software provider, E-Book Systems, to allow you a way to easily create, share and publish your own eBooks on your Free Websites! FlipBrowser™ incorporates E-Book Systems' patented Digital Flip technology to display regular web pages formatted in HTML and Open Electronic Book (OEB) format. FlipBrowser™ requires Windows 95/98/2000/NT 4.0 and

    51. Clay (Laura) Photographic Collection
    Party (US) Episcopal ChurchKentucky Kentucky Equal Rights Association League ofWomen Voters (US) Politicians Shaw, Anna Howard, 18471919 Temperance Upton
    http://digilib.kyvl.org/dynaweb/oak/kukead/kukavead/pa46m4/@Generic__BookTextVie
    Clay (Laura) Photographic Collection
    Controlled Access Terms
    Controlled Access Terms
    Addams, Jane, 1860-1935
    Anthony, Susan B. (Susan Brownell), 1820-1906
    Catt, Carrie Chapman, 1859-1947
    Clay, Laura, 1849-1941
    Democratic Party (U.S.)
    Episcopal ChurchKentucky
    Kentucky Equal Rights Association
    League of Women Voters (U.S.)
    Politicians
    Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919
    Temperance
    Upton, Harriett Taylor, 1854-1945
    Woman's Club of Central Kentucky
    Women's rightsUnited StatesHistory
    Women in politicsKentucky
    WomenKentuckySocieties and clubs
    WomenSuffrageUnited States
    WomenSuffrageKentucky

    52. Index
    Sharp, William (18551905) Life of Robert Browning Shaw, Anna Howard(1847-1919) The Story of A Pioneer Shaw, George Bernard (1856
    http://www.changanyouth.xahu.edu.cn/pages/novel/S/
    English Classics 3000 S ( Listed by Author )

    53. Bacon & Dear
    Anna Howard Shaw (18471919) Reformer, physician, and preacher. Aspresident of the National Woman Suffrage Association (1904-1915
    http://www.baconanddear.com/imm-famous/s.php

    ImmFamous Home
    Names:
    Brief biographies of 163 immigrants, with selected illustrations. If you're looking for a specific name you can go there now:
    A
    B C D ... Fields
    Immigrants grouped by
    fields of endeavor:
    The Arts

    Public Affairs

    Physical Sciences

    Social Sciences
    ... Countries
    Immigrants listed by country of birth: Austria Belgium Canada Chile ... West Indies
    S
    INDUCTEES
    Eero Saarinen Architect who gained fame for his imaginative, varied designs. Born in Finland. His works ranged from rectangular steel and glass (General Motors Technical Center near Detroit) to flowing masses of reinforced concrete (TWA Terminal at Kennedy Airport in New York City). He and his father, Eliel, himself a distinguished architect, settled in the U.S. in 1923. Saarinen gained recognition in 1948 when his design of the Gateway Arch for St. Louis won first prize in a national competition. Among his other works are the MIT Auditorium, Dulles International Airport, and the CBS Building in New York City. The stainless-steel Gateway Arch designed by Aeero Saarinen rises 630 feet above the St. Louis riverfront as symbol of the city's role as the gateway to the West.

    54. Authors S-U
    18631941 Sewell, Anna, 1820-1878 Sewell, Robert, 1845-1925 Shakespeare, William,1564-1616 Sharp, William, 1855-1905 Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919 Shaw, George
    http://www.worldwide-library.co.uk/Authors/s-u.htm
    Home Author Title Topic ... Book Club The Worldwide Library making e-books available to everyone worldwide without charge now. WWL Author Index Start A B C ... Z
    S
    Sabatini, Rafael, 1875-1950
    Saint-Simon, Louis de Rouvroy, duc de, 1675-1755
    Saki, 1870-1916 AKA: Munro, Hector Hugh, 1870-1916
    Salza, Giuseppe
    Sand, George, 1804-1876
    Sands, George W., ca. 1824-1874
    Sanger, Margaret, 1879-1966
    Sangster, Margaret E. (Margaret Elizabeth), 1894-1981
    Saunders, Marshall, 1861-1947
    Savage, Ernest Albert, 1877-1966
    Scavezze, Dan Schiller, Friedrich, 1759-1805 Schiller, Johann Christoph Friedrich von, 1759-1805 Schreiner, Olive, 1855-1920 AKA: Iron, Ralph, 1855-1920 Schwartau, Winn Scott, Leroy, 1875-1929 Scott, Walter Dill, 1869-1955 Scott, Walter, Sir, 1771-1832 Scully, W. C. (William Charles), 1855-1943 Seeger, Alan, 1888-1916 Seneca, Lucius Annaeus, ca. 55 B.C.-ca. 39 A.D Service, Robert W. (Robert William), 1874-1958 Seton, Ernest Thompson, 1860-1946 Severy, Melvin Linwood, 1863- Seward, Albert Charles, Sir, 1863-1941

    55. Brooklyn Public Library /All Locations
    1952 1 Shaw, Amanda (Fictitious character) Fiction. 1999 1 Shaw, Angela Lansbury,1925 See Lansbury, Angela, 1925- 1 Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919.
    http://catalog.brooklynpubliclibrary.org:90/kids/1899,1927/search/dShaw, Bernard
    KEYWORD AUTHOR TITLE SUBJECT Mark Nearby SUBJECTS are: Year Entries Shaw, Alexander, d. 1902. Shaw, Amanda (Fictitious character) Fiction. Shaw, Angela Lansbury, 1925- See Lansbury, Angela, 1925-
    Shaw, Anna Howard, 1847-1919.

    Shaw, Artie, 1910-
    Shaw, Ava Gardner, 1922- See Gardner, Ava, 1922-
    Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950.

    Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950 Appreciation Europe.
    Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950. Arms and the man. ...
    Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950. Arms and the man Criticism and interpretation.
    Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950. Bernard Shaw's Arms and the man See Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950. Arms and the man
    Shaw, Bernard, 1856-1950 Bibliography.

    56. Great Women Get Thxeir Due
    The Rev. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw (18471919) Women's suffrage leader; first womanordained by the Protestant Methodist Church. Ida Tarbell (1857-1944).
    http://csmweb2.emcweb.com/durable/2000/10/03/p14s1.htm
    Monitor Site Map @csmonitor.com About Us/Help Advertising Christian Science Article Archive AP's The WIRE Crossword puzzle Forums (join in!) Home International News Links Library News In Brief Subscriptions US News Weekly News Quiz
    TUESDAY, OCTOBER 03, 2000
    e-mail
    this story to a friend
    FEATURES, LEARNING
    Great women get their due The National Women's Hall of Fame, in Seneca Falls, N.Y., will induct 19 American women into the Hall on Saturday. Four of these women were active in education and research: Faye Glenn Abdellah (1919- ) Nurse researcher; her work has altered modern nursing theory and practice. Sylvia Earle (1935- ) Marine scientist, undersea explorer, and founder of Deep Ocean Engineering. Frances Kathleen Oldham Kelsey (1914- ) Medical researcher. Sophia Smith (1796-1870) Benefactor and founder of Smith College. The other women who will be inducted are: Emma Smith DeVoe (1848-1927) A women's suffrage activist. Marjory Stoneman Douglas (1890-1998) An environmentalist who led the campaign to establish Everglades National Park. Marjory Stoneman Douglas (1890-1998)
    AL DIAZ/AP Mary Barret Dyer (unknown-1660) Defied Puritan church to gain religious freedom for Quakers and others.

    57. FUMC United Methodist Women
    Circles of the UMW. Anna Howard Shaw Named for Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919),reformer, physician, Methodist minister, lecturer, suffragist.
    http://www.fumcwl.org/umw.htm
    FUMC 's United Methodist Women is a 5-Star Unit. This means we give through five channels of undesignated giving, allowing money to be used where it's most needed. Those channels are: Pledge to Mission, Special Mission Recognition, Gift to Mission, Gift in Memory, and World Thank Offering. Participation is organized by Circles, a small group concept offering both fellowship and focused Christian service.
    Circles of the UMW
    Anna Howard Shaw - Named for Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919), reformer, physician, Methodist minister, lecturer, suffragist. Meetings include fellowship and self-directed study on a wide variety of religious topics. Contact: Nancy Wagner, 447-3864. Meet: 7:30 PM, 3rd Wednesday in FUMC Parlor. Mary-Martha - Name chosen from the scriptures. Activities include field trips, mission studies, fellowship, program, business, and devotions. Contact: Ruth Everett,497-7307, or Vicki Johnson, 463-3725. Meet: 1:00 PM, 3rd Wednesday in FUMC Parlor. Ruth Jordan - Named for Ruth Jordan, FUMC member, daughter of a Methodist minister, and faculty member in the Home Economics Department at Purdue in the 1940's. Ms. Jordan and a colleague developed the "miracle master mix". She revived the Weslyan Service Guild, which then grew to include about thirty members from FUMC, Home Economics Extension, university library and several teachers. Meetings include fellowship, program, business, and devotions. Contact: Frances Lutes, 765-379-3151. Meet: 1:30 PM, 2nd Wednesday in FUMC Parlor.

    58. Www.mith2.umd.edu/WomensStudies/ReadingRoom/History/WOAH/95-02/02-23-95
    0223-95 Women of Achievement and Herstory One of the eloquent orators on behalfof women's suffrage and rights, Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919) was one of Susan B
    http://www.mith2.umd.edu/WomensStudies/ReadingRoom/History/WOAH/95-02/02-23-95
    02-23-95 Women of Achievement and Herstory One of the eloquent orators on behalf of women's suffrage and rights, Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919) was one of Susan B. Anthony's closest associates. She headed the women's suffrage movement in 1904-15 between the terms of Carrie Chapmen Catt. Many masculists and HIStorians attempt to paint the leaders of the women's rights and suffrage movement as elitist and not representative of the "common woman." Balderdash. Let us quote from Ms. Shaw's autobiography of when she was 12 in 1859, a far cry from the cleaned up versions of her life you read in biographical sketches: "We all had an idea that we were going to a farm (in Michigan), and we expected some resemblance at least to the prosperous farms we had seen in New England. What we found awaiting us were the four walls and the roof of a good-sized log house, standing in a small cleared strip of the wilderness, its doors and windows represented by square holes, (its floor was only untamped dirt) the whole effect achingly forlorn and desolate.... and I shall never forget the look my mother turned upon the place .... something within her seemed to give way, and she sank upon the ground. "She could not realize even then, I think, that this was really the place father had PREPARED for us, that here he expected us to live (alone, without him). When she finally took it in, she buried her face in her hands, and in that way she sat for hours without moving or speaking. We stood around her in a frightened group, talking to one another in whispers. Our little world had crumbled under our feet. Never before had we seen our mother give way to despair. "Night began to fall. The woods became alive with night creatures, ... and we children whimpered around her, our mother still sat in her strange lethargy. "(While her 20-year old brother) was picketing the horses and building his protecting fires my mother, came to herself, but her face never lost the deep lines those first hours of her pioneer life had cut upon it.' >> Ms. Shaw's recitation to be continued tomorrow, another chapter of what they don't teach you in school ...

    59. Www.mith2.umd.edu/WomensStudies/ReadingRoom/History/WOAH/95-02/02-24-95
    0224-95 Women of Achievement and Herstory We continued with Part 2 of excerpts fromthe autobiography of women's rights pioneer Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919).
    http://www.mith2.umd.edu/WomensStudies/ReadingRoom/History/WOAH/95-02/02-24-95

    60. General Resources: Virtual Libraries
    slavery; Arthur Ransome, Russia in 1919; Samuel Smiles (18121904), SelfHelp; Anna Howard Shaw (1847-1919), The Story of a Pioneer; Helen
    http://www.york.ac.uk/depts/hist/library/internet/general/virtual.shtml
    3. Virtual libraries:
    General
    Logos: texts in many languages [extensive library]:
    http://www.logos.it/literature/literaturewaa.html
    The On-Line Books Page [extensive links to variety of e-texts]:
    http://digital.library.upenn.edu/books/
    FRA Bibliotheque nationale de France: Gallica catalogue [large archive of facsimile texts (Acrobat), includes Latin (e.g. Rolls Series) and other non-French material as well as French texts]:
    http://catalognum2.bnf.fr/html/i-frames.htm
    Texts in English
    The Oxford Text Archive [extensive archive of e-texts]:
    http://ota.ahds.ac.uk/
    Project Gutenberg e-texts (English), include:
    • Richard de Bury (1287-1345) Philobiblon (Love of Books) Augsburg Confession, 1530 Thomas Huxley, Autobiography and Selected Essays Andrew Dickson White, Autobiography Benjamin Franklin, Autobiography Charles Darwin, Autobiography John of Damascus, Barlaam and Ioasaph Henry Ossian Flipper, The Colored Cadet at West Point.[autobiography] Arthur Ransome, The Crisis in Russia Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy In America Gerald of Wales, The Description of Wales

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