Box 1
Contains 38 Results:
Correspondence, 1886 - 1887
Includes a letter from D. A. Pennock describing a meeting with Susan B. Anthony as well as updates to various publications. Correspondents include D.E. Collins, Amanda Sanford Hickey, H. Hussey, Lydia King, Carrie Lacy, Mary Reed, Anna Searing, Harriette Shattuck, and Charlotte Smith, among others.
Correspondence, 1888 - 1889
Includes photocopy of a pledge against alcohol and narcotics, signed by Howland and many others. Correspondents include Amanda Sanford Hickey, Lydia King, Mary Reed, Anna Searing, and Alfreda Bosworth Withington, among others.
Correspondence, 1890
Includes photocopy of the Call for the First Woman Suffrage Convention in Washington Twenty-One Years Since. Correspondents include Elizabeth Comstock, Phebe Frost, Lydia King, R.J. Laws, Mary Reed, S. Searing, Mary Taliaferro, and Sidney Taliaferro, among others
Correspondence, 1891
Includes a letter from Elizabeth Comstock talking about society and Pandita Ramabai (January 30), letters from African American individuals seeking aid for housing or schools, and letters mentioning suffrage meetings. Correspondents include R.J. Laws, John Taliaferro, Anna Searing, Sarah Dolley, Ellen O'Connor, Alfreda Bosworth Withington, and Phebe Coffin, among others.
Correspondence, 1892
Includes a letter from Alfreda Withington describing recent medical cases and life as a woman physician (February 4), and many letters discussing women's suffrage. Correspondents include Alfreda Bosworth Withington, Anna Searing, D.E. Colins, W.D. Laws, Bettie Urquhart, and Sallie Holley, among others.
Correspondence, 1893
Many letters discuss women's suffrage events and ideas. Includes a photocopy of a letter from Susan B. Anthony (July 22). Correspondents include Catherine Helen Spence, Anna Searing, Mary F. Eastman, Eliza Wright Osborne, Bettie Urquhart, A. Gertrude Flanders, Sallie Holley, Amanda T. Jones, Clara Bewick Colby, and Jane Slocum, among others.
Correspondence, 1894
Correspondence, 1895
Many letters discuss women's suffrage events and ideas. Correspondents include Jean Greenleaf, Mrs. E.G. Draper (Sister Charlotte), T. Taliaferro, and Zobedia Allemen, among others.