Created equal : a biography of Elizabeth Cady Stanton 1815-1902 / by Alma Lutz.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York, NY : The John Day Company, [c1940]Description: xi, 345 pages : illustrations ; 22 cmOther title:
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton 1815-1902 Created equal [Spine title]
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 920.7
LOC classification:
  • JK 1899 .S7 L88 1940
Online resources:
Contents:
I. "A defect of sex" -- II. Peterboro and Henry B. Stanton -- III. Lucretia Mott -- IV. Johnstown, Boston, and Seneca Falls -- V. The first women's rights convention -- VI. Amelia Bloomer and the "Lily" -- VII. The bloomer costume -- VIII. Susan B. Anthony -- IX. Before the New York legislature -- X. Seven children -- XI. That dangerous subject, divorce -- XII. War turns back the clock -- XIII. The Negro's hour -- XIV. A ray of hope in Kansas -- XV. The "revolution" -- XVI. A woman suffrage amendment -- XVII. The parting of the ways -- XVIII. The lecture crusade -- XIX. Victoria Woodhull and the Beecher-Tilton case -- XX. Militancy -- XXI. "The History of Woman Suffrage" -- XXII. France and England -- XXIII. Suffragists unite -- XXIV. Writing and thinking -- XXV. "The Woman's Bible" -- XXVI. "The grand old woman of America" -- Chronology
Summary: "The interesting story of one of the leaders in the early fight for woman's place in the sun. Elizabeth Stanton was a successful wife and mother, but she found time to be in the thick of every fight of her day for women's right's rights, --in education, in business, in politics, in human relations, before the law and before society. She was for fifty years, a close friend and co-worker of Susan B. Anthony. She was a grand human being, and her biographer brings her to life in these pages." -- ttps://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/a/alma-lutz/created-equal-a-biography-of-elizabeth-cady-sta/
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"Published in celebration of the seventy-fifth anniverary of Vassar College and in honor of Henry Noble MacCracken in the twenty-fifth year of his presidency."

We discarded the physical item due to condition, but kept the record for the electronic link.

Includes bibliography (pages 327-330) and index.

I. "A defect of sex" -- II. Peterboro and Henry B. Stanton -- III. Lucretia Mott -- IV. Johnstown, Boston, and Seneca Falls -- V. The first women's rights convention -- VI. Amelia Bloomer and the "Lily" -- VII. The bloomer costume -- VIII. Susan B. Anthony -- IX. Before the New York legislature -- X. Seven children -- XI. That dangerous subject, divorce -- XII. War turns back the clock -- XIII. The Negro's hour -- XIV. A ray of hope in Kansas -- XV. The "revolution" -- XVI. A woman suffrage amendment -- XVII. The parting of the ways -- XVIII. The lecture crusade -- XIX. Victoria Woodhull and the Beecher-Tilton case -- XX. Militancy -- XXI. "The History of Woman Suffrage" -- XXII. France and England -- XXIII. Suffragists unite -- XXIV. Writing and thinking -- XXV. "The Woman's Bible" -- XXVI. "The grand old woman of America" -- Chronology

"The interesting story of one of the leaders in the early fight for woman's place in the sun. Elizabeth Stanton was a successful wife and mother, but she found time to be in the thick of every fight of her day for women's right's rights, --in education, in business, in politics, in human relations, before the law and before society. She was for fifty years, a close friend and co-worker of Susan B. Anthony. She was a grand human being, and her biographer brings her to life in these pages." -- ttps://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/a/alma-lutz/created-equal-a-biography-of-elizabeth-cady-sta/

From the library of Roscoe and Oletta Proctor.

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