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LEADER 00000cam a2200781 i 4500 
001    on1086503544 
003    OCoLC 
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019    1256678623 
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035    (OCoLC)1086503544|z(OCoLC)1256678623 
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072  7 POL|x008000|2bisacsh 
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082 00 324.6/230973|223 
245 04 The women's suffrage movement /|cedited with an 
       introduction by Sally Roesch Wagner ; foreword by Gloria 
       Steinem. 
264  1 [New York, New York] :|bPenguin Books,|c2019. 
264  4 |c©2019 
300    1 online resource (xxxiii, 519 pages) 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    computer|bc|2rdamedia 
338    online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 
340    |gpolychrome|2rdacc 
347    text file|2rdaft 
504    Includes bibliographical references. 
505 0  Women voted before the United States was formed -- Women 
       organized before Seneca Falls -- The 1850s : the movement 
       takes off -- The 1860s : in full stride, the war's setback,
       and regrouping after -- The 1870s : a decade of progress, 
       loss, and refining tactics -- "The centennial year-1876," 
       history of woman suffrage -- The 1880s : a decade of 
       progress and danger -- The 1890s : suffrage victories and 
       moral decay -- The 1900s : consolidating power -- 1910 : 
       nearing the finish line for suffrage -- 1920 : the final 
       victory. 
505 8  I. WOMEN VOTED BEFORE THE UNITED STATES WAS FORMED  -- 1. 
       "The Remnant of the Five Nations,"by Matilda Joslyn Gage, 
       the (New York) Evening Post, ,September 24, 1875  -- 2. 
       Woman, Church and State, by Matilda Joslyn Gage, 1893  -- 
       3. "Indian Citizenship," by Matilda Joslyn Gage, National 
       Citizen and Ballot Box, May 1878  -- 4. "The Matriarchate,
       or Mother-Age," by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, February 1891  
       -- 5. "The Legal Condition of Indian Women," Alice 
       Fletcher's speech at the 1888 International Council of 
       Women  -- 6. "The Rights and Condition of Women," sermon 
       by Samuel J. May, November 1845  -- II. WOMEN ORGANIZED 
       BEFORE SENECA FALLS  -- 1. "Preceding Causes," by Matilda 
       Joslyn Gage, published in History of Woman Suffrage, 
       volume I, 1881  -- 2. Mary Grew's report of the second 
       Female Anti-Slavery Society national convention, 1838  -- 
       3. Laura Lovell's report of the second Female Anti-Slavery
       Society convention, 1838  -- 4. An Appeal to American 
       Women, on Prejudice Against Color, 1839  -- 5. Angelina 
       Grimke's address to the Massachusetts Legislature, 1838  -
       - 6. Judge Hertell's defense of his Married Women's 
       Property Bill, 1836  -- 7. Declaration of Sentiments 
       adopted at Seneca Falls convention, 1848  -- 8. "The Times
       that Try Men's Souls," by Maria Weston Chapman, 1837  -- 
       9. Lucretia Mott on the Seneca Falls convention, from 
       letter to the Liberator, August 24, 1848  -- 10. Lucretia 
       Mott on the Seneca, from letter to the Liberator, August 
       24, 1848  -- III. THE 1850s: The Movement Takes Off  -- 1.
       Abby H. Price's speech at the first national woman's 
       rights convention, in 1850  -- 2. Ernestine Rose's speech 
       at the 1851 National Woman's Rights Convention in 
       Worcester, Massachusetts  -- 3. New York State 
       Legislature's Select Committees' February 20, 1854, 
       response to a petition signed by 5,931 men and women, 
       calling for the "just and equal rights of women"  -- 4. 
       Lucy Stone's comments at the 1852 National Woman's Rights 
       Convention regarding taxation  -- 5. The New York 
       Tribune's reporting on Harriot Hunt's tax protest, and her
       letter to the Boston authorities, November 16, 1853  -- 6.
       Elizabeth Cady Stanton on "the Bloomer costume" in her 
       "Reminiscences," published in History of Woman Suffrage, 
       volume I, 1881  -- 7. Public letter by Gerrit Smith to 
       Elizabeth Cady Stanton criticizing her for giving up the 
       reform dress, dated December 1, 1855, referenced in 
       "Reminiscences"  -- 8. Public letter by Elizabeth Cady 
       Stanton to Gerrit Smith as counterargument, December 21, 
       1855  -- 9. Dress reformers criticize suffragists for 
       abandoning the movement in a New York Tribune article, 
       January 20, 1857  -- 10. Speech by "Mrs. Branch" on Free 
       Love printed in the Syracuse Standard, July 1858  -- 
505 8  IV. THE 1860s: In Full Stride, the War's Setback, and 
       Regrouping After  -- 1. "Appeal to the Women of New York 
       and Petition" from Elizabeth Cady Stanton, President; 
       Lydia Mott, Secretary and Treasurer; Ernestine L. Rose; 
       Martha C. Wright; and Susan B. Anthony, on behalf of the 
       New York State Woman Suffrage Committee, November ...  -- 
       2. "Marriage and Divorce," Elizabeth Cady Stanton's letter
       to Horace Greeley, the editor of the New York Tribune, May
       8, 1860  -- 3. Horace Greeley's response in the New York 
       Tribune, May 14, 1860  -- 4. The History of Woman Suffrage
       editors' conclusion to the divorce debate between 
       Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Horace Greeley in the New York 
       Tribune  -- 5. Angelina Grimke Weld's speech at the 
       Woman's Loyal National League convention, May 1863  -- 6. 
       The Woman's Loyal National League petitions presented to 
       Congress on February 9, 1864, calling for an end to the 
       institution of slavery  -- 7. Elizabeth Cady Stanton's 
       follow-up petition call of April 7, 1864, on behalf of the
       Woman's Loyal National LeagueSusan B. Anthony's proposal 
       for the creation of an organization to work for universal 
       suffrage at the eleventh National Woman's Rights Co...  --
       8. Susan B. Anthony's proposal for the creation of an 
       organization to work for universal suffrage at the 
       eleventh National Woman's Rights Convention, held May 10, 
       1866  -- 9. Susan E. Wattles's letter to Susan B. Anthony 
       on Kansas's struggle to become a free (non-slave) state 
       and achieve universal suffrage, December 30, 1881  -- 10. 
       Elizabeth Cady Stanton's editorials opposing the Fifteenth
       Amendment in the Revolution, October 21, 1869, and June 3,
       1869  -- 11. The Revolution's reporting of the first 
       National Woman's Suffrage Convention, held in Washington 
       in January 1869  -- 12. The American Equal Rights 
       Association's debate on the Fifteenth Amendment, May 1869 
       -- V. THE 1870S: A Decade of Progress, Loss, and Refining 
       Tactics  -- 1. "Child-Birth Made Easy," by Dr. Clemence S.
       Lozier, 1870  -- 2. The St. Louis Resolutions proposed by 
       Francis Minor and adopted by the NWSA, October 1869  -- 3.
       "Woman's Rights Catechism," by Matilda Joslyn Gage, 1871  
       -- 4. "Woman Suffrage. The Argument of Carrie S. Burnham 
       before Chief Justice Reed, and Associate Justices Agnew, 
       Sharswood and Mercur of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania,
       on the Third and Fourth of April, 1878"  -- 5. Victoria C.
       Woodhull, "And the Truth Shall Make You Free," speech, 
       Steinway Hall, November 20, 1871  -- 6. Dr. Clemence S. 
       Lozier, president of the New York Woman Suffrage 
       Association, call for a mass tax protest meeting, 1873  --
       7. Matilda Joslyn Gage's argument against the Supreme 
       Court decision in Minor v. Happersett at the 1875 NWSA 
       convention  -- 8. Matilda Joslyn Gage's description of the
       NWSA 1876 Centennial protest, chapter XXVII, "The 
       Centennial Year--1876," History of Woman Suffrage  -- 9. 
       The minority report of the Senate Committee on Privileges 
       and Elections, February 1, 1879  -- 10. Resolutions 
       adopted by the National Woman Suffrage Association 
       convention, May 1878  -- 
505 8  VI. THE 1880S: A Decade of Progress and Danger  -- 1. 
       Report of the House of Representatives Special Committee 
       on Woman Suffrage, March 1, 1883  -- 2. Summary of Belva 
       Lockwood's speech at the January 1878 NWSA convention  -- 
       3. Platform of the National Equal Rights Party, 1884  -- 
       4. Clara Foltz, "Testimony of an Eye-Witness," 1885  -- 5.
       Discussion by NWSA members of Elizabeth Cady Stanton's 
       church accountability resolution in the 1886 NWSA 
       convention  -- 6. "Persons and Things," Matilda Joslyn 
       Gage article in her National Citizen and Ballot Box, 1881 
       -- 7. Clara Bewick Colby, "The Relation of the Woman 
       Suffrage Movement to the Labor Question," NWSA convention,
       1886, as edited in History of Woman Suffrage (and 
       Resolutions)  -- 8. Lillie Devereux Blake, president of 
       the New York City Suffrage Association, description of the
       1886 protest at the unveiling of the Statue of Liberty, in
       the Woman's Journal  -- 9. "Our New York Letter," Lillie 
       Devereux Blake's description of the 1887 Constitution 
       centennial protest  -- 10. Excerpt from Lillie Devereux 
       Blake lecture "Is It a Crime to Be a Woman?," published in
       the San Jose Daily, July 27, 1888  -- 11. Matilda Joslyn 
       Gage, A Statement of Facts. Private. To members of the 
       National Woman Suffrage Association Only, 1889  -- VII. 
       THE 1890S: Suffrage Victories and Moral Decay  -- 1. 
       "Woman's Imperative Duty," an address by Elizabeth Cady 
       Stanton upon her eightieth birthday, November 12, 1895  --
       2. Susan B. Anthony's speech during The Woman's Bible 
       debate in the National American Woman Suffrage Association
       1895 convention  -- 3. The Woman's Bible Introduction, by 
       Elizabeth Cady Stanton and the Revising Committee, 1898  -
       - 4. Letter of support for Moses Harman by Alice Stone 
       Blackwell, associate editor of the Woman's Journal, 1894  
       -- 5. "The Co-Operative Ideal Will Remodel Codes and 
       Constitutions," a letter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton to a 
       Woman Suffrage Convention, 1898  -- VIII. THE 1900s: 
       Consolidating Power  -- 1. Lillie Devereux Blake Diary 
       entries selected from January 23 to March 28, 1900  -- 2. 
       Laura Peters letter to Lillie Devereux Blake, January 18, 
       1900  -- 3. "Educated Suffrage," Elizabeth Cady Stanton's 
       last speech, read by Clara Colby at the 1902 NAWSA 
       convention, excerpted in History of Woman Suffrage, volume
       5  -- 4. NAWSA board of officers' response to an 
       accusation by the New Orleans Times-Democrat that the 
       suffragists were encouraging racial equality, signed Susan
       B. Anthony, Carrie Chapman Catt, Anna Howard Shaw, Kate 
       Gordon, and Alice Stone Blackwell, 1902  -- 5. Reverend 
       Anna Howard Shaw in her autobiography, The Story of a 
       Pioneer, recalled how she handled the repeated query about
       the "color question" at the 1903 NAWSA convention  -- 6. 
       Ida B. Wells, in this excerpt from her autobiography, 
       Crusade for Justice, recalls an 1894 visit with Susan B. 
       Anthony  -- 7. "The Modern City and the Municipal 
       Franchise for Women," Jane Addams's speech at the 1906 
       NAWSA convention  -- 8. Fannie Williams's eulogy to Susan 
       B. Anthony at the 1907 NAWSA convention, excerpted in 
       History of Woman Suffrage, volume 5  -- 9. Anthony's 
       report for the Congressional Committee at the 1900 NAWSA 
       convention explaining why Congress had not acted favorably
       on the woman suffrage amendment  -- 10. Ida Craddock's 
       suicide note extracted, 1902  -- IX. 1910: Nearing the 
       Finish Line for Suffrage  -- 1. "Suffragette Tells of 
       Forcible Feeding," the New York Times, February 18, 1910  
       -- 2. Report of Emmeline Pankhurst's speech at the 1911 
       NAWSA convention in History of Woman Suffrage, volume 5  -
       - 3. Speech of Margaret Hinchey, a laundry worker, at the 
       1913 NAWSA convention  -- 4. Anna Howard Shaw's speech at 
       the 1913 NAWSA convention  -- 5. Helen Hamilton Gardener's
       1913 speech to the House of Representatives calling for 
       the establishment of a Committee on Woman Suffrage  -- 6. 
       Carrie Chapman Catt, Address to the Congress on Women's 
       Suffrage, November 1917  -- 7. "Woman Suffrage and the 
       Fifteenth Amendment," by Mary Church Terrell, published in
       The Crisis, August 1915  -- 8. "Arrest 41 Pickets for 
       Suffrage at the White House," the New York Times, November
       11, 1917  -- 9. "Woman Suffrage and the Negro," by A. 
       Philip Randolph, the Messenger, November 1917  -- X. 1920:
       The Final Victory  -- 1. "The Story of the 36th State," 
       Harriet Taylor Upton in the Headquarters News Bulletin, 
       September 1, 1920  -- Afterword: Now That Our Journey Is 
       at an End. 
506 1  Concurrent user level: 1 user 
520    Anthology "comprised of historical texts spanning two 
       centuries with commentary on each period by the editor, 
       this book covers the major issues and figures involved in 
       the women's suffrage movement with a special focus on 
       diversity, incorporating race, class, and gender. The 
       writings of such figures as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and 
       Susan B. Anthony are featured alongside accounts of Native
       American women and African American suffragists such as 
       Sarah Mapps Douglas and Harriet Purvis"--|cProvided by 
       publisher. 
588    Description based on online resource; title from digital 
       title page (viewed on November 26, 2019). 
650  0 Women|xSuffrage|zUnited States.|0https://id.loc.gov/
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650  0 Women|xSuffrage|zUnited States|0https://id.loc.gov/
       authorities/subjects/sh2010118822|vSources.|0https://
       id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2002012007 
650  0 Women's rights|zUnited States|xHistory.|0https://
       id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2010119110 
650  0 Women's rights|zUnited States|0https://id.loc.gov/
       authorities/subjects/sh85147769|vSources.|0https://
       id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2002012007 
650  7 Women|xSuffrage.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/
       1176996 
650  7 Women's rights.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/
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650  7 POLITICAL SCIENCE|xPolitical Process|xElections.|2bisacsh 
650  7 History.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/958235 
650  7 POLITICAL SCIENCE|xPolitical Process|xGeneral.|2bisacsh 
650  7 Women.|2homoit|0https://homosaurus.org/v3/homoit0001509 
650  7 Womyn.|2homoit|0https://homosaurus.org/v3/homoit0001516 
651  7 United States.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/1204155
655  0 Electronic books. 
655  7 Sources.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/1423900 
655  7 History.|2fast|0https://id.worldcat.org/fast/1411628 
700 1  Wagner, Sally Roesch,|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/
       names/n95018054|eeditor. 
700 1  Steinem, Gloria,|0https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/
       n83074143|ewriter of foreword. 
776 08 |iPrint version:|tWomen's suffrage movement.|dNew York, 
       New York : Penguin Books, 2019|z9780143132431|w(DLC)  
       2018050035 
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856 42 |3Instructions for reading/downloading the EBSCO version 
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