The Woman in American HistoryAddison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1971 - 207 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 120
... became a training ground for leadership , a link between the educated elite and the general mass , and an important force in community betterment . For the black woman the struggle against race prejudice was a constant , overwhelming ...
... became a training ground for leadership , a link between the educated elite and the general mass , and an important force in community betterment . For the black woman the struggle against race prejudice was a constant , overwhelming ...
Page 123
... became an organizational school for hundreds of thousands of women . Frances Willard , who shortly after the founding of the WCTU became its moving spirit , must be credited with turning the pet cause of a small group of zealots into ...
... became an organizational school for hundreds of thousands of women . Frances Willard , who shortly after the founding of the WCTU became its moving spirit , must be credited with turning the pet cause of a small group of zealots into ...
Page 128
... became concerned with the more deep - seated causes of poverty and attacked the sweatshop system , the exploitation of women , child labor , the miserable wages paid to unorganized workers , and other such evils . Before long they were ...
... became concerned with the more deep - seated causes of poverty and attacked the sweatshop system , the exploitation of women , child labor , the miserable wages paid to unorganized workers , and other such evils . Before long they were ...
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Common terms and phrases
abolitionist American women Angelina Grimké Anne Hutchinson Anthony antislavery became Beecher birth control black women Boston campaign career Carrie Chapman Catt cause Charlotte Perkins Charlotte Perkins Gilman child church cities Civil College colonial America colonial women contribution death decades developed Dorothea Dix economic Elizabeth Cady Stanton Emma equal factory federal amendment female suffrage feminist field Frances Frances Wright freedom frontier Gilman girls Grimké Grimké sisters Harriet husband industry Jane Addams labor ladies later leaders leadership legislation literary lives Lucretia Mott male Margaret Sanger marriage married Mary Baker Eddy Massachusetts ment mother National NAWSA nineteenth century nurses NWTUL organized percent pioneer plantation political President reform role Sarah Sarah Grimké sisters slave slavery social society soldiers South southern status struggle suffragists Susan teachers tion United vote wages Willard wives woman suffrage woman's rights movement workers York
References to this book
Theories of Women's Studies Gloria Bowles,Renate Duelli-Klein,Renate Klein No preview available - 1983 |