The Woman in American HistoryAddison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1971 - 207 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 13
Page 40
... remained isolated expressions of advanced thinking until several decades later when Emma Willard , Catherine Beecher , and Mary Lyon joined the two great educators Henry Barnard and Horace Mann in a major reform of American education ...
... remained isolated expressions of advanced thinking until several decades later when Emma Willard , Catherine Beecher , and Mary Lyon joined the two great educators Henry Barnard and Horace Mann in a major reform of American education ...
Page 52
... remained untrained , casual labor , and soon were relegated by custom to the lowest paid jobs . Long hours , overwork , and poor working conditions came to characterize women's work in industry for almost a century . Home Industry . The ...
... remained untrained , casual labor , and soon were relegated by custom to the lowest paid jobs . Long hours , overwork , and poor working conditions came to characterize women's work in industry for almost a century . Home Industry . The ...
Page 120
... remained close to her southern country roots , even when she became the first member of her race to head a federal agency . A scholarship student at Scotia Seminary and graduate of Moody Bible Institute in Chicago , she taught school in ...
... remained close to her southern country roots , even when she became the first member of her race to head a federal agency . A scholarship student at Scotia Seminary and graduate of Moody Bible Institute in Chicago , she taught school in ...
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Common terms and phrases
abolitionist American women Angelina Grimké Anne Hutchinson Anthony antislavery became 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 cultural 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 |