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- Lucretia Mott (3249 bytes)
1: [[image:lucretiamott.jpg|right|]]
3: '''Lucretia Mott''' ([[January 3]], [[1793]] – [[Novemb...
5: ...[abolitionist]] movement in the very early 1800s. Lucretia Mott was one of the first Quaker women to do advo...
11: ...Susan B. Anthony]] are usually credited as the leaders of that effort, it was Mott's mentoring of Stan...
13: ...nction for that period of the movement, until her death in 1880.
Page text matches
- Lucretia Mott (3249 bytes)
1: [[image:lucretiamott.jpg|right|]]
3: '''Lucretia Mott''' ([[January 3]], [[1793]] – [[Novemb...
5: ...[abolitionist]] movement in the very early 1800s. Lucretia Mott was one of the first Quaker women to do advo...
11: ...Susan B. Anthony]] are usually credited as the leaders of that effort, it was Mott's mentoring of Stan...
13: ...nction for that period of the movement, until her death in 1880. - Elizabeth Cady Stanton (4406 bytes)
4: ...ed a resolution, that was voted upon and carried, demanding voting rights for women.
6: ... rights newsletter ''The Revolution'', which included frequent contributions from Stanton. Starting i...
8: [[Image:ElizabethCadyStanton-Veeder.LOC.jpg|left|thumb|Elizabeth Cady Stanton in her...
12: ...ue in an 1873 letter to [[Julia Ward Howe]], recorded in Howe's diary at [[Harvard University]] Librar...
21: *''Solitude of Self'' ISBN 1930464010 - Women's suffrage (11832 bytes)
1: ...ation due to, for instance, race), which was considered too radical.
2: ...New York City, 1912.jpeg|thumb|350px|Suffrage parade, New York City, 1912]]
3: ...first modern polity where equal suffrage was extended to women.
4: ..., which some claim to be a [[State|country]] extended suffrage to women in [[1838]]. In [[1893]], [[Ne...
13: ... granted in [[New Jersey]] in [[1776]], but rescinded in [[1807]]. The [[Pitcairn Islands]] granted wo... - Samuel F. B. Morse (8859 bytes)
1: ...b|right|Portrait of Samuel F. B. Morse.Image provided by [http://classroomclipart.com Classroom Clip A...
3: ...nventing the electric [[telegraph]] and [[Morse code]].
9: ...an painter. While at [[Yale University]], he attended lectures on [[electricity]] from [[Benjamin Sill...
11: ...f that same year, Morse's wife, Lucretia, died suddenly. She was buried before he returned to New Have...
13: ...ing [[telegraph]] and [[Morse code|dot-and-dash code system]] (a signalling [[alphabet]]) in his [[ske... - James A. Garfield (15070 bytes)
1: <table border="0" align="right" style="margin-left:1em"><tr><t...
2: <table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
5: <tr><td>'''Order:'''</td><td>20th President</td></tr>
8: <tr><td>'''Succeeded by:'''</td><td>[[Chester A. Arthur]]</td></tr>
11: <tr><td>'''Date of Death:'''</td><td>[[September 19]], [[1881]]</td></t... - First Lady of the United States (9641 bytes)
3: ...government jargon that often acronymizes the President of the United States as "POTUS" similarly appli...
5: ...zed as "America's First Lady", but did not gain wider recognition until 1877 when newspaper journalist...
7: ...ven a formal job in the Clinton administration to develop reforms to the health care system.
9: ...s formally referred to as, for example, "The President and Mrs. Washington."
11: The term is also used to describe the wife of other government officials, or ...
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