Alice Stone Blackwell, editor of the "Woman's Journal, "
published this biography of her mother, Lucy Stone, in 1930, a
decade after the ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment.
Reprinted now for the first time, "Lucy Stone: Pioneer of Woman's
Rights" is a fascinating, plainspoken document of an important era
in women's history.
Lucy Stone's biography is all the more impressive because she
has been largely left out of the history of women's suffrage. Her
leadership came in a form that was not grandstanding or shocking
but personal and mentoring. Her daughter's book provides a vivid,
unsentimental portrait of growing up female in rural Massachusetts
in the nineteenth century, of earning a college degree, and of
beginning a lifelong advocacy for basic civil rights for all
Americans.
Often facing hostile audiences, Stone lectured all over the
country, and she led the call for the first national woman's rights
convention, which took place in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1850.
She brought other leaders&emdash; for example, Susan B. Anthony
and Julia Ward Howe--to the cause, and she attended antislavery
conferences with Frederick Douglass. The reissue of her biography
can kindle a vital discussion of how Stone's activism influenced
abolitionist and feminist reform ideology. Her story should be
especially remarkable to students, who may find her struggles with
keeping her own name after marriage hard to imagine, but her
successes as a female public figure and political speaker worth
emulating.
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