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Mary Elizabeth Garrett - Society and Philanthropy in the Gilded Age (Paperback)
Loot Price: R637
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Mary Elizabeth Garrett - Society and Philanthropy in the Gilded Age (Paperback)
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Donate to Against Period Poverty
Total price: R647
Discovery Miles: 6 470
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A captivating look at the remarkable life of this
nineteenth-century suffragist, philanthropist, and reformer. Mary
Elizabeth Garrett was one of the most influential philanthropists
and women activists of the Gilded Age. With Mary's legacy all but
forgotten, Kathleen Waters Sander recounts in impressive detail the
life and times of this remarkable woman, through the turbulent
years of the Civil War to the early twentieth century. At once a
captivating biography of Garrett and an epic account of the rise of
commerce, railroading, and women's rights, Sander's work reexamines
the great social and political movements of the age. As the
youngest child and only daughter of the B&O Railroad mogul John
Work Garrett, Mary was bright and capable, well suited to become
her father's heir apparent. But social convention prohibited her
from following in his footsteps, a source of great frustration for
the brilliant and strong-willed woman. Mary turned her attention
instead to promoting women's rights, using her status and massive
wealth to advance her uncompromising vision for women's place in
the expanding United States. She contributed the endowment to
establish the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine with two
unprecedented conditions: that women be admitted on the same terms
as men and that the school be graduate level, thereby forcing
revolutionary policy changes at the male-run institution. Believing
that advanced education was the key to women's betterment, she
helped found and sustain the prestigious girls' preparatory school
in Baltimore, the Bryn Mawr School. Her philanthropic gifts to Bryn
Mawr College helped transform the modest Quaker school into a
renowned women's college. Mary was also a great supporter of
women's suffrage, working tirelessly to gain equal rights for
women. Suffragist, friend of charitable causes, and champion of
women's education, Mary Elizabeth Garrett both improved the status
of women and ushered in modern standards of American medicine and
philanthropy. Sander's thoughtful and informed study of this
pioneering philanthropist is the first to recognize Garrett and her
monumental contributions to equality in America.
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