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Lucy Stone - A Life (Hardcover)
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Lucy Stone - A Life (Hardcover)
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In the rotunda of the nation's Capital a statue pays homage to
three famous nineteenth-century American women suffragists:
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Lucretia Mott.
"Historically," the inscription beneath the marble statue notes,
"these three stand unique and peerless." In fact, the statue has a
glaring omission: Lucy Stone. A pivotal leader in the fight for
both abolition and gender equality, her achievements marked the
beginning of the women's rights movement and helped to lay the
groundwork for the eventual winning of women's suffrage. Yet, today
most Americans have never heard of Lucy Stone.
Sally McMillen sets out to address this significant historical
oversight in this engaging biography. Exploring her extraordinary
life and the role she played in crafting a more just society,
McMillen restores Lucy Stone to her rightful place at the center of
the nineteenth-century women's rights movement. Raised in a
middle-class Massachusetts farm family, Stone became convinced at
an early age that education was key to women's independence and
selfhood, and went on to attend the Oberlin Collegiate Institute.
When she graduated in 1847 as one of the first women in the US to
earn a college degree, she was drawn into the public sector as an
activist and quickly became one of the most famous orators of her
day. Lecturing on anti-slavery and women's rights, she was
instrumental in organizing and speaking at several annual national
woman's rights conventions throughout the 1850s. She played a
critical role in the organization and leadership of the American
Equal Rights Association during the Civil War, and, in 1869,
cofounded the American Woman Suffrage Association, one of two
national women's rights organizations that fought for women's right
to vote. Encompassing Stone's marriage to Henry Blackwell and the
birth of their daughter Alice, as well as her significant
friendships with Frederick Douglass, Susan B. Anthony, and others,
McMillen's biography paints a complete picture of Stone's
influential and eminently important life and work.
Self-effacing until the end of her life, Stone did not relish the
limelight the way Elizabeth Cady Stanton did, nor did she gain the
many followers whom Susan B. Anthony attracted through her
extensive travels and years of dedicated work. Yet her
contributions to the woman's rights movement were no less
significant or revolutionary than those of her more widely lauded
peers. In this accessible, readable, and historically-grounded
work, Lucy Stone is finally given the standing she deserves.
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