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Contents: Volume I: Suffrage Edited and Introduced by Janet Beer Janet Beer Introduction: The Woman Suffrage Movement in America - 1848-1920 1. The First Convention: Seneca Falls, including the Declaration of Sentiments [1848] 2. Lucretia Mott Discourse on Woman, Philadelphia [T.B. Peterson, 1850] 3. Elizabeth Cady Stanton to Woman's Rights Conventions at Worcester [1850] and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to Woman's Rights Conventions at Syracuse [1852] Woman's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1852] 4. Matilda Gage to Woman's Rights Conventions at Syracuse, Woman's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1852] 5. Theodore Parker A Sermon of the Public Function of Women, Women's Rights Tracts, Syracuse [Master's Print, Malcolm Block, 1853] 6. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper The Colored People in America, from The Colored People in America: Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects Philadelphia [1857] 7. Sojourner Truth Address to the American Equal Rights Association [1867] 8. Hamilton Wilcox Women are Voters! New York Suffrage Law [John W. Lovell Co., 1885] 9. Angelina French Newman Woman Suffrage in Utah [Government Print Office, 1886] 10. Henry Blair Woman Suffrage Speech to the Senate [1886] 11. Clara Benwick Colby The Ballot and the Bullet Theory The Woman's Tribune [Editor, 1883-86] 12. Thomas Wentworth Higginson Unsolved Problems in Woman Suffrage, reprinted from The Forum [Forum Publishing Company, 1887] 13. F.G. Adams The Women's Vote in Kansas [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1888] 14. Olympia Brown Woman's Suffrage a Political Necessity, abstract of address before the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives, [January 28, 1889] 15. Lucy Stone Questions for Remonstrants [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889] 16. Olive Schreiner Three Dreams in a Desert [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889] 17. Various Authors, The Elective Franchise [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889] 18. Ednah D. Cheney Municipal Suffrage for Women [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1889] 19. Thomas Wentworth Higginson Straight Lines or Oblique Lines? [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1893] 20. Henry Blackwell Objections to Woman Suffrage Answered [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1896] 21. Katherine A.G. Patterson, Helen G. Ecob et al Colorado Speaks for Herself [American Woman Suffrage Association, 1897] 22. Carrie Chapman Catt, Florence Kelley and Evelyn W. Ordway How the Women of New Orleans Discovered their Wish to Vote [Political Science Study Series, Vol. V. No. 4, 1900] 23. William M. Salter What is the Real Emancipation of Woman? [Woman Suffrage Association, 1902] 24. Marion B. Schlesinger, Mary A.E.M. Buckminster, and Mary Leavens Arguments in Favour of Woman Suffrage [Committee of the College Equal Suffrage Law, 1905] 25. Ida Husted Harper Suffrage a Right [North American Review Publishing Co., 1906] 26. Ida Husted Harper History of the Movement for Women Suffrage [Interurban Woman Suffrage Council, 1907] 27. Martha Carey Thomas New Fashioned Argument for Woman Suffrage [National American Women Suffrage Association, 1908] 28. Julia Ward Howe Woman and the Suffrage The Outlook [1909] 29. Max Eastman Woman's Suffrage and Sentiment [The Equal Franchise Society, 1909] 30. Lucia Ames Mead What Women Might Do with the Ballot [National American Woman Suffrage Association, circa 1910] 31. Amelia MacDonald Cutler Six Reasons Why Farmers' Wives Should Vote [National American Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., Inc., circa 1910] 32. The Truth versus Richard Barry [National American Woman Suffrage Association, circa 1911] 33. Equal Suffrage Meeting [Frank Facey, 1911] 34. Women in the Home [California Equal Suffrage Association, circa 1911] 35. Ida Husted Harper How Six States Won Woman Suffrage [National American Woman's Suffrage Association, 1912] 36. Theodore Roosevelt Speech on Suffrage [Allied Printing, 1912] 37. Ella S. Stewart The Ballot for the Women of the Farm [Chicago, 1913] 38. Official Program, Woman Suffrage Procession [1913] 39. George Creel What Have Women Done with the Vote? [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, 1915] 40. Alice Stone Blackwell Jane Addams Testifies Woman's Journal [1915] 41. Alice Stone Blackwell Woman Suffrage [1915] 42. Edith Abbot Are Women a Force for Good Government? National Municipal Review Vo. IV, No.3 July [1915] 43. Mary Beard and Florence Kelley Why Women Demand a Federal Suffrage Amendment [Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage, 1916] 44. Mrs. Guilford Dudley The Negro Votes in the South [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Company, 1918] 45. Carrie Chapman Catt An Address to the Legislatures of the United States [National Woman Suffrage Publishing Co., 1919] Volume II: Work and Education Edited and introduced by Anne-Marie Ford Anne-Marie Ford Introduction: The Woman's Place Part 1: Education 46. C.D.B Colby Concerning Farmers' Wives [New England Publishing Company, 1880] 47. Maria Mitchell The Collegiate Education of Girls [New England Publishing Company, 1881] 48. Kate Morris Cone The Gifts of Women to Educational Institutions [Association of Collegiate Alumnae, 1884] 49. Kate Holladay Claghorn The Problem of Occupation for College Women Educational Review March 1898, pp. 217-230 50. Sui Sin Far and Edith Maude Eaton Its Wavering Image Mrs. Spring Fragrance [1912] 51. Zitkala-Sa and Gertrude Simmons Bonnin 'The Ground Squirrel' and 'The Big Red Apples' from 'Impressions of an Indian Childhood',Atlantic Monthly [1900] 52. Francis Squire Potter Education and Democracy [College Equal Suffrage League, July 1909] Part 2: Women's Work 53. Caroline Dall The Opening at the Gates The College, the Market and the Court, or Women's Relations to Education, Labor and Law [Boston, Lee and Shepherd, 1867] 54. May Wright Sewall A Report on the Position of Women in Industry and Education in the State of Indiana [Indiana Department of the New Orleans Exposition, 1885] 55. Agnes Nestor The Working Girl's Need of Suffrage [Literature of the Mississippi Valley Suffrage Conference, circa 1910] 56. Wages of Women in the Corset Factories in Massachusetts [Minimum Wage Commission, 1914.] 57. Maggie Hinchey Senators vs. Working Women [Wage Earners' Suffrage League, circa 1918.] Part 3: The Rights and Wrongs of Women 58. Great Auction Sale of Slaves at Savannah, Georgia Tribune, March 1859, [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1859] 59. Southern Proofs of the 'Chivalrous and High-Minded Character' produced by slavery [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860] 60. Southern Proofs that Slavery is a 'Parental Relation' [American Anti-Slavery Society, 1860] Part 4: Angels of Mercy 61. Seventh Report of the Ladies' Aid Society of Philadelphia [1865] 62. C.E. Hopkins and E.C. Hobson A Report Concerning The Coloured Women of the South [Trustees of the John F. Slater Fund, 1896] 63. Anna Julia Cooper The Status of Woman in America A Voice from the South [The Aldine Printing House, 1892, pp.127-145] 64. N. Mosell, The Work of the Afro-American Woman, [G.S. Ferguson, 1894, reprinted 1908.] 65. Elise Johnson McDougald The Task of Negro Womanhood [The New Negro, ed. Alain Locke.] 66. The Fadettes Woman's Orchestra of Boston Boston Evening Transcript [14 August 1906] 67. Women's National Agricultural and Horticultural Association, May 1914 68. Edith Wharton 'Reverence' and 'The New Frenchwoman,' French Ways and Their Meaning New York and London [D. Appleton, 1919.] Volume III: Health, Birth-Control and Prostitution Edited and introduced by Katherine Joslin Katherine Joslin Introduction: The Female Body 69. Victoria Woodhull The Elixir of Life, or Why do We Die? [Woodhull and Clafin, 1873] 70. Mary Putman Jacobi A Question of Rest for Women During Menstruation [1877] 71. John Noyes Male Continence The Oneida Community [Office of the American Socialist, 1877] 72. Dr Elizabeth Blackwell The Human Element in Sex [J.&A. Churchill, 1894] 73. Maria E. Ward Bicycling for Ladies [Brentano's, 1896] 74. Police Records of Prostitution from 1907-1908 in The Records of the Enforcement of the Laws of Prostitution 75. Helen Keller The Modern Woman Metropolitan Magazine, 1912 [Congressional Record, September 17, 1913] 76. Dr. Anna Blount The Woman Voter and the Eugenic Ideal (c.1915) [Research Publications, Inc., 1977] 77. Dr. Marie Carmichael Stopes The Problem of Unrest SNE, volume 31 78. Margaret Sanger Family Limitation [Fifth Edition, 1916] 79. S. Adolphus Knopf Birth Control [A.R. Elliott Publishing Company, 1916] 80. Katharine Bushnell Plain Words to Plain People 81. Virginia Brooks Eliminating Vice from the Small City [Chicago] 82. M.P. Dowling, Paul L. Blakely and Austin O'Malley Race, Suicide, Birth Control [New York Press] 83. Florence Kelley and Alzina Stevens Wage Earning Children in Hull House Maps and Papers [Thomas Y. Crowell, 1895] 84. Caroline Hedger, M.D. The School Children of the Stockyards District, Reprinted from the Transactions of the Fifteenth International Congress on Hygiene and Demography, held at Washington D.D., September 23-28, 1912, [Washington Government Printing Office, 1913] 85. The Massachusetts Bureau of Statistics of Labor in Collaboration with the Women's Education and Industrial Union of Boston, 'Household Expenses,' [Wright and Potter Printing Company, 1900] 86. Jane Addams Increased Social Control in a New Conscience and an Ancient Evil [Macmillan, 1912] 87. Emma Goldman The Traffic in Women (1911), Red Emma Speaks edited by Alix Kates Shulman, [Random House, 1972] 88. Frances E. Willard The Beautiful in How to Win: A Book for Girls [Funk & Wagnalls, 1886] 89. Charlotte Perkins Gilman Women and Social Service, Address before the Boston Equal Suffrage Association for Good Government [November 14, 1907] 90. Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Emmeline Pethick Lawrence Does a Man Support his Wife? And Who Supports the Children? [National American Woman Suffrage Association] Volume IV: Women's Clubs and Settlements Edited and introduced by Katherine Joslin Katherine Joslin Introduction: The Gathering of Women 91. Mrs. Percy Pennybacker The Eighth Biennial Convention of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, No. 519 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906] 92. Sarah S. Platt Decker The Meaning of the Women's Club Movement, No. 513, [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906] 93. Mrs. John Dickinson Sherman The Women's Clubs in the Middle-Western States, No.515 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906] 94. Mary Alden Ward The Influence of Women's Clubs in New England, and in the Middle-Eastern States, No. 514 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906] 95. 'Clara de Hirsche Home for Working Girls,' Pamphlet, [Keystone Printery New York, 1905] 96. Elizabeth Lindsay David Chapters 1 and 2 from The Story of the Illinois Federation of Colored Women's Clubs [Pamphlet, 1922] 97. Dorothea Moore The Work of Women's Clubs in California, No. 517, [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906] 98. Mrs A.O Granger The Effect of Club Work in the South, No. 516 [The American Academy of Political and Social Science, 1906] 99. Frances E. Willard The Ballot for the Home, Equal Suffrage Leaflet, Volume VII, Number 2 [March 1898] 100. Eliza Daniel Stewart Memories of the Crusade: A Thrilling Account of the Great Uprising of the Women of Ohio in 1873, Against the Liquor Crime [Columbus: Wm. G. Hubbard and Co., 1888] 101. Alice Stone Blackwell Suffrage and Temperance [Woman Suffrage Association and the Woman's Journal, circa 1912] 102. Elizabeth Tilton Is Beer the Cure for the Drink Evil? The Survey February 24, [1917] 103. Jane Addams Hull House: A Social Settlement at 335 South Halstead Street [Privately Published, 1894] 104. Jane Addams The Subjective Value of Social Settlements Philanthropy and Social Progress [Thomas Y. Crowell & Company, 1893] 105. South End House: Its 18th Year of Cumulative Progress [March 1910] 106. Ellen Gates Starr Art and Labor Hull House Maps and Papers [Thomas Y. Crowell, 1895] 107. Florence Mabel Dedrick Our Sister or the Streets Fighting the Traffic in Young Girls or War on the White Slave Trade [G.S. Ball, 1910] 108. Lillian D. Wald Organizations within the Settlements in The House on Henry Street [Rinehart and Winston, 1915] 109. Jane Addams Women's Memories - Reacting on Life as Illustrated by the Story of the Devil Baby The Long Road of Woman's Memory [Macmillan, 1916] 110. Mary Antin The Law of the Fathers They Who Knock at Our Gates [Houghton Mifflin, 1914] 111. Anna Julia Cooper The Social Settlement: What It Is and What It Does [privately published, Murray Brothers Press, 1913] 112. Ida B. Wells-Barnett A Red Record: Tabulated Statistics and Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the US, 1892-1893-1894 [Donohue & Henneberry, 1895] 113. Alice Hamilton 'Journey and Impressions of Congress' and 'At the War Capitals' Women at the Hague [Macmillan, 1915] 114. Emily Greene Blach and Mercedes M. Randall Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, Appendix in Peace and Bread in Time of War [Macmillan, 1922] 115. Zitkala-Sa and Gertrude Bonnin The Warlike Seven Old Indian Legends [Ginn & Company, 1902] 116. Mary Austin Sex Emancipation through War, Forum 59 [1918] 117. Caroline Bartlett Crane What Every Woman Wants Everyman's House [Doubleday, Page & Company, 1925]
Of all the many biographies of Theodore Roosevelt, none has
presented the twenty-sixth president as he saw himself: as a man of
letters. This fascinating account traces Roosevelt's lifelong
engagement with books and discusses his writing from childhood
journals to his final editorial, finished just hours before his
death. His most famous book, The Rough Riders--part memoir, part
war adventure--barely begins to suggest the dynamism of his
literary output. Roosevelt read widely and deeply, and worked
tirelessly on his writing. Along with speeches, essays, reviews,
and letters, he wrote history, autobiography, and tales of
exploration and discovery. In this thoroughly original biography,
Roosevelt is revealed at his most vulnerable--and his most human.
Of all the many biographies of Theodore Roosevelt, none has
presented the twenty-sixth president as he saw himself: as a man of
letters. This fascinating account traces Roosevelt's lifelong
engagement with books and discusses his writings from childhood
journals to his final editorial, finished just hours before his
death. His most famous book, The Rough Riders-part memoir, part war
adventure-barely begins to suggest the dynamism of his literary
output. Roosevelt read widely and deeply, and worked tirelessly on
his writing. Along with speeches, essays, reviews, and letters, he
wrote history, autobiography, and tales of exploration and
discovery. In this thoroughly original biography, Roosevelt is
revealed at his most vulnerable-and his most human.
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