Materials Related to the 1850 Convention
- Call to the Convention (including
list of names of those who signed the Call)
- Proceedings
of the 1850 National Women's Rights Convention
- Members of the 1850 Convention
- Letters published
with the Proceedings but not read aloud at the Convention
- "Argument on Woman's
Rights," by H.H. Van Amringe, as reprinted in the Proceedings
of the 1850 Convention
- Elizabeth Blackwell's critique
of the 1850 Convention's Proceedings
- Contemporary newspaper
accounts of the 1850 Convention
- [Harriet Taylor], "Enfranchisement
of Women," reprinted from the Westminster and Foreign
Quarterly Review for July 1851, Woman's Rights Tracts,
. . . . No. 4 (Syracuse, 1852 or 1853) as excerpted.
Materials Related to the 1851 Convention
- Abby Kelley Foster's speech
to the 1851 Convention
- Wendell Phillips' speech
to the 1851 Convention
- Paulina Wright Davis' speech
to the 1851 Convention
Male Voices on Woman's Rights
- BROTHER JONATHAN'S
WIFE: A Lecture, by a retired editor [John Neal] (Philadelphia,
1842) as excerpted
- Adin A. Ballou, Diary for October
26, 1850
- Parker Pillsbury, "WOMAN'S
RIGHTS CONVENTION AND PEOPLE OF COLOR." The North
Star, December 5, 1850 [reprinted from the Pittsburgh
Visitor]
- Theodore Parker, Sermon:
of the public function of woman, preached at the Music hall,
March 27, 1853
- Thomas Wentworth Higginson, "Ought
Women to Learn the Alphabet?" (1859)
- G. P. Webster and Thomas Nast, "A
Dream of the Period," "Nast's Illustrated Almanac
for 1871 (N.Y.: McLoughlin Bros., 1870), Pp.56-63
Rediscovered Voices
Other Materials
- Report of the Massachusetts
Committee on the Qualifications of Voters (1852)
- Lucretia Mott's Diary
of Her Visit to Great Britain to Attend the World's Anti-Slavery
Convention of 1840
- Paulina Wright Davis, A History
of the National Woman's Rights Movement (1870)
- Harriet H. Robinson, Massachusetts
in the woman suffrage movement. A general, political, legal and
legislative history from 1774, to 1881 (1883) [excerpted
+ Appendix H: The Woman Suffrage
Commemorative Convention In 1880
- Catherine E. Beecher, The
True Remedy for the Wrongs of Woman excerpts
- "LINES TO
ABBY KELLEY FOSTER," By C. Louisa Morgan, The Liberator,
November 1, 1850, reprinted from the Anti-Slavery Bugle.
- Controversy over the [Boston] Female Medical Education Society
between "E.A.S."
and Samuel Gregory in The Liberator (1850)
- Advertisements from The North Star (1850) for "water cure spas" and
other alternative therapies
- Open letter
in The Liberator on prostitution from Caroline Wells (Healey)
Dall to Paulina Wright Davis
- "Pity," an unsigned poem
about prostitution (from The Liberator)
- New York newspaper's humorous account
of the Jenny Lind "Rage" (from The Liberator)
- Minnie Myrtle [Nancy Cummings Johnson (1815-1852)], "Strange
Things I Have Seen and Heard" and other pieces from
The Myrtle Wreath or Stray Leaves Recalled (N.Y.: Charles
Scribner, 1854)
- "Woman's Mission,"
[poem] by Ebenezer Elliot. The North Star, October 3,
1850
- "WOMAN'S POWER"
[poem] by Frank J. Walters,Godey's Lady's Book, February
1850
- "The Vacant Chair,"
[poem] by Richard Coe, Jr., Godey's Lady's Book, January
1850
- George Denison Prentice, Prenticeana
or Wit and Humor in Paragraphs, by the Editor of the Louisville
Journal (1860)
- "LATE, LATER,
LATEST, AND HIGHLY IMPORTANT FROM CHARLESTON --
OUR SPECIAL DISPATCHES BY THE UNDERGROUND LINE" (1861)
[satire of rumors of secession]
- "Who's to
Be President? By a Lady" [humorous poem] (1864)
- "Homely Girls,"
Frank Leslie's Budget of Fun, January 1866
- The Lady's Guide
to Perfect Gentility, in Manners, Dress, and Conversation,
in the Family, in Company, at the Piano Forte, The Table, in
the Street, and in Gentlemen's Society. Also a Useful Instructor
in Letter Writing, Toilet Preparations, Fancy Needlework, Millinery,
Dressmaking, Care of Wardrobe, the Hair, Teeth, Hands, Lips,
Complexion, etc. By Emily Thornwell (New York: Derby and
Jackson, 1856)
- Other On-line Resources