Haverford College
Quick Access
Quaker & Special Collections >

Welcome
About
Collections
Finding Aids
Research
Services
Exhibitions
Gest Fellowship
Blog

Grab a feed! Grab an RSS Feed
Subscribe to Email Updates Get Email Updates

  • Categories

    • Announcements
      • Hours
    • Collections
      • Art
      • Audio Visual
      • College Archives
      • Manuscripts
      • Photography
      • Rare Books
      • Treasures
    • Digital Projects
    • Events
    • Exhibitions
    • People
      • Gest Fellows
      • Interns
      • Staff News
      • Students
    • Publications
    • Uncategorized
  • View by Tag

    Abolition Africa Anti-Slavery Art Benjamin Franklin Cadbury Charles Roberts China Christopher Morley Civil War Conservation Cope CRALC Digital Libraries Evans Fanny Brawne France Germantown Gest Fellows GIS Greek Haverford Haverford History History of Science John Keats John Woolman London Maps Meeting Houses Music Native Americans New Jersey Nobel Prize PACSCL Philadelphia Quakers Rare Books Rene Descartes Rufus Jones Slavery William Penn William Pyle Phillips William Shakespeare WWI WWII
  • Archives

  • Admin

    • Log in
    • Entries RSS
    • Comments RSS
    • WordPress.org

Posts Tagged ‘Women’s rights’

A Star in the Suffrage Firmament

Monday, March 14th, 2011

More than 40 years before women achieved the vote in the U.S. in 1920, Emily Howland (1827-1929), a Quaker reformer, educator and philanthropist was petitioning the New York legislature to act equitably. In an 1876 letter just added to our collections,
Howland reminds the Honorable A.S. Russell that under the Constitution as written, the legislature has the power to give women of New York the right to vote. To encourage him, she suggests that grateful women would vote for those who empower them, and, conversely, refers to the historical outcome of “taxation without representation”: peril to a government that disallows the vote to women. By the time this letter was written in 1876, Howland had already accomplished a great deal — as a teacher in a school for African American girls, as an organizer of the Freedom Village for refugee slaves during the Civil War, as an advocate for women’s rights alongside Susan B. Anthony; she would later also become a champion of world peace.
The letter takes its place alongside Haverford’s other Howland materials, including the Emily Howland Papers, which illustrate her interest in African American education.

Tags: Women's rights
Posted in Manuscripts | Comments Off

Haverford College • 370 Lancaster Avenue • Haverford, PA 19041
Quaker & Special Collections is proudly powered by WordPress