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Antislavery movements

 Subject
Subject Source: Unspecified ingested source

Found in 18 Collections and/or Records:

Papers of Susan B. Anthony, 1815-1961

Collection Identifier: A-143: M-21: M-42
Overview:

Diaries, correspondence, speeches, etc., of Susan B. Anthony, suffragist and reformer.

Dissertation on the the Blackwell family by Margo Horn, 1980

Collection Identifier: MC 321
Overview:

Collection contains a photocopy of Margo Horn's PhD dissertation, Family Ties: The Blackwells, A Study in the Dynamics of Family Life in Nineteenth Century America.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton: a radical for woman's rights by Lois W. Banner, 1979

Collection Identifier: MC 299
Overview:

Typed draft of Lois W. Banner's book, Elizabeth Cady Stanton: A Radical for Woman's Rights.

Scrapbook of Maria Theresa Baldwin Hollander, 1835-1884

Collection Identifier: A/H734
Overview:

Scrapbook of Maria Theresa Baldwin Hollander containing letters to Hollander from colleagues in the woman suffrage movement and from relatives and friends.

Richard James Hooker collection of letters from American women, 1788-1890

Collection Identifier: A-133
Overview:

Correspondence, mostly by19th century American women, compiled by Richard James Hooker of Chicago, Illinois.

Letters from Wendell Phillips, 1855

Collection Identifier: A/P564
Overview:

Autograph letters of Wendell Phillips, lawyer, abolitionist, and labor reformer.

Papers of the Ellis Gray Loring family, 1824-1925

Collection Identifier: A-115
Overview:

Correspondence, diaries, notebooks, etc., of Ellis Gray Loring, lawyer and abolitionist, from Boston, Massachusetts, and of family members.

Papers of Ellis Gray Loring, 1809-1949

Collection Identifier: A-160
Overview:

Correspondence, scrapbooks, diaries, etc., of Ellis Gray Loring, lawyer and abolitionist, from Boston, Massachusetts.

Lucien Farnham sermons and correspondence collection

FOUND IN: Houghton Library
Collection Identifier: MS Am 3381
Overview:

Sermons and correspondence of Lucien Farnham, including an account of conditions for formerly enslaved people in Georgia.

Alma Lutz collection of documents by and about abolitionists and women's rights activists, 1775-1943

Collection Identifier: A-110: M-133: M-59: Mf-3
Overview:

Correspondence of Alma Lutz, author and suffragist, and others involved in the abolitionist and suffrage movements.

Papers of Ann Maria Davison, 1814-1866 (inclusive), 1847-1860 (bulk)

Collection Identifier: MC 234
Overview:

Diaries, notes, notebook, etc., of Ann Maria Davison, a widow living on a plantation in Louisiana who wrote on the evils of slavery.

Papers of Caroline Wells Healey Dall, 1829-1956 (inclusive), 1837-1916 (bulk).

Collection Identifier: MC 351
Overview:

Writings, notes, clippings, etc., of Caroline Wells (Healey) Dall, author and social reformer.

Papers of Lydia Maria Child, ca.1827-1878

Collection Identifier: MC 305: Mf-3
Overview:

Correspondence and scrapbook of Lydia Maria Child, author and reformer.

Papers of the Blackwell family, 1784-1944 (inclusive), 1832-1939 (bulk)

Collection Identifier: A-77: M-35
Overview:

Chiefly papers of Congregational minister Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell, as well as papers and photographs of other family members.

Papers of the Blackwell family, 1831-1981

Collection Identifier: MC 411
Overview:

Correspondence, diaries, photographs, account books, etc., of four generations of the American branch of the Blackwell family.

Papers of the Bradley-Hyde family, 1800-1861

Collection Identifier: A-66
Overview:

Correspondence of four generations of the Bradley and Hyde families from New England.

Papers of Harriet Jane Hanson Robinson and Harriette Lucy Robinson Shattuck, 1833-1937

Collection Identifier: A-80: M-110
Overview:

Correspondence, scrapbooks, and diaries of author and former mill girl Harriet Jane Hanson Robinson and her daughter, Harriette Lucy Robison Shattuck, suffragist and women’s clubs advocate.

Letters of Harriet Beecher Stowe, 1854-1890

Collection Identifier: A/S892
Overview:

Letters of American abolitionist and author Harriet Beecher Stowe to various correspondents concerning her publishers, friends, and the abolition of slavery.