Women social reformers--United States
Found in 5 Collections and/or Records:
Minute books of the American Female Moral Reform Society, 1834-1841
Minute books of American Female Moral Reform Society, an organization whose mission was to combat prostitution, provide aid for the poor, reform prisons, and promote Christianity.
Anti-pornography civil rights legislation collection of Rhea Becker, 1985-1993
Correspondence, legal documents, flyers, brochures, clippings, etc., relating to attempts to pass legislation defining pornography as a violation of women's civil rights in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the Massachusetts State legislature, and Bellingham, Washington.
Papers of the Cannon family, 1887-1980 (inclusive), 1917-1945 (bulk)
Diaries, engagement calendars, and correspondence of Ida Maud Cannon; stories, articles/essays, and scrapbooks by Cornelia James Cannon; family correspondence, of Cornelia, Walter B. Cannon, and their children: Bradford Cannon, Wilma (Cannon) Fairbanks, Linda (Cannon) Burgess, Marian (Cannon) Schlesinger, and Helen (Cannon) Bond; photographs of family and events.
Papers of Charlotte, E. Carr, ca.1900-1956
Correspondence, diaries, writings by and about, and other professional papers of social worker, welfare advocate, labor supporter, and first salaried head of Hull-House, Charlotte E. Carr.
Joan C. Tonn Collection on Mary Parker Follett, 1979-2001 (inclusive), 1982-1988 (bulk)
Research material, photocopies of documents, notes, academic papers, and correspondence created and assembled by Joan C. Tonn while writing a biography of Mary Parker Follett.