Text Susan B. Anthony letter, Cleveland, November 22, 1870, verso, with docket title and address. View Item
Text Susan B. Anthony letter, Rochester, to Theodore Tilton, March-April 1862, page [1] and [4]. View Item
Text Susan B. Anthony letter, Rochester, to Theodore Tilton, March-April 1862, page [2] and [3]. View Item
Text Susan B. Anthony letter, Fort Leavenworth, to Harriet Taylor Upton, October 30, 1888, verso. View Item
Text Susan B. Anthony letter, Fort Leavenworth, to Harriet Taylor Upton, October 30, 1888, recto. View Item
Text The Revolution : principle, not policy; justice, not favors--Men, their rights and nothing more; women, their rights and nothing less. Vol. 1, No. 2, New York, Wednesday, January 15, 1868, page [1] The front pages of the first two issues of The Revolution, a newspaper established by women's rights activists Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. The entire run of the newspaper has been digitized by Lewis & Clark College and is available on their website at http://digitalcollections.lclark.edu/items/browse?collection=21&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate. "The Organ of the National Party of New America." Editors: Jan. 1868-May 1870, Elizabeth C. Stanton (with Parker Pillsbury, Jan. 1868-July 1, 1869); June 1870-Oct. 1871, Laura C. Bullard; Oct. 1871-Feb. 1872, W.T. Clarke. View Item
Text The Revolution : principle, not policy; justice, not favors. Vol. 1, No. 1, New York, Wednesday, January 8, 1868, page [1] The front pages of the first two issues of The Revolution, a newspaper established by women's rights activists Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. The entire run of the newspaper has been digitized by Lewis & Clark College and is available on their website at http://digitalcollections.lclark.edu/items/browse?collection=21&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate. "The Organ of the National Party of New America." Editors: Jan. 1868-May 1870, Elizabeth C. Stanton (with Parker Pillsbury, Jan. 1868-July 1, 1869); June 1870-Oct. 1871, Laura C. Bullard; Oct. 1871-Feb. 1872, W.T. Clarke. View Item
Image Text 2 Items Susan B. Anthony letter, Cleveland, November 22, 1870. Letter concerns the scheduling of speeches and lists upcoming dates and locations. View Item
Image Text 2 Items Susan B. Anthony letter, Philadelphia, to Mary L. Booth, January 9, 1888. Letter asks Mrs. Booth to prepare a paper on the topic of women in journalism to follow one on women's organizations to be delivered March 29 by Julia Ward Howe. View Item
Image Text 2 Items Susan B. Anthony letter, undated. Letter undated but probably written by Anthony around November 1895, as it regards Elizabeth Cady Stanton's 80th birthday celebration at the Metropolitan Opera House, organized by Anthony and Mary Lowe Dickinson. View Item
Image Text 2 Items Susan B. Anthony letter, Rochester, to Theodore Tilton, March-April 1862. Letter concerns a speech by Frederick Douglass and compares attendance favorably with that at a lecture by Dr. Cheever. View Item
Image Text 2 Items Susan B. Anthony letter, Rochester, to Mr. [Guthrie?], August 5, [1880]. Letter discusses the remaking of a dress. View Item
Image Text 2 Items Susan B. Anthony letter, Fort Leavenworth, to Harriet Taylor Upton, October 30, 1888. Letter concerns the scheduling of an appearance at Mrs. Upton's church. View Item
Image Text 2 Items Susan B. Anthony letter, Rochester, to Theodore Tilton, April 14, 1859. Letter compliments Theodore Tilton on his lecture and mentions Frederick Douglass's appreciation of it. View Item
Image Text 2 Items The Revolution, 1868 The front pages of the first two issues of The Revolution, a newspaper established by women's rights activists Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. The entire run of the newspaper has been digitized by Lewis & Clark College and is available on their website at http://digitalcollections.lclark.edu/items/browse?collection=21&sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CDate. "The Organ of the National Party of New America." Editors: Jan. 1868-May 1870, Elizabeth C. Stanton (with Parker Pillsbury, Jan. 1868-July 1, 1869); June 1870-Oct. 1871, Laura C. Bullard; Oct. 1871-Feb. 1872, W.T. Clarke. View Item
Image Collection 7 Items Susan B. Anthony letters, 1859-1888, undated Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906) was a key figure in the women's suffrage and abolitionist movements in the United States. Five of the letters concern speeches by Frederick Douglass, Theodore Tilton, Julia Ward Howe, and Mary L. Booth, as well as Anthony's own speaking engagements. Recipients include Theodore Tilton and Mary L. Booth. One letter is about remaking a dress. One letter is undated but is probably written by Anthony around November 1895, since it regards Elizabeth Cady Stanton's 80th birthday celebration at the Metropolitan Opera House, organized by Anthony and Mary Lowe Dickinson. View Collection