Women During the Civil War: An EncyclopediaRoutledge, 2004 M04 28 - 490 páginas For more information, including a full list of entries, a generous selection of sample entries, and more, visit the Women During the Civil War website. |
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... federal government records have been analyzed. Troves of letters and diaries, as well as the public writings of women in newspapers and magazines, are as yet untouched. Over the course of the writing of this book, numerous essays had to ...
... federal government to free the slaves and to provide assistance and education to the freedpeople. Northern women wrote and distributed antislavery literature, protested racially discriminatory laws and policies, circulated petitions to ...
... federal government's lack of regard for black soldiers' families, free and enslaved African-American women strongly supported the Union war effort. As soon as the United States military began enlisting African-American men, Northern ...
... federal government accept “No Compromise with Slaveholders” and institute “Immediate and Unconditional Emancipation” (I.Harper 1899, 1:208). The violence Anthony faced did not deter her nor did it appear to rattle her, even when others ...
... federal woman suffrage amendment. After a lifetime leading the National Woman Suffrage Association and the National American Woman Suffrage Association (established in 1890), Anthony died of pneumonia and heart failure in 1906 at the ...