Women were active participants in the anti-slavery movement. They made up a large portion of professional abolitionists who traveled the country to educate the public on the perils of slavery. Unfortunately, their efforts were hindered by their gender, and it led to the restriction of their rights to speak publicly on the issue of slavery. This paper chronicles freedom of speech and the abolition movement and its impact on the women who fought for their rights to share in the emancipation fight. It’s a story about the efficacy of language and its impact on history and social change. The modern Women’s Rights Movement did not begin as a fight for equality, but as a fight for freedom of speech
For the past twenty years, historians have recognized the role that \u271\u27 women played in the ni...
Vindicated voices Study recovers history of struggle According to the American humorist Oliver Her...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Without a public arena, the women’s aboliti...
267 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1985.Women were actively involved ...
Black and white women in Virginia were on the front lines of the struggle over emancipation during a...
Review of: The Great Silent Army of Abolitionism: Ordinary Women in the Antislavery Movement. Jeffre...
Early nineteenth-century northeastern and western white women increasingly lived in a bifurcated wor...
This thesis looks at the abolition of slavery in Britain and the role played by women’s anti-slavery...
Shifting the Focus of Abolition History Stacey M. Robertson’s latest book is a welcome addition to a...
In the 1830s, antislavery advocates used highly sexualized language to recruit Northerners into the ...
Mary Easton Sibley, the founder of Lindenwood University, was an ambitious woman. A supporter of the...
The most prominent images of Black women in antebellum America depicted in classes across the United...
Beyond Freedom grew out of a conference organized by David Blight, Gregory Downs, and Jim Downs at t...
This article will investigate how African American women’s experience with education informed the Co...
In the 19th century, voices for social reform reached a high pitch—both figuratively and literally. ...
For the past twenty years, historians have recognized the role that \u271\u27 women played in the ni...
Vindicated voices Study recovers history of struggle According to the American humorist Oliver Her...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Without a public arena, the women’s aboliti...
267 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1985.Women were actively involved ...
Black and white women in Virginia were on the front lines of the struggle over emancipation during a...
Review of: The Great Silent Army of Abolitionism: Ordinary Women in the Antislavery Movement. Jeffre...
Early nineteenth-century northeastern and western white women increasingly lived in a bifurcated wor...
This thesis looks at the abolition of slavery in Britain and the role played by women’s anti-slavery...
Shifting the Focus of Abolition History Stacey M. Robertson’s latest book is a welcome addition to a...
In the 1830s, antislavery advocates used highly sexualized language to recruit Northerners into the ...
Mary Easton Sibley, the founder of Lindenwood University, was an ambitious woman. A supporter of the...
The most prominent images of Black women in antebellum America depicted in classes across the United...
Beyond Freedom grew out of a conference organized by David Blight, Gregory Downs, and Jim Downs at t...
This article will investigate how African American women’s experience with education informed the Co...
In the 19th century, voices for social reform reached a high pitch—both figuratively and literally. ...
For the past twenty years, historians have recognized the role that \u271\u27 women played in the ni...
Vindicated voices Study recovers history of struggle According to the American humorist Oliver Her...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Without a public arena, the women’s aboliti...