[387]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 763.[388]To Elizabeth Smith Miller, July 25, 1894, Elizabeth Smith Miller Papers, New York Public Library.[389]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 788.[390]Ibid., p. 791.[391]Ibid., p. 794.[392]To Clara Colby, July 22, 1895, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.[393]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 842.[394]N.d., Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.[395]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 843.[396]Ibid., pp. 844, 859.[397]Ms., Diary, July 10, 1896.[398]Sept. 8, 1896, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.[399]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, pp. 274-275.
[387]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 763.
[387]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 763.
[388]To Elizabeth Smith Miller, July 25, 1894, Elizabeth Smith Miller Papers, New York Public Library.
[388]To Elizabeth Smith Miller, July 25, 1894, Elizabeth Smith Miller Papers, New York Public Library.
[389]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 788.
[389]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 788.
[390]Ibid., p. 791.
[390]Ibid., p. 791.
[391]Ibid., p. 794.
[391]Ibid., p. 794.
[392]To Clara Colby, July 22, 1895, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[392]To Clara Colby, July 22, 1895, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[393]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 842.
[393]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 842.
[394]N.d., Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[394]N.d., Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[395]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 843.
[395]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 843.
[396]Ibid., pp. 844, 859.
[396]Ibid., pp. 844, 859.
[397]Ms., Diary, July 10, 1896.
[397]Ms., Diary, July 10, 1896.
[398]Sept. 8, 1896, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[398]Sept. 8, 1896, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[399]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, pp. 274-275.
[399]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, pp. 274-275.
[400]Ms., Diary, Nov. 7, 1895[401]Mary Gray Peck,Carrie Chapman Catt(New York, 1944), p. 84.[402]Ms., Diary, Nov. 27, 1895.[403]To Mrs. Upton, Sept. 5, 1890, University of Rochester Library, Rochester, New York.[404]Feb. 10, 1894, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.[405]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1113.[406]Miss Anthony's first attempt to win Southern women to suffrage was at the time of the New Orleans Exposition in 1885. Because of her reputation as an abolitionist, she had much resistance to overcome in the South.[407]Dec. 18, 1895, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.[408]Woman's Tribune, Feb. 1, 1896.[409]History of Woman Suffrage, IV, p. 264.[410]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 855. The action of the National American Woman Suffrage Association on the Woman's Bible was never reversed.[411]Ibid., p. 856.[412]Susan thought seriously of Clara Colby as a collaborator but concluded she was too involved with theWoman's Tribune. Susan agreed to share royalties with Mrs. Harper on the biography and any other work on which they might collaborate. On her 75th birthday Susan's girls had presented her with an annuity of $800 a year. This made it possible for her to give up lecturing and concentrate on her book.[413]Genevieve Hawley left an interesting record of these years in letters to her aunt, many of which are preserved in the Susan B. Anthony Memorial Collection in Rochester, New York.[414]Both the New YorkHeraldand ChicagoInter-Oceangave the book full-page reviews. A third volume was published in 1908.[415]Aug. 10, 1898, Susan B. Anthony Papers, Library of Congress.[416]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1121.[417]Aug. 10, 1898, Susan B. Anthony Papers, Library of Congress.[418]Dec. 17, 1898, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library. Clara Colby, making her headquarters in Washington, kept Susan informed on developments and they carried on an animated, voluminous correspondence during these years.[419]March 12, 1894, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.[420]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 920.[421]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 924.
[400]Ms., Diary, Nov. 7, 1895
[400]Ms., Diary, Nov. 7, 1895
[401]Mary Gray Peck,Carrie Chapman Catt(New York, 1944), p. 84.
[401]Mary Gray Peck,Carrie Chapman Catt(New York, 1944), p. 84.
[402]Ms., Diary, Nov. 27, 1895.
[402]Ms., Diary, Nov. 27, 1895.
[403]To Mrs. Upton, Sept. 5, 1890, University of Rochester Library, Rochester, New York.
[403]To Mrs. Upton, Sept. 5, 1890, University of Rochester Library, Rochester, New York.
[404]Feb. 10, 1894, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[404]Feb. 10, 1894, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[405]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1113.
[405]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1113.
[406]Miss Anthony's first attempt to win Southern women to suffrage was at the time of the New Orleans Exposition in 1885. Because of her reputation as an abolitionist, she had much resistance to overcome in the South.
[406]Miss Anthony's first attempt to win Southern women to suffrage was at the time of the New Orleans Exposition in 1885. Because of her reputation as an abolitionist, she had much resistance to overcome in the South.
[407]Dec. 18, 1895, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[407]Dec. 18, 1895, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[408]Woman's Tribune, Feb. 1, 1896.
[408]Woman's Tribune, Feb. 1, 1896.
[409]History of Woman Suffrage, IV, p. 264.
[409]History of Woman Suffrage, IV, p. 264.
[410]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 855. The action of the National American Woman Suffrage Association on the Woman's Bible was never reversed.
[410]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 855. The action of the National American Woman Suffrage Association on the Woman's Bible was never reversed.
[411]Ibid., p. 856.
[411]Ibid., p. 856.
[412]Susan thought seriously of Clara Colby as a collaborator but concluded she was too involved with theWoman's Tribune. Susan agreed to share royalties with Mrs. Harper on the biography and any other work on which they might collaborate. On her 75th birthday Susan's girls had presented her with an annuity of $800 a year. This made it possible for her to give up lecturing and concentrate on her book.
[412]Susan thought seriously of Clara Colby as a collaborator but concluded she was too involved with theWoman's Tribune. Susan agreed to share royalties with Mrs. Harper on the biography and any other work on which they might collaborate. On her 75th birthday Susan's girls had presented her with an annuity of $800 a year. This made it possible for her to give up lecturing and concentrate on her book.
[413]Genevieve Hawley left an interesting record of these years in letters to her aunt, many of which are preserved in the Susan B. Anthony Memorial Collection in Rochester, New York.
[413]Genevieve Hawley left an interesting record of these years in letters to her aunt, many of which are preserved in the Susan B. Anthony Memorial Collection in Rochester, New York.
[414]Both the New YorkHeraldand ChicagoInter-Oceangave the book full-page reviews. A third volume was published in 1908.
[414]Both the New YorkHeraldand ChicagoInter-Oceangave the book full-page reviews. A third volume was published in 1908.
[415]Aug. 10, 1898, Susan B. Anthony Papers, Library of Congress.
[415]Aug. 10, 1898, Susan B. Anthony Papers, Library of Congress.
[416]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1121.
[416]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1121.
[417]Aug. 10, 1898, Susan B. Anthony Papers, Library of Congress.
[417]Aug. 10, 1898, Susan B. Anthony Papers, Library of Congress.
[418]Dec. 17, 1898, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library. Clara Colby, making her headquarters in Washington, kept Susan informed on developments and they carried on an animated, voluminous correspondence during these years.
[418]Dec. 17, 1898, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library. Clara Colby, making her headquarters in Washington, kept Susan informed on developments and they carried on an animated, voluminous correspondence during these years.
[419]March 12, 1894, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[419]March 12, 1894, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[420]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 920.
[420]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 920.
[421]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 924.
[421]Harper,Anthony, II, p. 924.
[422]Rachel Foster Avery, Ed.,National Council of Women, 1891 (Philadelphia, 1891), p. 229.[423]Dec. 1, 1898, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library. Mrs. Elnora Babcock of New York was in charge of the press bureau.[424]Miss Anthony was enrolled as a member of the Knights of Labor and invited this organization to send delegates to the International Council of Women in 1888.[425]To Ellen Wright Garrison, 1900, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College.[426]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1137. A few years later, militant suffragists, led by Emmeline Pankhurst, were active in London. Mrs. Pankhurst heard Miss Anthony speak in Manchester in 1904.[427]Ida Husted Harper Ms., Catharine Waugh McCulloch Papers, Radcliffe Women's Archives.[428]Nov. 20, 1899, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.[429]History of Woman Suffrage, IV, p. 385. Miss Anthony was "moved up," as she expressed it, to Honorary President.[430]Peck, Catt, p. 107, WashingtonPostquotation.[431]To Laura Clay, April 15, 1900, University of Kentucky Library, Lexington, Kentucky.[432]Ibid., March 15, 1900.[433]Ibid.[434]Ibid., Sept. 7, 1900.[435]Ms., Diary, Nov. 10, 1900.[436]Ibid., Sept. 26, 1900. A separate woman's college was established at the University of Rochester and not until 1952 were the men's and women's colleges merged.[437]May 20, 1901, Note, Susan B. Anthony Memorial Collection, Rochester, New York.[438]History of Woman Suffrage, V, pp. 741-742.[439]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1263.[440]Oct. 28, 1902, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.[441]Oct. 27, 1904, Elizabeth Smith Miller Collection, New York Public Library. A few years later, Mrs. Blatch made a vital contribution to the cause through the Women's Political Union which she organized and which brought more militant methods and new life into the woman suffrage campaign in New York State.[442]Jan. 27, 1904, Lucy E. Anthony Collection. Mrs. Blake who had been a candidate in 1900 had by this time formed her own organization, the National Legislative League.[443]History of Woman Suffrage, V, p. 99.[444]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1308.[445]Ibid.
[422]Rachel Foster Avery, Ed.,National Council of Women, 1891 (Philadelphia, 1891), p. 229.
[422]Rachel Foster Avery, Ed.,National Council of Women, 1891 (Philadelphia, 1891), p. 229.
[423]Dec. 1, 1898, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library. Mrs. Elnora Babcock of New York was in charge of the press bureau.
[423]Dec. 1, 1898, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library. Mrs. Elnora Babcock of New York was in charge of the press bureau.
[424]Miss Anthony was enrolled as a member of the Knights of Labor and invited this organization to send delegates to the International Council of Women in 1888.
[424]Miss Anthony was enrolled as a member of the Knights of Labor and invited this organization to send delegates to the International Council of Women in 1888.
[425]To Ellen Wright Garrison, 1900, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College.
[425]To Ellen Wright Garrison, 1900, Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College.
[426]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1137. A few years later, militant suffragists, led by Emmeline Pankhurst, were active in London. Mrs. Pankhurst heard Miss Anthony speak in Manchester in 1904.
[426]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1137. A few years later, militant suffragists, led by Emmeline Pankhurst, were active in London. Mrs. Pankhurst heard Miss Anthony speak in Manchester in 1904.
[427]Ida Husted Harper Ms., Catharine Waugh McCulloch Papers, Radcliffe Women's Archives.
[427]Ida Husted Harper Ms., Catharine Waugh McCulloch Papers, Radcliffe Women's Archives.
[428]Nov. 20, 1899, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[428]Nov. 20, 1899, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[429]History of Woman Suffrage, IV, p. 385. Miss Anthony was "moved up," as she expressed it, to Honorary President.
[429]History of Woman Suffrage, IV, p. 385. Miss Anthony was "moved up," as she expressed it, to Honorary President.
[430]Peck, Catt, p. 107, WashingtonPostquotation.
[430]Peck, Catt, p. 107, WashingtonPostquotation.
[431]To Laura Clay, April 15, 1900, University of Kentucky Library, Lexington, Kentucky.
[431]To Laura Clay, April 15, 1900, University of Kentucky Library, Lexington, Kentucky.
[432]Ibid., March 15, 1900.
[432]Ibid., March 15, 1900.
[433]Ibid.
[433]Ibid.
[434]Ibid., Sept. 7, 1900.
[434]Ibid., Sept. 7, 1900.
[435]Ms., Diary, Nov. 10, 1900.
[435]Ms., Diary, Nov. 10, 1900.
[436]Ibid., Sept. 26, 1900. A separate woman's college was established at the University of Rochester and not until 1952 were the men's and women's colleges merged.
[436]Ibid., Sept. 26, 1900. A separate woman's college was established at the University of Rochester and not until 1952 were the men's and women's colleges merged.
[437]May 20, 1901, Note, Susan B. Anthony Memorial Collection, Rochester, New York.
[437]May 20, 1901, Note, Susan B. Anthony Memorial Collection, Rochester, New York.
[438]History of Woman Suffrage, V, pp. 741-742.
[438]History of Woman Suffrage, V, pp. 741-742.
[439]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1263.
[439]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1263.
[440]Oct. 28, 1902, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[440]Oct. 28, 1902, Anthony Collection, Henry E. Huntington Library.
[441]Oct. 27, 1904, Elizabeth Smith Miller Collection, New York Public Library. A few years later, Mrs. Blatch made a vital contribution to the cause through the Women's Political Union which she organized and which brought more militant methods and new life into the woman suffrage campaign in New York State.
[441]Oct. 27, 1904, Elizabeth Smith Miller Collection, New York Public Library. A few years later, Mrs. Blatch made a vital contribution to the cause through the Women's Political Union which she organized and which brought more militant methods and new life into the woman suffrage campaign in New York State.
[442]Jan. 27, 1904, Lucy E. Anthony Collection. Mrs. Blake who had been a candidate in 1900 had by this time formed her own organization, the National Legislative League.
[442]Jan. 27, 1904, Lucy E. Anthony Collection. Mrs. Blake who had been a candidate in 1900 had by this time formed her own organization, the National Legislative League.
[443]History of Woman Suffrage, V, p. 99.
[443]History of Woman Suffrage, V, p. 99.
[444]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1308.
[444]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1308.
[445]Ibid.
[445]Ibid.
[446]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1325.[447]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, p. 210.[448]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1319.[449]Ibid., p. 1336.[450]Miss Anthony also carefully prepared her scrapbooks, her books, and bound volumes ofThe Revolution, woman's rights and antislavery magazines for presentation to the Library of Congress, inscribing each with a note of explanation.[451]Ann Anthony Bacon.[452]New York Suffrage Newsletter, Jan., 1905.[453]History of Woman Suffrage, V, p. 122.[454]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1365. The statue of Sacajawea, presented to the Exposition by the clubwomen of America, was the work of Alice Cooper of Denver. Woman suffrage was again defeated in Oregon in 1906.[455]Harper,Anthony, III, pp. 1357, 1359.[456]Ibid., pp. 1376-1377.[457]The medallion, the work of Leila Usher of Boston, was commissioned by Mary Garrett.[458]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1395.[459]Ibid., pp. 1395-1396.[460]Sept., 1935, Statement, Una R. Winter Collection.[461]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1409.[462]Ibid.[463]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, pp. 230-232.[464]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1259.
[446]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1325.
[446]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1325.
[447]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, p. 210.
[447]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, p. 210.
[448]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1319.
[448]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1319.
[449]Ibid., p. 1336.
[449]Ibid., p. 1336.
[450]Miss Anthony also carefully prepared her scrapbooks, her books, and bound volumes ofThe Revolution, woman's rights and antislavery magazines for presentation to the Library of Congress, inscribing each with a note of explanation.
[450]Miss Anthony also carefully prepared her scrapbooks, her books, and bound volumes ofThe Revolution, woman's rights and antislavery magazines for presentation to the Library of Congress, inscribing each with a note of explanation.
[451]Ann Anthony Bacon.
[451]Ann Anthony Bacon.
[452]New York Suffrage Newsletter, Jan., 1905.
[452]New York Suffrage Newsletter, Jan., 1905.
[453]History of Woman Suffrage, V, p. 122.
[453]History of Woman Suffrage, V, p. 122.
[454]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1365. The statue of Sacajawea, presented to the Exposition by the clubwomen of America, was the work of Alice Cooper of Denver. Woman suffrage was again defeated in Oregon in 1906.
[454]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1365. The statue of Sacajawea, presented to the Exposition by the clubwomen of America, was the work of Alice Cooper of Denver. Woman suffrage was again defeated in Oregon in 1906.
[455]Harper,Anthony, III, pp. 1357, 1359.
[455]Harper,Anthony, III, pp. 1357, 1359.
[456]Ibid., pp. 1376-1377.
[456]Ibid., pp. 1376-1377.
[457]The medallion, the work of Leila Usher of Boston, was commissioned by Mary Garrett.
[457]The medallion, the work of Leila Usher of Boston, was commissioned by Mary Garrett.
[458]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1395.
[458]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1395.
[459]Ibid., pp. 1395-1396.
[459]Ibid., pp. 1395-1396.
[460]Sept., 1935, Statement, Una R. Winter Collection.
[460]Sept., 1935, Statement, Una R. Winter Collection.
[461]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1409.
[461]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1409.
[462]Ibid.
[462]Ibid.
[463]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, pp. 230-232.
[463]Shaw,The Story of a Pioneer, pp. 230-232.
[464]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1259.
[464]Harper,Anthony, III, p. 1259.
MANUSCRIPT COLLECTIONS
American Antiquarian Society, Worcester, Massachusetts:Abby Kelley Foster Papers.
Lucy E. Anthony and Ann Anthony Bacon Papers:Susan B. Anthony Diaries, Letters, and Speeches.
Boston Public Library, Manuscript Division:Antislavery, Garrison, and Higginson Papers.
Matilda Joslyn Gage Collection.
Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery, San Marino, California, Manuscript Division:Ida Husted Harper Collection.Anthony Collection.
Kansas State Historical Society, Topeka, Kansas:Anthony Papers.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., Manuscript Division:Susan B. Anthony Papers, including Diaries.Anna E. Dickinson Papers.Elizabeth Cady Stanton Papers.
Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., Rare Book Room:Susan B. Anthony Scrapbooks.
Alma Lutz Collection.
Anna Dann Mason Collection.
Museum of Arts and Sciences, Rochester, New York:Anthony Collection.
New York Public Library, Manuscript Division:Susan B. Anthony Papers.Elizabeth Cady Stanton Papers.Elizabeth Smith Miller Papers.
Ohio State Library, Columbus, Ohio:Ohioana Library Collection.
Seneca Falls Historical Society, Seneca Falls, New York:Amelia Bloomer Papers.
Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts:Sophia Smith Collection.
Edna M. Stantial Collection:Blackwell Papers.
Susan B. Anthony Memorial Collection, 17 Madison Street, Rochester, New York.
Radcliffe Women's Archives, Radcliffe College, Cambridge, Massachusetts.
University of California, Bancroft Library, Berkeley, California:Susan B. Anthony Papers.Keith Papers.
University of Kentucky Library, Lexington, Kentucky:Laura Clay Papers.
University of Rochester Library, Rochester, New York:Susan B. Anthony Papers.
Vassar College Library, Poughkeepsie, New York:Elizabeth Cady Stanton Papers.Margaret Stanton Lawrence Papers.
Una R. Winter Collection.
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