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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-011.mrc:179952456:12597
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-011.mrc:179952456:12597?format=raw

LEADER: 12597cam a2200385 a 4500
001 5324142
005 20221110020453.0
008 041129s2005 ilu f 000 0 eng
015 $aGBA518116$2bnb
016 7 $a013124311$2Uk
020 $a0252072766 (pbk.)
024 30 $a9780252072765$d90000
035 $a(OCoLC)ocm58051353
035 $a(NNC)5324142
035 $a5324142
040 $aUKM$cUKM$dOCLCQ$dNNC$dOrLoB-B
043 $an-us---
082 04 $a324.6230973$222
245 04 $aThe concise History of woman suffrage :$bselections from History of woman suffrage by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Matilda Joslyn Gage, and The National Amerian Woman Suffrage Association /$cedited and with an introduction by Mari Jo Buhle & Paul Buhle.
246 1 $aHistory of woman suffrage
260 $aUrbana, Ill. :$bUniversity of Illinois Press ;$aChesham :$bCombined Academic [distributor],$c2005.
263 $a200506
300 $axxxiii, 468 pages ;$c23 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 00 $tIntroduction : woman suffrage and American reform --$gDocument 1.$t(I: 25-42) : preceding causes, written by Matilda Joslyn Gage in 1881 --$gDocument 2.$t(I: 339-41) : Sarah T. Smith, address to Anti-Slavery Societies, Second National Anti-Slavery Convention of American Women, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, May 15, 1838 --$gDocument 3.$t(I: 333-37) : Angelina Grimke's address, with comments by Abby Kelley and Lucretia Mott, National Anti-Slavery Convention, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, May 16, 1838 --$gDocument 4.$t(I: 53-62) : World's Anti-Slavery Convention, London, England, June 1840 --$gDocument 5.$t(I: 67-74) : Seneca Falls Convention, Seneca Falls, New York, July 19-20, 1848, including the Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions --$gDocument 6.$t(I: 75-78) : Rochester Convention, Rochester, New York, August 2, 1848 --$gDocument 7.$t(I: 115-17) : Akron Convention, Akron, Ohio, May 28-29, 1851 : reminiscences by Frances D. Gage of Sojourner Truth --$gDocument 8.$t(I: 237-42) : Second National Convention, Worcester, Massachusetts, October 15-16, 1851 : address by Ernestine Rose --$gDocument 9.$t(I: 825-26) : Second National Convention, Worcester, Massachusetts, October 15-16, 1851 : resolutions --$gDocument 10.$t(I: 117-18) : Woman's Rights Meeting in a barn, May 1850, and "John's Convention," Mount Gilead, Ohio, December 1851, described by Frances D. Gage in a letter to Matilda Joslyn Gage --$gDocument 11.$t(I: 517-30, 535-42) : Syracuse National Convention, Syracuse, New York, September 8-10, 1852 --$gDocument 12.$t(I: 476-78) : Mary C. Vaughan, address, Daughters of Temperance Assembly, Albany, New York, January 28, 1852 --$gDocument 13.$t(I: 501-3) : Lucy Stone, letter to The Una, May 1853 --$gDocument 14.$t(I: 493-97) : Elizabeth Cady Stanton, address, First Annual Meeting of the Woman's State Temperance Society, Rochester, New York, June 1, 1853 --$gDocument 15.$t(I: 507) : Antoinette Brown, statement on World Temperance Convention, September 1853 --$gDocument 16.$t(I: 632-33) : Lucy Stone, address to Seventh National Woman's Rights Convention, New York City, November 25-26, 1856 --$gDocument 17.$t(I: 689-99) : Susan B. Anthony, Ernestine L. Rose, and Elizabeth Jones, addresses to the Tenth National Woman's Rights Convention, New York City, May 10-11, 1860 --$gDocument 18.$t(I: 716-35) : debates on Marriage and divorce, Tenth National Woman's Rights Convention, New York City, May 10-11, 1860 --$gDocument 19.$t(II: 1-3) : woman's patriotism in the war, written by Matilda Joslyn Gage --$gDocument 20.$t(II: 53) : call to the Woman's National Loyal League Meeting of May 14, 1863 --$gDocument 21.$t(II: 57-66) : resolutions and debate, Woman's National Loyal League Meeting, New York City, May 14, 1863 --$gDocument 22.$t(II: 78-80) : Prayer of one hundred thousand, presented by Charles Sumner, U.S. Senate, February 9, 1864 --$gDocument 23.$t(II: 90-97) : congressional action, 1866 --$gDocument 24.$t(II: 152-54, 168-71, 174-75) : Woman's Rights Convention, New York City, May 10, 1866, including address to Congress adopted by the convention --$gDocument 25.$t(II: 235-37) : Henry Blackwell, letter from the Kansas Campaign, April 21, 1867 --$gDocument 26.$t(II: 193-94) : Sojourner Truth, address to the First Annual Meeting of the American Equal Rights Association, New York City, New York, May 9, 1867 --$gDocument 27.$t(II: 213-20) : resolutions and debate, First Annual Meeting of the American Equal Rights Association, New York City, May 10 --$gDocument 28.$t(II: 309-12) : American Equal Rights Association anniversary, New York City, May 14, 1868 --$gDocument 29.$t(II: 348-55) : Elizabeth Cady Stanton, address to the National Woman Suffrage Convention, Washington, D.C. January 19, 1869 --$gDocument 30.$t(II: 381-98) : debates at the American Equal Rights Association Meeting, New York City, May 12-14, 1869 257 --$gDocument 31.$t(II: 516-20) : National Woman Suffrage Association, May anniversary of 1872, New York City, May 9-10, 1872 --$gDocument 32.$t(II: 443-48) : Victoria Woodhull, memorial and petition to the Judiciary Committee of the House of Representatives, U.S. Congress, December 19, 1870, and January 11, 1871 --$gDocument 33.$t(II: 715-17, 732-34) : Virginia L. Minor's petition, Circuit Court of St. Louis County, Missouri, December, 1872 --$gDocument 34.$t(II: 648-49. 687-89) : The United States of America vs. Susan B. Anthony, Circuit Court, Northern District of New York, June 17-18, 1873 --$gDocument 35.$t(III: 28-34) : United States Centennial celebration and the Declaration of Rights, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, July 4, 1876 --$gDocument 36.$t(III: 57-59) : National Woman Suffrage Association, appeal and petition for a sixteenth amendment, November 10, 1876 --$gDocument 37.$t(III: 75) : "Susan B. Anthony Amendment," U.S. Congress, January 10, 1878 --$gDocument 38.$t(III: 104) : American Woman Suffrage Association, response to NWSA's petition for a sixteenth amendment, February 4, 1878 --$gDocument 39.$t(IV: 75-77) : debate on woman suffrage and the churches, NWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., February 17-19, 1886 --$gDocument 40.$t(IV: 145-46) : Elizabeth Cady Stanton, letter, NWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 21-23, 1889 --$gDocument 41.$t(IV: 148-49) : Olympia Brown, "foreign rule," NWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 21-23, 1889 --$gDocument 42.$t(IV: 554-57) : South Dakota Campaign, 1890 --$gDocument 43.$t(IV: 189-91) : Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "Solitude of self," address before the U.S. Senate Committee on Woman Suffrage, February 20, 1892 --$gDocument 44.$t(IV: 216) : resolutions, NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 16-19, 1893 --$gDocument 45.$t(IV: 218-19) : on national conventions, NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 16-19, 1893 --$gDocument 46.$t(IV: 513-18) : Colorado Campaign, 1893 --$gDocument 47.$t(IV: 246) : Henry B. Blackwell, address to NAWSA Convention, Atlanta, Georgia, January 31-February 5, 1895 --$gDocument 48.$t(IV: 248-49) : Carrie Chapman Catt, report of the Plan of Work Committee, and comments by Susan B. Anthony, NAWSA Convention, Atlanta, Georgia, January 31-February 5, 1895 --$gDocument 49.$t(IV: 263-64) : The Bible Resolution and Susan B. Anthony's comment, NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 23-28, 1896 --$gDocument 50.$t(IV: 373) : Susan B. Anthony, statement to NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., February 8-14, 1900 --$gDocument 51.$t(V: 8-12) : suffrage strategy, NAWSA Convention, Minneapolis, Minnesota, May 30-June 4, 1901 --$gDocument 52.$t(V: 32) : Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "educated suffrage," NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., February 12-18, 1902 --$gDocument 53.$t(V: 82-83) : Belle Kearney, "the South and woman suffrage," NAWSA Convention, New Orleans, Louisiana, March 15-25, 1903 --$gDocument 54.$t(V: 59-60) : NAWSA position on the race question, letter to the New Orleans Times-Democrat, during March 1903 convention --$gDocument 55.$t(IV: 116-17) : Mary Seymour Howell, "the present and the past," NWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 25-27, 1887 --$gDocument 56.$t(IV: 151-52) : Clara Bewick Colby, "women in marriage," NWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 21-23, 1889 --$gDocument 57.$t(IV: 209-11) : Ruth C. D. Havens, "the girl of the future," NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 16-19, 1893 --$gDocument 58.$t(IV: 213-15) : Carroll D. Wright, U.S. Commissioner of Labor, "the industrial emancipation of women," NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 16-19, 1893 --$gDocument 59.$t(IV: 266-67) : Charlotte Perkins Stetson [later Gilman], "the ballot as an improver of motherhood," NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., January 23-28, 1896 --$gDocument 60.$t(IV: 308-9) : Rev. Anna Garlin Spencer, "fitness of women to become citizens from the standpoint of moral development," NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., February 13-19, 1898 --$gDocument 61.$t(IV: 311) : Harriot Stanton Blatch, "women as an economic factor," NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., February 13-19, 1898 --
505 80 $gDocument 62.$t(IV: 311-13) : Florence Kelley, "working woman's need of the ballot," NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., February 13-19, 1898 --$gDocument 63.$t(IV: 357-58) : Anna Barrows, "new professions for women centering in the home," NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., February 8-14, 1900 --$gDocument 64.$t(V: 178-79) : Jane Addams, "the modern city and the municipal franchise for women," NAWSA Convention, Baltimore, Maryland, February 7-13, 1906 --$gDocument 65.$t(V: 225-26) : Rev. Anna Garlin Spencer, address to NAWSA Convention, Buffalo, New York, October 15-21, 1908 --$gDocument 66.$t(V: 304-5) : Laura J. Graddick, address to NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., April 14-19, 1910 --$gDocument 67.$t(V: 348-49) : Elsie Cole Phillips, address to NAWSA Convention, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, November 21-26, 1912 --$gDocument 68.$t(V: 350-51) : Caroline A. Lowe, address to NAWSA Convention, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, November 21-26, 1912 --$gDocument 69.$t(VI: 675-82) : Washington Campaign, 1910 --$gDocument 70.$t(VI: 148-56) : Illinois Campaign, 1910-13 --$gDocument 71.$t(VI: 459-64) : New York City Campaign, 1915 --$gDocument 72.$t(VI: 512-17) : Ohio Campaign, 1913-17 --$gDocument 73.$t(V: 377-81) : Congressional Committee activities, NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., November 29-December 5, 1913 --$gDocument 74.$t(V: 416-17) : Shafroth-Palmer Amendment and "brief," NAWSA Convention, Nashville, Tennessee, November 12-17, 1914 --$gDocument 75.$t(V: 453-55) : The Congressional Union, NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., December 14-19, 1915 --$gDocument 76.$t(V: 675-77) : The National Woman's Party, 1913-17 --$gDocument 77.$t(V: 488-89) : Carrie Chapman Catt, "the crisis," NAWSA Emergency Convention, Atlantic City, New Jersey, September 4-10, 1916 --$gDocument 78.$t(V: 496-98) : Woodrow Wilson's address, NAWSA Convention, Atlantic City, New Jersey, September 4-10, 1916 --$gDocument 79.$t(V: 513-15) : NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., December 12-15, 1917 --$gDocument 80.$t(V: 534-36) : Anna Howard Shaw, NAWSA Convention, Washington, D.C., December 12-15, 1917 --$gDocument 81.$t(V: 550-51) : NAWSA Convention, St. Louis, Missouri, March 24-29, 1919 --$gDocument 82.$t(V: 684) : Carrie Chapman Catt, "the nation calls," League of Women Voters National Convention, St. Louis, Missouri, March 24-29, 1919 --$gDocument 83.$t(V: 594-95) : call to the Victory Convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association and the First Congress of the League of Women Voters, Chicago, Illinois, February 12-18, 1920.
520 1 $a"In Concise History of Woman Suffrage, Mari Jo Buhle and Paul Buhle have revitalized this classic text by selecting from among the original six-volume History of Woman Suffrage's best material. The volume's eighty-two chosen documents now also include a new preface and interpretative introductory material by the editors, giving researchers easy access to material that the original arrangement often caused readers to ignore or to overlook."--BOOK JACKET.
650 0 $aWomen$xSuffrage$zUnited States$xHistory.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh2008113725
650 0 $aWomen$xSuffrage$zUnited States$vSources.
700 1 $aBuhle, Mari Jo,$d1943-$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n78004799
700 1 $aBuhle, Paul,$d1944-$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82082633
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852 00 $bbar$hJK1896$i.C66 2005g