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Mary Thacher Higginson, Thomas Wentworth Higginson: the story of his life, VII: the free church (search)
in a rather forlorn hotel from whose windows no house is visible, but only a few sheds with a dirty pig or two, then a frozen river and a bleak uninhabited shore behind. .. I doubt not that here also there are Abolitionists and Women's Rights people who would welcome me, could I only get at them. At another time, when attending certain suffrage meetings in New York city, he wrote:— This morning our Woman's Suffrage Convention began—I being President thereof; think of me in that big Hall! We had a very successful beginning— large numbers. . . . Rev. Antoinette [Brown] is a soft, gentle-looking person, youthful, and nervo-lymphatic —quite unlike most of the Woman's Rights women. Lucy Stone is staying in the house with me and more charming than ever. . . . I am willing to have women preach, if they will do it as much better than average men as she [Antoinette Brown] does. As for Lucy Stone, I admire and love her more every day. Of the success of this convention, Mr. Hi
Mary Thacher Higginson, Thomas Wentworth Higginson: the story of his life, Bibliography (search)
les were published later in Higginson's Larger History of the United States (1885), and in Higginson and Mac-Donald's History of the United States (1905). The Baby Sorceress. [Sonnet.]. (In Century Magazine, Nov.) Def. VI. Editorials and other articles. (In Index, Nation, Woman's Journal.) 1883 Dedicatory Address at unveiling of the statue of John Bridge, Sept. 20, 1882. (In Cambridge City Document, 1883.) Why do Children dislike History? (In Methods of Teaching History. Hall's Pedagogical Library, vol. I.) Report on the Parker Library. (In Boston Public Library. 31st Annual Report.) Pph. Old English Seamen. (In Harper's Monthly Magazine, Jan.) French Voyageurs. (In Harper's Monthly Magazine, March.) Negro Race in America. (In Atlantic Monthly, April.) Conway's Emerson at Home and Abroad. (In Century Magazine, April.) An English Nation. (In Harper's Monthly Magazine, April.) The Hundred Years War. (In Harper's Monthly Magazine, June.)