A Rhode Island Original: Frances Harriet Whipple Green McDougallUniversity Press of New England, 2004 - 187 pages Frances Harriet Whipple (1805-1878) was born in Smithfield, Rhode Island, She gained early recognition for her poems that appeared in local papers, and in 1829 published The Original, establishing herself as one of America's first female editors. Almost a decade later she wrote one of the few published narratives about a free black woman, The Memoirs of Elleanor Eldridge. In her middle years, Whipple turned to spiritualism, leaving Providence to write for numerous spiritualist publications in New York City. By this time she had married and divorced Charles Green - an unusual step for a woman in the mid-nineteenth century. Whipple moved from the East Coast to California in 1861. She served briefly on the board of the first female typographical union in San Francisco and at the age of fifty-seven married her second husband, a gold miner who had been a California assemblyman and brother of the state's second governor. O'Dowd, deftly contextualizing her analysis of Whipple's key works in nineteenth century politics and culture, has created a fascinating portrait of a woman well ahead of her time. |
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Page 40
... temperance , little evidence of this work has been found today . By looking at the history of the temperance move- ment in Rhode Island , we can at least see what her efforts were likely to have been . The crusade against alcohol gained ...
... temperance , little evidence of this work has been found today . By looking at the history of the temperance move- ment in Rhode Island , we can at least see what her efforts were likely to have been . The crusade against alcohol gained ...
Page 41
... temperance movement rapidly evolved into a more controversial campaign for total abstinence . In the fall of 1831 ... Temperance , which soon afterward , over heated opposition , agreed to admit the first women . Although they were not ...
... temperance movement rapidly evolved into a more controversial campaign for total abstinence . In the fall of 1831 ... Temperance , which soon afterward , over heated opposition , agreed to admit the first women . Although they were not ...
Page 42
... temperance activities in the late nineteenth century . " Very much less is known for the pre- Civil War years , even though women already occupied an important place in temperance agitation and despite the fact that later trends in ...
... temperance activities in the late nineteenth century . " Very much less is known for the pre- Civil War years , even though women already occupied an important place in temperance agitation and despite the fact that later trends in ...
Contents
The Memoirs of Elleanor Eldridge | 19 |
A New Age of Reform | 32 |
The Wampanoag and Operatives Journal | 63 |
Copyright | |
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A Rhode Island Original: Frances Harriet Whipple Green McDougall Sarah C. O'Dowd Limited preview - 2004 |
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abolitionist antislavery apparently Baker became believed Boston botany Bowen Broekhoven California cause Child church died Dorr Rebellion early edited editor Eldridge's Elizabeth Buffum Elleanor Eldridge example Fall River Fanny Green father female Fox sisters Frances Green Frances H Frances Harriet Frances Whipple Frances's freedom friends George girls Green McDougall Hale Harriet Beecher Stowe History issue John Kane labor ladies later lectures letters Liberty Chimes literary living Lowell Offering magazine married Mary medium Memoirs of Elleanor Mettler mill workers moral movement Neal nineteenth century Paschal Beverly Randolph poem poetry poets political probably published Randolph reform Rhode Island Samuel Brittan San Francisco Sarah Helen Whitman Sarah Josepha Hale Semantha Shahmah sisters slave slavery Smithfield social society Spiritualism Spiritualist story Stowe suffrage temperance temperance movement Theodosia tion Univercoelum University Press Wampanoag Whipple's William William McDougal woman women's rights writing wrote York young