Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 4.djvu/1197




 * , large number of women in, xxii; women on faculties, 355; Emma Willard's school, geometry in, 355; Mt. Holyoke, Latin in, 355; first Boston High School, 355; President Eliot on girls in Boston Latin School and Radcliffe, 355; Johns Hopkins Medical, 700; Wellesley students for worn, suff., 714; teachers for, 716; same, 726; Smith, same, 716; Girton and Newnham (Eng.), same, 1015; woman suffrage in, 709; Radcliffe, 355, 749; Columbia, 871; Rochester, 871; Brown, 918-20; Oberlin, 884; Antioch, 885; State, closed to wom., 966; open to women in Gr. Brit., 1024; in other countries, 1038 et seq.; presidents of, favoring wom. suff., 1079. See also Education.


 * , adopts wom. suff., xxi; 252; visit of Miss Anthony and Miss Shaw in '95, 253; welcomed by Nat'l. Ass'n., 260; organiz'n for worn, suff., 262; gift to Miss Anthony, 390. See State chapter, also Statistics and Testimony.


 * , chapter on, 1031.


 * , of women, 240; 334-5.


 * , woman's, political complexion of, xviii, not wanted by politicians and others, xix; best women would not vote, 50; they would, 97; they would not, 98; women do vote, 93, 117, 181; first voted in N. J., 19, 830; future woman will be urged to vote, 211. See Statistics, Suffrage, Testimony, and chapters for Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Australia and New Zealand.

— of nat'l. conv. on carrying wom. suff. into church, 77; on Woman's Bible, 263; in U. S. Senate on amend. for wom. suff., 112.

, see Labor and Statistics.

, see p. 455 and Laws.

, hated by women, xix, 84, 208; man's part compared to woman's, 115; woman's part in war, 161-2; first to see advantages of peace, 208; pathetic war for suff., 231, 245; war should have consent of women, 335; women left to fight alone, 338; badly needed in Span. Am., 339; women and the South African, 391. See Military and Soldiers.

— Civil, developed woman, 2; results frittered away, 159; woman's part in, 195.


 * , plan to beautify, xxxii; entertains nat'l. suff. convs. from '69, 14; Miss Anthony's preference as a place for holding convs., 218, 351. See accounts of nat'l. convs., Chaps. II-XXII, also chapter on District of Columbia.


 * , xxi; xxix; Sen. Dolph on enfranch. of its women, 102; their disfranch. denounced, 155; full account of this, 1096-8. See State chapter, also Statistics and Testimony.


 * , Sen. Suff. in, xv; rule of foreigners, 148. See State chapter.


 * , 52; 88; 95; 106; 160; Mrs. Stanton on, 165; 225; 285; 319; 1086 et seq.


 * , petition for suff., no; 123; Miss Willard represents before Sen. Com. of '88, 141-2; worn, suff: in '81, 215; at nat'l. conv. of '97, 278. For bills in Legislatures see pp. 451-2, and various State chapters under head of Legislative Action; also Canada, New Zealand and Tasmania; for founding and work, 1045 et seq.; attitude towards wom. suff., 1070.


 * , demands of first one nearly all granted, xiii; earliest ones held, 14; 40th annivers., 125; 204; 50th anniv., 288; descrip. of, 298-9; compared to Bunker Hill, etc., 397; 1043.


 * , how enfranchised, xvii, same, 305; in Great Brit., 311; injured by disfranch: women, 312. See Labor.


 * , relation of wom. suff. to. 70; Nat'l. Ass'n. demands suff. for, 216. See Labor and Statistics.


 * , adopts wom. suff., xxi; Nat'l. Ass'n. congratulates on admission, 176; gavel from, 238; 252; visit of Miss Anthony and Miss Shaw, 253; compared to Switzerland, 282; gift and trib. to Miss Anthony on 80th birthday, 400; petits. Cong, for 16th amend., 448; debate in Cong, on admission, 998 et seq. See State chapter, also Statistics and Testimony.