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BISHOPS, in favor of woman suff., 588; Vincent, 708, 727; Phillips Brooks, 757; Doane organizes anti-suff. soc., 765; Turner, 812.
BLOOMERS, 84; 91; description of, 112; by whom worn, ridicule of public, 113; arguments for, 114; letters on, 114-116; final abandonment, 117; 844.
BOARDS, women on in Eng., 564, 565; N. Y. World's Fair, 734; of Lady Managers for Columb. Expos., 744, 748; Woman's of Tenn. Expos., 927.
BREAD AND BALLOT, A.'s lecture on, 472, 546, 996.
BUSTS. See Sculpture.
CALLS, for first Wom. St. Temp. Conv., 66, 67; for second, 92; for Women's World's, 96; for Wom. Rights Conv. in Rochester, 104; for forming Loyal League, 226; for first W. R. Conv. after War, 256; for Natl. Wom. Suff. Conv. of 1872, 410; of women to form new party, A. repudiates, 413; for Natl. Wom. Suff. Conv. in New York in 1873, 434; A. on omission of woman suff. from Call for Intl. Council of Women, 634; of prominent New York women in suff. campaign of 1894, 764; A. prepares for Natl. Suff. Conv. of 1895, 801.
CAMPAIGNS, first St. campaign for woman suff., in N. Y. in 1867, 271 et seq.; for woman suff. amend. in Kansas, 274 et seq.; discomforts of, 284, 285; Geo. Francis Train's part in, 286 et seq.; close in Leavenworth, 291; A. in Col. in 1877, hard and pleasant experiences, difference in women, 489-492; in Neb. in 1882, work of A. and assistants, 544, 545; in S. Dak., perplexities, hardships, humorous features, treachery of polit. parties, insults, etc., 679-696; in Kas. in 1892, 728; A.'s advice on Kansas, every woman can help, 742; same, 754; in Col. in 1893, woman suff. granted, 752; great campaign for woman suff. in N. Y. in 1894, 755 et seq.; same in Kas., 777 et seq.; A. reviews history of, 799; objects to Bible or Prohib. in Calif., 857; A. begged to assist in Calif., consents, 861; greeted by South. Calif., arrives in San Fr., 862; great campaign for woman suff. in 1896, 863 et seq.; in Kas. in 1867, 1016; in other States, 1017.
CANVASSES, A. and others in N. Y. for temp., 71; same, 103; for Woman's Rights, 105; unpleasant experience, 108; A.'s long work, 111; first of N. Y. for woman suff., 122 et seq.; for Woman's Rights in 1856, 138 et seq.; for Anti-Slavery, graphic pictures, 150 et seq.; for rights of women in 1860, 175, 178; for Anti-Slavery in 1861, 208 et seq.; for Equal Rights in 1866, 265; A. bore all the burdens, 273; of Conn. in 1874, 456; of Mich. for suff. amend. in 1874, 460; of Iowa in 1875, hard conditions, 470; of Kas. in 1886, 609-611; of Wis., 612; of Kas. in 1887, 625; of Ind., 626; of S. Dak. in 1890, 656; same, 679-696; of Kas. in 1892, 719; same, 728; of N. Y. in 1894, 759-763; of Kas. in 1894, 784, 785, 796; only women come to meetings, 1019 (see Campaigns).
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT, A. organizes meeting in protest, ends in mob, 164.
CASES (see Trials).
CHARACTERISTICS,[138] clear-sightedness, 141, 182, 185, 261, 519, 758, 929; courage, moral and physical, 43, 72, 111, 156, 158, 163, 164, 181, 190, 197, 202, 208-212, 272, 291, 292, 391, 396, 412, 428, 436, 468, 469, 534-542, 549, 583, 656, 689, 692, 773, 782, 783, 786, 799, 854, 855, 857, 901, 952, 974, 994; duty and principle, devotion to, 116, 117, 218, 222, 224, 482, 542, 679, 907; energy and perseverance, 36, 55, 105, 127, 148, 157, 179, 188, 190, 213, 221, 251, 288, 314, 414, 496, 581, 667, 772, 944, 973, 974, 994; executive ability, 62, 110, 154, 323, 473; expediency, disdain for, 95, 214, 262, 953; generosity, 20, 217, 329, 494, 508, 545, 592, 599, 608, 659, 695, 707, 711, 763, 796, 849, 892, 925; injustice, sense of, viii, 29, 30, 81, 107, 844; judgment, 150, 225, 293, 425, 638, 654, 857, 871, 882; justice, love of, 134, 169, 270, 592, 919, 944; kindness of manner, 285, 550, 597, 674, 838, 946, 972; optimism and cheerfulness, 587, 638, 660, 688, 773, 800, 877, 898, 938, 953; philosophy and logic, 185, 380, 511, 644, 648, 666, 672, 714; presiding, gift for, 163, 174, 637; self-sacrifice, viii, 127, 190, 273, 316, 323, 335, 396, 460, 480, 489, 504, 550, 615, 667, 671, 744, 772, 846, 891, 892, 944, 950; sense of humiliation and insult, 238, 268, 269, 584; sensitiveness, 28, 29, 30, 120, 168, 542, 583, 584; unselfishness, 384, 535, 695, 731, 735, 975 (see chart of head, 85; Domestic Traits, Love of Family, Newspapers, Tributes).
CHILDREN, hardships of A.'s mother, 12, 19; severity of early days, 31; 52; Mrs. Mott's and Mrs. Stanton's, 76; Mrs. Greeley's, 86, 97; A.'s answer to minister, 108; A. on "baby show," 132; mothers' trials, 139; Mrs. Stanton on, 142; maternity and conventions, 158, 162; Lucy Stone and Mrs. Stanton on, 162; A.'s care of Mrs. Stanton's, 142, 187, 213, 219; woman's immortal product, 193; mother no right to, sad story, 200; care of is a profession, 213; A.'s care of, 213; illegitimate, 216, 656, 844; A. would educate in public schools, 221; baby panacea for woman suff., 267; woman's right to have, 296; The Revolution, A.'s child, 362; Mrs. Stanton's belong to A., 489; Neb. man wants credit, 493; alleged effect of woman suff. in regard to, 504; A.'s care of nieces, 513; great number among suffragists, 517; impudent advice, 517; must suffer disgrace of parents' hostility to woman suff., 529; A.'s experience with woman and babies in Killarney, 573; God held responsible, 574; brought for A. to take in arms, 610; A. on pre-natal influence, 678; men suckle babies, 687; 690; trying experiences with in S. Dak. campaign, 692; Mrs. Stanton's, 713, 717; A. would turn palace into orphan asylum, 943 (see Guardianship).
CHINESE, A. compares status with women, 398; 986.
CHURCHES, St. Bartholomew the Great, 3; A.'s maternal grandparents members of Baptist, 5; later Universalist, 5; paternal, Quakers, 6; record Anthony and Read families, 5, 6, 7, 11, 21; father disciplined by Quakers, 10, 20, 36; A. on Lord's Supper, 36; 38; attitude toward colored people, 39; on a woman's preaching in 1839, 40; first knowledge of Unitarianism, 44; attends that church, 58; 65; Mrs. Stanton on in 1852, 67, 68; 70; bondage for women, relation to woman's rights, 73, 79, 90; Brick Ch. (N. Y.), 87, 96; Mrs. Stanton demands women in councils of, 92; Greeley on, 97; effort to secure for women's meetings, 119, 121;[139] A. on preaching, 133; efforts for Free Church in Rochester, 167; Beecher's at Elmira, 178; Free Church at Peterboro, Antoinette Blackwell's sermon and Gerrit Smith's nap, 179; Zion's colored, 209; attitude toward slavery, 228; 248; relation to negroes, 249; Ch. of Puritans, 227, 259, 276; last woman suff. conv. in, 278; fear of woman suff., 506; relig. of Garfield, 536; sectarianism in England, 554; in Italy, 556-558; in Cologne, 559; in London, 564; waning intellects return to childish teachings, 563; Stopford Brooke's, 564; in Ireland, 572; convent at Kenmare, 573; Natl. Assn. discusses creeds and dogmas, 595; A. and Mrs. Stanton's encounter with Dr. Patton, 596; orthodox preferred for suff. convs., 612; A. demands all creeds shall be recd. on natl. woman suff. platform, 631; objects to creeds and negations, 634; Catholic in St. Louis, 649; A. protests against theology in suff. platform, 655; orthodox indifferent to feelings of liberals, 678; on prohibition and woman suff. in S. Dak., 693; proportion of women in, 710; Unit. in Roch., 712, 714; boycott Miss Shaw for speaking to Spiritualists, her answer, 720; no creed in Natl. Suff. Assn., 757; in Calif., 826, 831-834; A. objects to Mrs. Stanton's attack on, 847; A. on bigotry and religious freedom, 854; woman suff. destroys superstition, 857; open to suff. speakers in Calif., 876, 877, 886; in Des Moines, 902; 927; A. attends Unit. in Rochester, 933; absorbs work of women, 1010 (see Bible, God, Ministers).
CITIZENSHIP, must be basis for suff., 310; established by 14th amend., 317; decis. in Dred Scott case, 454; Sumner on rights conferred by, 979; according to U. S. Constitu., 983-987.
Clubs, of men or of men and women, Press (N. Y.) gives dinner to women in 1869, 316; Albemarle (London), 564; Six O'clock (Washtn.), 647; Seidl (N. Y.), 653; Authors' Uncut Leaves (N. Y.), 802; Practical Progress (Columbia), 812; Travel (Washtn.), 814; Mercantile (St. Louis), 821; Unitarian (San Fr.), 830; addressed by A. in Calif., 876; Men's Club (Auburn, N. Y.), 914; Historical Soc. (Berkshire, Mass.), 939-946 (see Organizations of Women).
COEDUCATION, first efforts for, 64; Mrs. Stanton demands, 73; 130; A.'s effort to prepare paper on, 142; its reception, 143; resolution for in 1857, leads to social evil, 155; to Mormonism and amalgamation, 156; 164.
COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION, beginning of A.'s work for women in, 660; 676; A. would open gates on Sunday, 720; A.'s bust made for, 721, 722; N. Y. woman's board, 734; 737, 740, 741; A. on Mrs. Palmer's dedication sp., 742; A.'s part in securing recog. of women, 742-744; Board of Lady Managers, 744, 748; Woman's Congress, 745-748; wonderful ovation to A., 746-748; same, 752; Temp. Congress, 747; pre-eminence of woman suff., 748; A.'s part in many Congresses, 748-750; Press Congress, A.'s sp., 749; Educatl. Cong., 751; effect on Calif., 819.
COMMITTEE ON WOMAN SUFFRAGE, effort to secure from Congress, 527; debate on among Senators in 1880, 540; fight for in 1884, 584.
COMMITTEES, attempt to put A. on temp. in 1853, 88; on union of two suff. assns., 627-629; in N. Y. Constitl. Conv., on woman suff., 767, 768; amend. campaign in Kas., 781; for Calif. woman suff. campaign, 863, 865; res. coms. of the polit. convs., 870, 872, 873 (see Campaigns, Congress).
COMPARISONS, A. to Napoleon, 110; to Christ, 703; to Christ, to Washington, 805; to Pope Leo, 840; to Niagara, 892; to Washington and Lincoln, 900; to St. Paul, 924; to Galileo, 943; Napoleon, Gladstone, Lincoln, 952; Garrison, 953.
CONGRESS, U. S., N. Y. Herald on women in, 79; Wom. Loyal League petitions for emancip. of slaves, 226-238; first appealed to for Wom. Suff., 250; N. Y. Indpt. on, 253; address of Wom. Rights Soc. in 1866, 259; debates woman suff. in 1866, 266; A. and Mrs. Stanton send address to, 277; bills for Wom. Suff. in 1868, 310; appeal sent by women in 1869, 314; A. urges to enfranchise women of D. C., 338; Act under which A. was indicted, 437; A. appeals to remit her fine for voting, 449; majority and minority reports, 450-452; treatment by Senate of petits. for woman suff. in 1877, 485; Sen. Hoar hopes to see A. there, 485; condemned for treatment of women, 499-501; A. watches and distrusts, 516; members attend mem. serv. to Lucretia Mott, 526; opposed to Wom. Suff. Com., 540; attitude of members on woman suff., 250, 256, 266, 310, 317, 337, 375, 377, 405, 410, 411, 454, 455, 457, 477, 485, 500, 501, 502, 507, 543, 583, 584, 590, 596, 617-621, 688, 698, 699, 716, 718, 778, 969, 985; A. dislikes to interview members, 583; vote on Wom. Suff. Com. in 1884, 585; A. watches, 591, 603; persistence with, 605-608; same, 622; Sen. Blair's humor, 606, 626; action on admission of Wy. with woman suff., 698, 699; A.'s constant watchfulness, 716; efforts to secure recog. of women at Columb. Expos., 743, 744; admits Utah with woman suff., 851; A. demands no members be admitted unless elected by a maj. of all voters, black and white, 963, 967; power to create voters, 966; address of Natl. Wom. Rights Conv. in 1866, 968; fails in its highest duty, 970; as representatives of women, 970; right to control suff., 981; Repub. record on wom. suff., 1018.
CONGRESSES, Woman's, in Paris, 434, 496, 652; Woman's, Miss. Valley, 728, 821; Woman's at Columb. Expos., 745-748, 750, 751; Liberal Religious, 804, 805; Woman's Calif. in 1895, 819, 827-829, 831; in 1896, 871; in Ore., 877.
CONSTITUTION, U. S., protects slavery, 149, 184, 207; Sumner on, 235; 248; A. begins 30-years' war to amend, 249; "male" first introduced, protest of A., Mrs. Stanton and Lucy Stone, 250; Independent speaks, 253; 257; first effort to amend for woman suff., 313; B. F. Butler on its power over woman suff., 429; A. asks for broad interpret., 440; does not confer suffrage on any one, 453; arguments for right of women to vote under its provisions, 483; compact with slavery broken, 958; base use of it by President Johnson, 961; bring legislation up to Constitu., 970; protest against introd. word "male," 970; A.'s sp. on woman's right to vote under its provisions, 977-992; distinguished testimony for, 979-991.
CONSTITUTIONS, STATE, Phillips, Tilton, A. and Mrs. Stanton on striking out "male" from N. Y., 261; woman suff. in Utah, 825, 851; while "male" remains women should not help men, 839; of N. Y. guarantees woman suff., 979 (see Amendments).
CONSTITUTIONAL ARGUMENT, on right of women to vote, delivered by A. previous to her trial for voting, 977-992; newspaper comment, 993.
CONVENTIONS, first Woman's Rights, 59; in Worcester, 61, 75; Men's Temp. silence women in 1852, 64; first Wom. St. Temp., 66; Greeley's advice, 66; Men's Temp. reject women delegates, 68; Teachers' at Elmira, 71; Woman's Rights at Syracuse, 72; Mrs. Mott and Mrs. Stanton had objected to woman pres., 72; lofty character of first Wom. Rights Convs., 80; World's Temperance in New York, 1853, 87; women rejected, hold own meeting, abuse, 88-92; second Woman's St. Temp., 92; men gain control, 94; Women's Whole World's, 96, 100; A.'s first address to St. Teachers', 98; not supported by women, 98, 99, 100; Davies' sp., 99; sustained by a few, 100; Men's Whole World's Temp., Antoinette Brown rejected, 101; Woman's Rights in 1853, 102; in Cleveland, 103; in Rochester, 105; before the War, 107; in Albany, 108; A. again goes to Teachers' for rights of women, 120; Wom. Rights in Phila., 121; Teachers' in Utica, 130; Wom. Rights in Boston, 131; Teachers' in Troy, 143; Wom. Rights in New York, 147; Teachers' in Binghamton, 155; Wom. Rights in New York in 1858, under mob rule, 162; A. stirs up Teachers' in Lockport, 163, 164; Anti-Slavery in Albany in 1859, 173; Wom. Rights in New York, the mob, 174; Wom. Rights in Albany in 1860, 186; Conservatives' in Boston, 196; A. and Pillsbury on, 197; Wom. Rights, last before War, 212; A.'s dislike of giving up, 213, 215, 218; results of A.'s labors in Teachers', 221, 222; Anti-Slavery in Phila., 234; first Wom. Rights after War, 256 et seq.; N. Y. Constitl., A. arranges to present petitions, tilt with Greeley, 278; latter checkmated, 279; his anger, 280; first for woman suff. held in Washtn., 313; woman suff. at Hartford, 333; second of Natl. Wom. Suff. Assn., 337; woman suff. in New York in 1870, 368; third of Natl. Wom. Suff. Assn. in Washtn., managed by Mrs. Hooker, 371 et seq.; appearance of Mrs. Woodhull, 375; woman suff. in New York in 1871, excitement over Mrs. Woodhull, 383; Natl. Wom. Suff. in 1872, struggle to secure woman suff. under 14th amend., 409-411; woman suff. in New York, A. thwarts scheme for alliance with Woodhull party, 414; women attend Natl. Liberal in 1872, 415; Natl. Repub. in 1872, woman's plank, 416; Natl. Wom. Suff. in Washtn. in 1873, 431; woman suff. in New York in 1873, 434; Natl. Woman Suff. of 1874, 453; in New York, adverse accounts, 458; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1875, A. conquers all objections to, 467; A. misses Natl. Suff. for first time, 472; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1876 arranges to celebrate Centennial, 474; Natl. Wom. Suff. Assn. in 1877, 484 et seq.; A. misses May Anniv. first time, 488; of Natl. Wom. Suff. Assn. in 1878, need of A.'s management and Mrs. Stanton's presence, prayer meet. in Capitol, 494; 30th annivers. celebr. in Rochester, 495; last attended by Lucretia Mott, 496; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1879, 499-501; Natl. Suff. Assn. in 1880, 511; A. plans great series in 1880 and overcomes opposition, 515; begins at Indpls., 517; mass meet. in Chicago, 517; other cities, 519; Natl. polit. convs. appealed to by women in 1880, 518-520; A.'s amusing attempt to postpone Natl. Suff. of 1881, compels Mrs. Stanton's attendance, 526; same, 532; Natl. Assn. In New England, 533; W. C. T. U. in 1881 adopts franchise dept. but repudiates influence of A., 537, 538; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1882, 540; in Phila., 541; in Nebraska in 1882, 544, 545; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1883, 546; Liberal in Eng., 575, 576, 577; A.'s efforts for Intl. Wom. Suff., 578; Natl. Wom. Suff. in 1884, 588; holiday refused dept. women to attend, 588; Natl. polit. in 1884 appealed to by women, 594; Natl. Wom. Suff. in 1885, 595; Mrs. Stanton's satire on esthetic convs., 605; Natl. Suff. in 1886, 607; in Kas. in 1886, 609-611; in Wis. and Ills., 611; in Mich., 617; Natl. Wom. Suff. in 1887, 617; in Indiana, 623; in Kansas in 1887, 625; in Indiana, 626; Fred. Douglass on first Woman's Rights, 634; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1888, 639; Natl. polit. in 1888 appealed to by suffragists, 641, 642; in Iowa, Kas., Neb., 644; of 1889, 647; in New York, 651; Akron, O., 652; in Kas., Ind., Wis., 655; Minn., 656; of Natl. Amer. Wom. Suff. Assn. in 1890, 674; Farmers' Alliance and Knights of Labor in S. Dak., act. on woman suff., 685, 686; same of Democrats, 686; of Repubs. 687; in Neb., in Kas., in Iowa, 697; in N. Y., 698; in Mass., 701; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1891, 703; in Ohio, Conn., 705; Natl. Suff. of 1892, Mrs. Stanton's last appear., A. made pres., 717; in Mich., 720; A. urges Southern women to hold, 722; Natl. polit. for 1892, 723-727; Kas. St. Repub. adopts woman suff. plank, 726; Miss. Valley, 728; N. Y. State in 1892, pioneers and modern workers contrasted, 729; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1893, 737; the conv. taken from Washtn., A.'s opposition, 738; in N. Y., Penn., 753; in Mich., 755; in O., 756; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1894, 756; Constitl. of N. Y. in 1894, treatment of woman suff. amend., 767-771; N. Y. St. Repub., A. and others ask woman suff. plank, Miss Willard describes scene, 774; Democratic, asked for same, 775; Kas. Repub. refuses woman suff. plank, 785-787; Popu. adopts, 787-790; Prohib., 790; Dem. anti-plank, 796; Neb. St. Suff., 799; N. Y. same, 800; Natl. Woman. Suff. of 1895 in Atlanta, 810-812; in St. Louis, 821; in Utah, 825; in Calif., 835; in O., 845; Natl. Wom. Suff. in 1896, 851; at beginning of Calif. suff. campaign, 864; Repub. St. in Calif. adopts woman suff. plank, 871; Popu. and Prohib., same, 872; Dem. refuses, 872; efforts of women with delegates, 869-874; Idaho polit. convs. on woman suff., 879; W. C. T. U. withdrawn from Calif. in 1896, 881, 882; Calif. St. Suff. of 1896, 892; Natl. Wom. Suff. of 1897, 901; A. opposed to holding outside of Washtn., 903; A. begged to come to O., 927; N. Y. St. Suff., A. speaks on "rings" and women in politics, 928; round of convs. in Middle West, contrast between past and present, 929; Natl. Wom. Rights in 1866 sends memorial to Congress, 968; Natl. Repub. of 1872 on equal rights, Natl. Liberal, same, Calif. Repub., same, 991.
COOPER INSTITUTE, Beecher's sp. in 1860, 192; meet. of Wom. Loyal League, 229; headqrs. of same, 230; 264, 274, 303; meeting in Hester Vaughan case, 309; Anna Dickinson speaks for woman suff., 327; polit. meet. of women in 1872, 422.
DEATHS, of Deborah Moulson, 31; maternal grandparents and baby sister, 35; cousin Margaret, 52; of father, 222; niece, 241; nephew, 369; Greeley, 428; sister Guelma, 447; Sumner, 456; Gerrit Smith, Mrs. Wright, 467; Lydia Mott, 471; Mrs. Davis, Anson Lapham, 481; sister Hannah, 488; Garrison, A.'s tribute, 508; of mother, 512; Lucretia Mott, A.'s great loss, 525; memorial service, 526; Phoebe Jones, 536; Garfleld, A.'s comment, 536; Wendell Phillips, 587; Wm. Henry Channing, Sarah Pugh, Frances D. Gage, Mrs. Nichols, 595; General Grant, 598; Mrs. Julia Foster, 603; Dr. Lozler, E. M. Davis, A. Bronson and Louisa M. Alcott, 645; niece Susie B., 648; Emerine J. Hamilton, 654; Mrs. Riddle, Amy Post, Mary L. Booth, Maria Mitchell, Dinah Mendenhall, 660; Ellen Sheldon, 700; Julia T. Foster, 701; A. on Blaine's, 739; distinguished suffragists in 1893, 737; same in 1894, 756; Mrs. Bloomer, Mrs. Minor, 803; Frederick Douglass, Adeline Thompson, 814; Mrs. Dietrick, 849; Mr. Sewall, 850; Maria Porter, 896; how to remember the dead, 899; in 1896, 902; Mrs. Humphrey's, 908.
DEBATES, on Divorce in Wom. Rights Conv. of 1860, 194; on Wom. Suff. in Cong., 1866, 266; in U. S. Senate on creating Wom. Suff. Com., 540; same on 16th amend., 617-621; Sen. Ingalls refuses to debate with woman, 626; in Cong. on admission of Wy. with woman suff., 698, 699; Rev. Miss Shaw and Dr. Buckley at Chautauqua, 727; on woman suff. in N. Y. Constitl. Conv., 770; in Kas. St. Popu. Conv. on woman suff., 789; on Woman's Bible in Natl. Suff. Conv., 853.
DECISIONS, of Judge Hunt on A.'s voting, 438; U. S. Sup. Ct. on women's voting under 14th amend., 453; 735; Mich. Sup. Ct. on Munic. Suff. for women, 740; Idaho Sup. Court only majority of votes cast on amend. necessary to carry, 918; U. S. Sup. Ct. on women's entering public lands, 983; Dred Scott, 454, 984; others, 985.
DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE, 253, 475; women's in 1876, 476-479; Sen. Morton on, 500; compared to Emancip. Proc., 957; 960; should protect rights of women, 977; gives women right to vote, 977, 978.
DEMOCRATS, 59, 149, 211; would not fear to act, 216; 263, 264; embarrass Repubs. by approving woman suff., 265, 266, 267; in Kas. campaign for woman suff., 284, 287, 291; press comment, 293; A. and Mrs. Stanton attend Natl. Conv. of 1868, 305; insulted by it, 306; 311; nothing expected from, 365; Mrs. Hooker on, 381, 382; in Wyoming, 407, 411; women attend Natl. Conv. in 1872, 417, 418; 419, 420; A.'s attitude toward, 422; on A.'s registering to vote, 426; Natl. Conv. of 1876 on wom. suff., 476; Natl. Conv. of 1880, 519; A. criticises women for helping, 523; opposed to Wom. Suff. Com. in Congress, 585; Natl. Conv. of 1888, 641; disgraceful treatment of woman suff. in S. Dak., 686; Natl. Conv. of 1892 grants hearing to women, Miss Willard describes, 725; on woman suff. in Col., 753; in N. Y. refuse to make women delegates, 758; one exception, 759; N. Y. St. Conv. refuses woman suff. plank, 775; action in Kas. toward woman suff., 796; scene on night of conv. in Calif., 874; Maguire stands by women, 874; invite A. to address ratif. meeting, 878; in Idaho, 879; attitude toward woman suff. speakers, 884; abolish property qualif. for voting, 998; Greeley on, 999; in Kas. in 1867, oppose woman suff., 1016, 1017; in Col. in 1893, 1017; on Prohibition, 1017; op. woman suff. in Kas., 1018.
DISFRANCHISEMENT, degradation of, 318, 382, 584; A. points out disadvantages of to Pres. Garfield, 523; Mrs. Stanton's speech, 703; A.'s view, 711, 712; 801; way for women to be free from, 918, 996 et seq.; attempt to disfranchise negroes, 960 et seq.
DISSENSIONS, objections to recording, vii, 245, 336, 530.
DIVORCE, 61; Mrs. Stanton demands intemperance should be cause for, 67; law against wife, 74; Mrs. Stanton again demands, 92; debate in Wom. Rights Conv. of 1860, 193; Phillips on, 194, 196; A. on, 194; aftermath, 194 et seq.; Mrs. Stanton's sp. at meet. of Progressive Friends, 197; Catharine Beecher on, 352; 854.
DOMESTIC SPHERE, women should stay at home, 76, 78, 119; wife of present and future, 134; Willits on, 172; 178, 193; N. Y. Times' opinion, 295; effect of woman suff. on, 504, 505; U. S. Senators on, 617-620; in S. Dak., 686 (see Marriage).
DOMESTIC TRAITS, of mother, 6; of grandmothers, 7, 14; hard work of mother and daughters, 12, 19; A.'s needlework, 22; 30, 36, 42; biscuits and algebra, 43; 45; A. as nurse, 52; on the farm, 55; as cook, 60; suffragists declared to be without, 76; Lucretia Mott's, 122; A.'s love of young brother, 133; housekeeping too exacting, 134; wife's work in early days, 139; A. assists Mrs. Stanton with children, 142, 187, 213, 219; her work at home, 197; her farming, 215; 216, 218; helps at brother's "infare," 235; 243; nursing of brother D. R., 470; other instances, 471; Rochester paper on, 476; poor housekeeping unpardonable sin, 491; buys linen in Belfast, 575; goes to housekeeping, remembrance of friends, gifts, etc., 706, 707; her delight, 710; her hospitality and her cooking, 711; sends for Mrs. Stanton, 712; enjoyment of home, 719 (see Journals).
DRESS, of grandmother, 6; of mother, 11; of children lent, 14; of father, 20; A.'s plaid cloak, 21; 22; A.'s criticism, 36; her early love of, 50, 51, 52; Mrs. Stanton on, 66; A. on low-necks, 72; 84; A. opposes mixing dress reform with suff., 117; A.'s in 1855, 124, 134; wife and breeches, 141; Gerrit Smith on, 147; 151; A.'s in 1860, 197; 252; of suff. advocates, 337; of A. at 50th birthday party, 342; Mrs. Stanton's, 353; A.'s in 1873, 435; shameful account of A.'s in 1874, 458; true description, 459; gifts on starting to Europe, 549; A.'s on board steamer, 550, 552; shopping in Italy, 557; Lewia Smith's lace, 558; Rachel Foster's court costume, 562; A.'s garnet velvet, 567; her taste in, Mrs. Stanton's satire, 605; A.'s clothes after a campaign, 612; Miss Willard describes A.'s, 638; amusing newspaper comment, 651; Rev. Anna Shaw's in pulpit, 826; women had to dress to please men, 844; A.'s at 75, 858; according to reporters, 903; Mary S. Anthony on 70th birthday, 916; A.'s fastidiousness and love of beautiful things, 932; A.'s clothes "worn by a lady," 995.
EDUCATION, demand for women, 73; A. on public schools, 221; of women, 582; qualif. for suff., 899, 922 (see Co-education).
EMANCIPATION, attitude of Republicans and Abolitionists in 1857, 148, 149; Judge Ormond on, 184; 207; Greeley on, 221; A.'s speeches on, 222; Tilton on proclamation, 225; H. B. Stanton on same, 226; efforts of Repubs. for, 226, 235; of Woman's Natl. Loyal League, 226 et seq., 230; Sumner on, 235; Phillips believes ballot necessary for, A. same, Garrison differs, 245; Pillsbury's attitude, 246; Wom. Natl. Loyal League prays Lincoln to grant, 957-959 (see Petitions, Wom. Natl. Loyal League).
ENCYCLOPEDIA, treatment of women, 170; A. writes for Johnson's, 481, 802.
EQUAL RIGHTS ASSOCIATION, movement for in 1866, 256; Phillips objects to including women, 256, 259, 267; A. presents resolution for, 259; formed, 260; first meet. in Boston, attitude of Standard, 262; meet. in Albany, polit. differences arise, 263; meet. in Cooper Institute, 264; abuse of World, 264; first annivers. in New York, 276 et seq.; committee objects to The Revolution in its headqrs., 298; persecutions, 299; not responsible for The Revolution, 300; second annivers., women insulted, 303; abandoned for negro, 304; form independent com., which memorializes Repub. Conv., Tilton advises they go to Democratic, 304, 305; third annivers., attacks on A. and Mrs. Stanton, 322; tilt between A. and Douglass, 323, 324; discussion on "free love," 325; platform too broad, "cranks" take advantage, 326; Mrs. Livermore on, 327; merged into Union Wom. Suff. Society, 348, 349.
EXPEDIENCY, A. objects to word, 95, 214; 262; Beecher on, 276; Republican cry, 409; 415; 953.
EXPOSITIONS, first World's Fair, 101; Centennial of 1876, women open headqrs., 474; attempt to secure recognition, 476-480; hold their own celebr., 478; visits of Lucretia Mott, 479, 480; New Orleans, 597; Atlanta, 845; Tennessee, 927 (see Columbian Exposition).
FACTORY, first cotton factory of father, 11, 15; moved to Battenville, 17; temperance rules, 18; treatment of employes, 19; A.'s experience in, 20; prosperity, 23; financial crash, 33-35; vain struggle to maintain, 45; after 60 years, 944, 947.
FARMERS' ALLIANCE, of S. Dak., record on woman suff., 657; agree to support, 684; false to pledges, 685, 686.
FINANCE, A.'s accounts used in writing Biog., vii; ambition of grandfather, 6; prosperity in 1837, 15; panic of 1838, 33; hard struggle, 45; A. raises money in 1852, 68; in 1853, 92; ability to raise money, 92, 103, 120; never waited for money in hand, 111; for canvass of N. Y. in 1855, 122 et seq.; receipts for first St. canvass, 128; in 1857, Maria Weston Chapman on A.'s worth, 154; A. almost discouraged, 168; 173; Anti-Slavery lectures, 178; raising money for Wom. Loyal League, 232, 234, 237; for Kas. campaign, 282; A.'s struggle to support The Revolution, 298, 299, 308, 319, 354 et seq.; cost of publishing, 354; A. shows efforts to meet expenses, 362; status at the end, 363; A.'s lecture receipts, 364; heavy cost of trial for voting, help of friends, 446; willing to lose money to speak on suff., 460, 461; always assumes expenses, 468; last debt of The Revolution paid, 472; comments of press, 473; Centennial headqrs., 475, 480; in Col. campaign of 1877, 492; proceeds of two lecture seasons, 508; for woman's paper, 509; 595; connected with Hist. of Wom. Suff., 599, 600, 613, 616; cost of first Intl. Council of Women, 633; A.'s financial Natl. Conv. reports, 642; expenses of 70th birthday banquet, 663, 664; in S. Dak. campaign, 675. 676, 680-685; of Natl. Conv. in 1891, 703; Rachel Foster for Kas. work, 719; A. lectures to "keep pot boiling," 741; for Kas. campaign, 742; A.'s joy over contributions, 742; in N. Y. campaign, 759, 760, 763, 772; in Kas. campaign, 780, 785, 796; A. urges strict accounts, 806; gives all she earns to suff., 813; for Calif. Woman's Cong., 820; in Calif. campaign, 861, 864; same, 865, 888; pathetic incidents, 889; A.'s contribution, bills all paid, 892; A.'s lack of funds, 898; services contributed, 925; in Anthony home, 933 (see Funds).
FINANCIAL INDEPENDENCE, A.'s father believed in, 23; A. thinks women must have, 104; right over subsistence enslaves will, 169; 324; evils resulting from lack of, 385; same, 389; 653; its relation to virtue, 844; same, 1007, 1008; pleasure of, 1008; parents prefer marriage for daughters, 1008; lack of it in marriage, 1009; mothers of poor should be taught self-help, 1011.
FLAG, 550, 665; presented to A. by women of Col. and Wy., 757; A.'s hope for five suff. stars, 879.
FLOWERS, 53, 198; from workingwoman in Calif., 405; 464; A.'s response in St. Louis, more used to stones, 507; had more thorns, 536; on 70th birthday, 670, 671; 675, 707, 757; 75 roses, 821; in San Fr., 827; in South. Calif., 832, 833; 848; kind A. likes, 859; on A.'s train, 881; 892, 893; sent by Miss Willard, 906; 907.
FOOD, grandmother's cooking, 7, 14; mother's, 18, 19, 42, 45, 47; the goose, 27; 43; A.'s love of fruit, 55; cooking, 60; at Greeley's, 87; women eat cold victuals, 128; eating in early days, 139; peaches in home orchard, 145; in good, old time, 160; "cranks" on, 161; 172; A. and the bill of fare, 176; 200; Phillips' lunch, 217; A.'s lunches in 1863, 234; "real coffee" in 1865, 242; in Kansas in pioneer days, 284; diet prescribed by Geo. Francis Train, 289; Beecher's before speaking, 334; while snowed in Rocky Mts., 407; while campaigning in Col., 491; fruit in England, 554; in Italy, 556; milk in Naples, 557; dinner at Zurich, 559; breakfast in bed, 561; strawberries in Scotland, 569; luncheons and breakfasts, 571; two Irish scenes, 574; no mutton in America, 575; experiences in S. Dak., 691; at Mt. Holyoke, 706; A.'s cooking, 711; her dietary, 931; at the Anthony Reunion, 946.
FOURTH OF JULY, 330; in Salt Lake City, 389; women celebrate at Centennial of 1876, 475; in London, 566; in Kas., 609; in S. Dak., 690; women celebr. admis. of Wy., 699; A. invited to Col., 775; in San Fr., struggle for Miss Shaw to speak, 835-837.
FREE LOVE, first discussed by Equal Rights Assn., indignant protest and repudiation, 325; charges of N. Y. Tribune, attitude of Natl. Wom. Suff. Assn., 383; resolutions, 384; A.'s view, 390; 402; A.'s condemnation, 462, 463; insulting placards in Col., 492.
FUNDS, Jackson, 166, 171, 175, 178, 275, 539; Hovey, 182, 196, 199, 234, 251, 269, 275, 282; A. desires Standing Fund, 939.
GARRISONIANS, 133; A. begins campaign with, 149 (see Abolitionists).
GENEALOGY, Anthony and Read families, 3, 4, 12.
GIFTS, on A.'s 50th birthday, 342, 974-976; to The Revolution, 354-356; 370, 416; for costs of A.'s trial, 446; Anson Lapham, 448, 468; Dansville Sanitarium, 452; of brother, 459; Francis and Loutrel, 468; to Centennial headqrs., 475, 479, 480; Helen Potter, 488; Mrs. Hall and Mrs. Goodrich, 492; A.'s to others, 508; Mrs. Thompson to Hist. of Wom. Suff., 524; Phila. Assn. to A., 534; G. W. Childs, 538, 607; on going abroad, 547-550; A. to Oregon campaign, 592; Mrs. Mendenhall, 660; on A.'s 70th birthday, 671, 672; to A. on going to housekeeping, 707; on A.'s 73d birthday, 739; from Phila. friends, 741; from Chicago friends, 751; Mrs. Hall, 756; on 74th birthday, 757; Mrs. Southworth to A. and Natl. Assn., 801; Mrs. Gross, 803; "annuity" to A., 813; during illness in 1895, 841; to take secy, to Calif., 862; A. to Calif. campaign, Calif. women to her, 892; New Year's, 1897, 900; on 77th birthday, 907; on Mary S. Anthony's 70th, 916; A. mourns that small gifts cannot be recorded, 938 (see Finance, Funds).
GOD, JESUS, etc., 68, 77; blessing asked on conv., 87; Creator's intentions, 109; Christ an agitator, 177; God will bless woman suff., 272; Christ on Divorce, 352; improve upon Christ's methods, 373; A.'s unselfishness next to Christ's, 535; God recognizes A.'s work, 537; pictures of Christ in Italy, 556, 557; 563; Lord and temp. movement, 567; God sends children, 574; wife compared to Christ, 595; Creator's intentions toward women, 617; 620; A. objects to mention of in woman suff. platform, 655; Christ-like spirit of A., 703, 805; A. on people who know God's wishes, 853; women live in air with Jesus and angels, 857; A. on God in Govt., 898; needs money to do God's work, 898; on God's special interference, 921; on personal God, 923; on miraculous intervention, 923; God divided head and heart equally, 945; woman accountable to God only, 1011 (see Church).
GRANGE, 652; petition for woman suff., 767; in Calif., 886.
GUARDIANSHIP, EQUAL, drunkard keeps children, 74; A. secures petitions for in 1853, 105, 108; rejected by Legis. with insult, 109; A.'s sp. for, 110; laws in 1860, 186; granted by N. Y. Legis., 190; repealed, 219; example from Mass., 200 et seq.; 988.
HALLS, Albany, Association, 104, 186, 212; Tweddle, 263; Ann Arbor, University, 755; Boston, Music Hall, 214; Chicago, Farwell, 515, 517; Denver, Broadway Theater, 823; Duluth, Masonic Temple, 656; Leavenworth, Chickering, 649; Memphis, Young Men's Hebrew Assn., 807; New Orleans, Tulane, 597; New York, Apollo, 348, 352, 368, 383, 434; Broadway Tabernacle, 89, 102, 147; Metropolitan, 101; Mozart, 174; Steinway, 322; Tammany, 305 (see Cooper Institute); Oakland, Tabernacle, 837; Rochester, Corinthian, 67, 92, 98, 105, 167, 180, 209; San Francisco, Golden Gate, 827, 829, 830, 835, 892; Metropolitan Temple, 834, 874, 878, 893; Platt's, 390; Woodward's Pavilion, 836; Saratoga, St. Nicholas, 121; St. Louis, Memorial, 649; Mercantile Library, 469; Syracuse, Convention, 211; Troy, Rand's, 143; Utica, Mechanics', 210; Washington, Lincoln, 337, 484, 511, 526, 546, 659; Smithsonian Institute, 118.
HARDSHIPS (see Campaigns, Canvasses, Lecture Bureaus, Persecutions).
HEADQUARTERS, of Wom. Natl. Loyal League, 230; Centennial of Natl. Wom. Suff. Assn., 475 et seq.; Natl. Suff. Assn. in Washtn., 700; Mrs. Southworth's contrib. to, 801; in Calif., 862, 864, 875.
HEALTH, Mrs. Stanton on in 1852, 66; effect of fashions, 112; A.'s cold bath, 125; convert to water cure, 126; results of, 129; at sanitarium, 134; medical certificate, 136; men speakers break down, 161; effect of hard work on A., 168, 169; powers of endurance, 408; prostrated in Ft. Wayne in 1873, 433; physical condition in 1877, 486; Mrs. Stanton's illness not due to work for suff., 537; effects of S. Dak. campaign, 696; A.'s illness in Boston, 701; illness in 1895, 840; secret of health, 843; after Calif, campaign, 895; of A. and Mrs. Stanton after 50 yrs.' work, 917; dependent on natural, not supernatural laws, 923; laws observed by A., 931; does not think of bodily ills or disagreeable things, 932; medicine and physicians, 933.
HEARINGS, first granted to women by Congressl. Com., 314; second, 338; Sumner on, 339; Mary Clemmer on, 340; of Mrs. Woodhull and others, 375; in 1872, on right of women to vote under 14th and 15th Amends., 410; in 1880, 511; in 1882, 541; in 1884, A.'s address, 588; A. has speeches printed, 591; in 1886, 607; in 1888, 640; in 1890, 674; in 1892, 718; at Natl, Repub. Conv. of 1892, 723; at Dem., 725; Congressl. in 1894, member asks why never held before, 758; in 1896, 851.
HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE, first move towards writing, 475; beginning, 480; financial help recd., 524; A.'s restiveness, 525; Mrs. Nichols' assistance, A. orders names of opponents to be published, 529; 1st Vol. published, cost of pictures, favorable comment of press and prominent people, imperfections, services of the three authors, Mrs. Stanton replies to critics, rest of material stored, 530-532; Mrs. Stanton's fears, may not live to finish, 537; presented to Senators, 541; A.'s longing to be through, 542; 2d Vol. finished, 543; A. looks for in Rome, 553; 565; work on 3d Vol., A.'s restiveness, 592; 595; financial status, 599; serious and amusing difficulties, 601; A.'s dislike of it all, 602; 3d Vol. finished, 603; 608; immense outlay, 612; tribute to authors, synopsis of work, extensive donations, 613, 614; commendation, 614-616; sales, desire for 4th Vol., 616; A. begs Mrs. Stanton to write, 712; 754; Miss Willard's estimate, 951.
HOME LIFE, in Adams, 5-15; in Battenville, 17-35; in Center Falls (Hardscrabble), 35-46; near Rochester, 47 et seq.; in Rochester, beginning, 231; 706; in 1897, 913, 931-939; A. on beautifying country homes, 200; Abrahamic bosom, 218 (see Domestic Traits, Love of Family).
HOMES FOR SINGLE WOMEN, A.'s lecture, visit to Alice Cary, 359; A. writes it in Denver, 493.
HONORARY MEMBERSHIP, Chicago Woman's Club, 896; Rochester D. A. R., 919; other organizations, 925.
HOUSE OF COMMONS, A. visits, 553, 563, 567.
HUMANITIES, CHARITIES, etc., A.'s interest in, 60; women fail to lay ax at root of difficulty, 920; 1004 et seq.
IMMIGRATION AND IMMIGRANTS, 59; in S. Dak., 687, 690, 694, 695; efforts to secure votes of, 887 (see Citizenship, Naturalization).
IMMORTALITY, A.'s ideas of, 119, 242, 508, 516, 650, 859, 899.
INDIANS, in Repub. conv. in S. Dak., 687; preferred to white women, 762.
INDIFFERENCE OF WOMEN, 73, 98, 130, 251; should be shocked into action, 366; Mrs. Stanton on, 382; 456; A.'s strong statement, 641; in Calif, suff. campaign, 866.
INDIRECT INFLUENCE, dangers of, 590.
INDUSTRIES, PROFESSIONS, etc., demand for woman's admission to, 73; to law, 74; 79; Greeley on woman's right to enter, 147; A. urges agriculture for women, 160; on status of workingwomen, 333; women may practice bef. Sup. Ct., 502; dentistry in Berlin, 559; law in Gr. Brit., 564; medicine in, 570; indebtedness to woman suff. advocates, 80, 740, 822, 848, 949, 973, 976 (see Labor).
INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL, N. Y. St., A. appointed trustee, 730; her work, 733, 737, 816; recognizes girls, need of women on boards, resigns, 817.
INFIDELITY, woman suff. advocates charged with, 77-79, 91; Mrs. Rose's, 118, 121; 147, 311; woman suff. leads to, 401; suff. advocates and Dr. Patton, 596; A. stands for infidel's rights, 631; same, 655, 854.
INSURANCE, N. Y. Life, father connected with, 49, 55; A. insures in, 136.
INTEMPERANCE, in early days, 15, 18, 19; A.'s tilt with uncle, 40; on Martin Van Buren, 41; Whig festivals, 42; no disgrace, 61; Mrs. Stanton demands shall be cause for divorce, 67; wives and drunken husbands, 74, 84; in London, 564; in Ireland, 573; A. on woman's vote, 655; specimen of man's govt. in S. Dak., 693; women greatest sufferers from, statistics, root of the evil, 1004; effects of, 1005; in Chicago, women's petition spurned, 1012 (see Laws, Liquor Dealers).
INTERNATIONAL, COUNCIL OF WOMEN, its conception, carrying forward, first great meeting in Washtn., newspaper comment, speeches, permanent organization, 633-639; during Columb. Expos., 745.
INTERVIEWS, A. on Beecher-Tilton case, 461; effect of woman suff. on saloons, 505; source of the opposition, 506; Mrs. Blake with Gen. Hancock on woman suffrage, 520; requested of A. by editor of Le Soir in Paris, 561; impressions of Gr. Brit., 581; change in public men, and on woman of the future, 582; contrast between pioneer and modern suffragists, 729; on N. Y. anti-suftragists, 766; on her alliance with Popu. party, 791; in Chicago in 1895, 821; in Denver, 823; on the Bible and the Woman's Bible, 856; of "Nelly Bly" in N. Y. World, 858; in San Fr. Examiner, 870; on Sister Mary's 70th birthday and early life, 915; on "rings" and "bosses," 928.
INVITATIONS, specimens of, 740, 753, 803, 924.
JOURNALS, MISS ANTHONY'S, used in writing Biog., vii; in boarding school, 24 et seq.; in 1838, 34; in girlhood days, 35, 36, 38, 39; woman's financ. independ., 104; first St. canvass for Wom. Rights, 125 et seq.; in 1856, 138; almost discouraged, 151; daily doings in 1859, 172, 173; life at home and abroad in 1860, 197, 198; in 1862, 216; public work in 1865, 252; on Chas. Sumner, 269; on 50th birthday, 344; in 1870, 346; 362; work for woman suff. conv. in New York, 368; on treatment in San Francisco, 392; stage driver, 394; the "reform world," 395; trip by boat in 1871, 395; Calif. experiences, 404; snowed in in the Rocky Mts., 406-408; our ship nearly lost, 415; joy over Repub. action in 1872, 419; on death of Greeley, 428; on outrage of her trial, 441; on death of Sumner, 456; on degraded labor of women and "coaxing" women, 457; on Beecher-Tilton case, 463; on death of Martha C. Wright, 467; of Lydia Mott, 471; on Frances Willard, 472; on writing the History, 480, 525, 542; on Anson Lapham, 481; 532, 535; on W. C. T. U., 537; 541; while in Europe, 560; in Scotland, 569; in Ireland, 575; in England, 577; shrinks from pleading with politicians, 583; on inefficient women, 586; no blame for any one, 587; on Miss Eddy, 601; on literary "style," 601; racy comments on writing the History, 602; work in Congress, 607, 608; on Phoebe Couzins, 608; in Chicago, St. Louis, Leavenworth, 609; 623; on Mrs. Stanton's refusal to come to Intl. Council, 636; tricks of saloon element, 649; Grant mementoes at Mt. McGregor, 653; unmarried mothers, 656; on Chief Just. Fuller, 660; on Harriot Stanton Blatch, 675; first housekeeping experiences, 711; amusing bits in 1891, 714; on Popu. party, 727; on divinely-appointed male head of family, 730; overwhelmed with work, 737, 739; on death of Blaine, 739; 785; "alliance" with Populists, 791; on Robt. Collyer, 802; 843; the $6,000 bed, 902; on thinking of past, 914.
JURIES, men judge women, 74; A. demands women have one of their peers, 309; Gov. Geary declares need of women on, 310; right to trial by under Constitu., 429; Judge refuses to have polled in A.'s trial, 439; A. pleads for jury of her peers, 440; opinions of press, 441-443; of John Van Voorhis, 444; same, 449; of Judge Selden, 449; A.'s appeal to Congress, 449; majority and minority reports, 450-453; mothers with infants, 618, 619; A. accused of trying to influence by speeches before her trial, 993-995.
LABOR, the wife's wages, 74, 108, 110; proceeds of wife's work, 139; A. demands vote for workingwomen, 263; rebuke to married ex-teacher, 272; workingmen's influence compared to women's, 306; The Revolution's efforts for wage-earning women, assn. formed, 307; Labor Congress for women's rights, but not for suff., 307; A. teaches workingwomen to organize, 307; A. to women typesetters, 308; on women wage-earners, 333; rejected as delegate to Labor Cong, in Phila., 366; gratitude of workingwomen, 405; women a millstone, 457; Greenback-Labor party on woman suff., 518; workingwoman's need of ballot, 523; farmers enfranchised in Gr. Brit., 593; workingwomen welcomed in N. O., 597; telegrams to A. from leaders, 671; action of Knights of Labor on woman suff. in S. Dak., 685, 686; A. addresses workingwomen in Omaha, 726; organizations petition for woman suff., 766; press in Calif, in favor of, 868; debt of wage-earn, women to A., 740, 976; on workingwoman's need of suff., 996-1003; wage-earning men in England wanted bread, not ballot, 996; ballot granted, 997; excellent results, 997, 998; political preferences, 998; political power behind strikes, 999; statistics of women's wages, 999; why their strikes fail, 999, 1000; women's great need of franchise, 1000; wages not regulated by supply and demand, 1001; give women same power as men, 1002; effect of taking work from home to factory, 1006; reward of virtue, 1007; women must be self-supporting and enfranchised, 1007; temptations to wage earners, 1007, 1008 (see Industries).
LAWS, women's property rights, adopted, 58; Fugitive Slave, License repealed, husband's rights under, 61; Maine Law, 70, 71; Lucy Stone on, 81; nobody wants but women, 83; Common Law on women, 74; conv. to secure better ones, 104; A. canvasses for, 105, 108; petitions presented and petitioners abused, 109; A. argues for, 110; arranges series of convs. for, 110; hard work of canvass, 111; for women, in 1860, 185; for equal guardianship repealed in N. Y., 219; A.'s scathing review of laws and wives' protest, 331; Ingersoll shows injustice to women, 345; for remitting fines, 449; women admitted to practice before U. S. Sup. Ct., 502; A. criticises Garfield's saying just to women, 536; School Suff. in N. Y. partial failure, 730; show men cannot be trusted to legislate for women, 966; use of masculine pronouns, 982, 983, 990; for married women, 987; can't own false teeth, 988; all made by men, women cannot testify in court, 1009 (see Guardianship, Property Rights).
LECTURE BUREAUS, hardships under, 154; conservatism of, 191; first estab., A. and Mrs. Stanton employed, 344; in 1871, 380; Iowa experiences, 470; 472; Slayton's circular on A.'s speeches, her endurance, 486; Mrs. Stanton's dislike, 488; hardships of tours, 490, 493; in 1878, 495; A.'s proceeds under, 508; 595, 598, 602; in 1888, 644; A. declines $100 per night, 843.
LECTURES, A. arranges course in Roch., 167, 190, 217; tour under Train's manage., 293; work in 1870, 364; newspaper comment, 387; general results of, 502; tour of Mich, in 1893, wide range of invitations to speak, 740, 753; in N. Y., 741; in Cinti., 741; in Kas. and Ills., 751; in N. Y., 753; in Ann Arbor, 755; in Baltimore, 756; in Phila., 776; A. and Mrs. Catt in South. States, 806-810; A. in S. C. and Va., 812, 814; at Drexel Ins., 815; power to draw audiences, 816; thro' the West to Calif., 821-826; offer from Major Pond, 896; man asks A. how many she has given, 925 (see Speeches).
LEGACIES, Francis Jackson's for Woman's Rights, 165; opinions as to expenditure, 171; Charles F. Hovey's for various reforms, 182; Mrs. Eddy's to A. and Lucy Stone, 539; litigation, appeals for the money, 540; legacy paid, only instance, 598; A. besieged, 599; use of, 600; of Emerine J. Hamilton to A., 654; of Mrs. Mendenhall, 660; of Eliza J. Clapp, 763; of Mrs. Minor, 803; of Adeline Thompson, 814 (see Funds).
LEGISLATURES, A.'s grandfather member of Mass., 4; women first address N. Y., 81; action on Wom. Rights petitions, 109; contemptuous report, 140; A.'s efforts for Personal Liberty Bill, 173; Mrs. Stanton addresses N. Y. in 1860, 186; N. Y. repeals equal guard. law, 219; need of women in, 220; in South at close of War, 255; Mrs. Stanton at Albany in 1867, 273; Ills. addressed by women in 1869, 315; Mich. submits woman suff. amend., 459; Col. same in 1877, 489; A. watches and distrusts, 516; Neb. submits woman suff. amend. in 1882, 544; action on negro suff., A.'s appeal that woman suff. be submitted to, 589; Kas. grants Munic. Suff., 611; A. addresses N. Y. in 1887, 622; Wy. on woman suff., 699; A. addresses N. Y. in 1891, 719; A. addresses Mich., it confers Munic. Suff. on women, 740; Col. submits woman suff. amend. in 1893, 752; Kas. same, 754; N. Y. orders constitl. conv., makes women eligible as delegates, 758; Calif. submits woman suff. amend., 820; same, 863; A. addresses Indiana, 904; A. addresses N. Y. for last time, 914; Kas. voted against negro suff. 963; submitted three suff. amends. in 1867, 1016.
LETTERS OF MISS ANTHONY, used in writing Biog., vii; from boarding school, 24 et seq.; on Lord's Supper, 36; colored people, 39, 40; women preachers, 40; Van Buren and wine-drinking, 41; silk worms, 42; family love, 44; first temp. meet., 53; growing ambition, 70; Bloomer costume, 116; ministers and churches, 119, 121; 122; numbers of, 131; the wife's existence, 134; canvass of 1856, 138; begging for help, 140; to brother Merritt on Kas., 144; woman's dependence, 146; Remond's and Pillsbury's speeches, 152; large families, 162; will rout old fogies, 164; on spiritual loneliness, 168; urges women to discontent, 169; right of self-representation, 169; loss of individuality in marriage, 170; wife's annihilation, 171; criticises Curtis, 172; suff. needs consecrated souls, 177; trouble with women lecturers, 177; no time for humor, 179; salvation of women depends on Mrs. Stanton, 186; conservative people, 197; from birthplace, 198; describes mobs, 210; children, 213; approaching war, 214; Adam Bede, 216; sculpture and painting, 219; repeal of equal guard. law in N. Y., 220; public schools, 221; her power of speaking, 222; love for father, mother and home, 231; on death, 241; tenderness in family, 242; trip to Kansas in 1865, 242; negro suffrage, 245; church and negroes, 249; treatment of Anti-Slavery Standard, 268; hearing before N. Y. Constitl. Conv., heresies and orthodoxies, 279; struggle to raise money for Kas. campaign, 282; hardships of, 284, 285; protest against taxes, 330; to mother about 50th birthday, 343; on uniting two suff. assns., 347; funds for The Revolution, 354, 355; sorrow at giving it up, heavy debts incurred, 362; resume of situation as to woman suff. in 1870, 365; criticising Mrs. Stanton's readiness to give up, 373; Natl. Suff. Conv. of 1871, 373; Social Purity, double standard of morals and woman's dependence, 384; love in marriage, Wyoming, 388; polygamy, 388-390; man-visions, 390; trip to Yosemite, 392; interest in reforms, 394; Mrs. Stanton's overshadowing, 396; lecturing in Oregon, 395-399; abuse in San Francisco, Fair case, regret at not speaking more boldly, 396; Chinese and women, 398; 399; beauties of Ore. and Washtn., 399; stage riding, 399, 403; devotion of friends, 412; Mrs. Woodhull and attempt to form new party, 413; Repub. plank in 1872, 419, 420; attitude toward political parties, 422; account of her voting in 1872, 424; of her arrest and examination, 428; to mother on death, 447; women's temperance crusade, 457; marriage, honesty best policy, and no outsiders in family life, 459; no rest, canvass of Mich. in 1874, 460; not working for personal reward, 480; to mother on love and duty, 482; to Lucy Stone on partisanship, 497, 498; on death of Garrison, 508; on death of mother, 513; specimen of A.'s stirring appeals to workers, preparing to influence polit. convs., 515, 516; to presidential candidates, 521; to Garfield, 522; criticises women for supporting either pres. candidate, 523; hopes Repubs. may help women, 524; compelling Mrs. Stanton to attend convs., 526; children must bear parents' record, 529; death of Garfield, 536; Mrs. Stanton's work and health, 537; to Phillips on 70th birthday, 538; appreciation of Mrs. Eddy's legacy, 539; passing of old workers, 544; revolutionary letters returned in Germany, 559; letters from Europe, 551-578; converts Edinburgh prof., 570; to Wm. D. Kelley to push woman suff. in Cong., 584; to Mrs. Stanton on Douglass marriage and amalgamation, 586; death of Wendell Phillips, 587; close watch on Congress, 591; Gladstone's action, 593; to Frances Willard on refusal of woman plank by Prohibs. in 1884, 594; on inability to write, Mrs. Stanton's love of ease, 600; Miss Eddy, 601; on Kas. meetings in 1887, 609; heterodox and orthodox churches for conv., 612; advises Wis. women to avoid legal decisions, 624; union of two suff. assns., 628, 629; declining presidency and urging elect. of Mrs. Stanton, 631; ordained and non-ordained women ministers, 634; lack of concerted action by women, 641; open letter to Gen. Harrison in 1888, 642, 1013; dislike of "red tape," immense correspondence, 643; death and immortality, 650; best campaign methods, 657, 658, 659; Prohibition and woman suff., 657; "Andrew Jackson-like methods," 659; immense circulation of literature, 659; on selling tickets for her birthday banquet, 663, 664; union of two assns., 674; value of social functions, 677; disregard of orthodox Christians for feelings of liberals, 678; pre-natal influence, 678; love for Washtn. City, 679; on financial management of S. Dak. campaign, 681, 682; W. C. T. U. and suff. campaign in S. Dak., 683; hardships of, 688; criticises commission to S. Dak., 690; visits to Holyoke and Cheshire, 705; to John Brown's grave, 708; meeting at Lily Dale, Miss Shaw answers Dr. Buckley, 710; 711; begging Mrs. Stanton to end her days in Rochester, 712; agrees to help in Kas., 715; objects to male sculptor for her bust, 721; urges Southern women to organize, 722; first trip to Europe, 739; never dreamed of stenographer, 741; joy of having worked for liberty, 741; on situation in Kas., 741; women make burden heavy for others, 742; 745; Kas. campaign, 754; lack of organization, votes of drunkards, 763; corrects report of sp. on orthodoxy, 774; scores Repub. party in Kas., 779; to Kas. Woman's Campaign Com. on plank, 781; to Repub. leader, same, 783; to Mrs. Johns, 784; joy over Populist plank, 792; repudiates Kas. Repubs., 793, 794; on speaking in Kas., 794; Y. M. C. A. and wom. suff., 804; majority rule, financial mistake, 806; to contribs. to annuity, 814; first serv. of stenographer, 843; virtue and financial independence, 844; "trusts" and woman suff., dress, 844; all organizns. should celebrate Stanton birthday, 846; suff. elephant and horned head must stand back, 847; objects to Mrs. Stanton's attack on church, 847; desire to give all an opportunity, 849; tribute to Mrs. Dietrick, 849; to Mr. Sewall, 850; grief at action of Natl. Suff. Assn. on Woman's Bible, 855; Spanish inquisition methods, 855; Mrs. Stanton writes down instead of up in Woman's Bible, 856; religious superstition, refuses to mix relig. or temp. discuss. in Calif. suff. campaign, 857; begging W. R. Hearst to favor woman suff. in Examiner, 867; longing for home, 878; to Idaho women, 878; to Mrs. Stanton, 879; woman plank of Natl. Repub. Conv. of 1896, 880; urging Miss Willard to withdraw Natl. W. C. T. U. Conv. from Calif, in 1896, 881; to Mrs. Sturtevant Peet on same, 882; opposed to public denial of charges, 897; urging women not to scramble for office, 897; prefers her own wisdom to Solomon's, 897; secret of her success, 897; declines alliance with political parties, 898; objects to making God author of Govt., 898; need of money for her work, 898; on educated and property suffrage, 899; same, 922; think of dead as in vigor of life, 899; holding Natl. Convs. in Washtn., 903; the writing of her Biog., 909; dislike of groping in past, 914; greatest compliment, 917; impossibility of "insurrection" of women, 918; Theosophy, Christian Science, etc., 918; to Sup. Court of Idaho thanking for broad decision, 919; to D. A. R. on Revolutionary mothers, 919; every dollar given helps woman suff., 920; suffrage great need of women working in charities and reforms, 920; objects to asking for partial suff., 920; on poetry, 921; God's special interference, 921; Sunday no more sacred than other days, 922; personal God, 922; miraculous intervention, 923; compared to St. Paul's, 924; foolishness of women's attacking public evils until they get suff., 924; number of cities visited, 925; giving her services, 925; to man asking how many times she had lectured, 925; toil of correspondence, 935; endless requests, 936; amusing instances, 937; loving messages, 938.
LETTERS OF OTHERS, number used in writing Biog., vii; Anthony family life in 1836, 22; father on daughter's teaching, 24; to A. in boarding school, 27; panic of 1838, 33, 34; Washtn. City, 33; Aaron McLean on negroes, 39; Uncle Albert scores A., 40; Van Buren, drinking and dancing, 42; to woman's temp. meet, in 1852, 65; Greeley on Wom. Temp. Conv., 66; Mrs. Stanton, Mrs. Nichols encourage A.'s temp. work, 66; Mayo and Geo. W. Johnson on woman's rights, 73; Gerrit Smith, same, 75; Lucy Stone on Maine Law, 81; A.'s father on woman suff. in 1853, 85; Neal Dow, 93; Abby Kelly Foster on A., 93; Lucy Stone on Divorce, 93; Gerrit Smith on female modesty, 93; Saml. F. Cary on Wom. Temp. Conv., 96; Greeley on Temp. Conv. and Church, 97; Pillsbury on A.'s industry, 105; Lucy Stone, 111; Bloomers, 114-116; Mrs. Mott, 122; Greeley's offer, 122; father advises to save newspaper clippings, 125; Greeley on Woman's Rights, 125; father on same, 129; Lucy Stone on her marriage, 130, 139; T. W. Higginson, Mrs. Stanton, Paulina Wright Davis, 130; freedom in marriage, 135; Lucy Stone on retiring from work, 135; John A. McCall, 136; Anti-Slav. Com., 137; Mrs. Stanton on children and work, 142; Mary L. Booth on teachers, 143; on woman's sad position, 146; the Hutchinsons, 146; Lucy Stone on wife's position, 146; Greeley on free speech, 146; Gerrit Smith on woman's dress, 147; Samuel May, 148; and Lucy Stone encouraging A., 151; Wm. Lloyd Garrison, 152, 161; Mrs. Stanton on Teachers' Conv., 157; Lucy Stone and Abby H. Patton, 162; Phillips on Jackson legacy, 165; Curtis on Woman's Rights, 167, 172; Lydia Mott on loss of individuality in marriage, 170; Phillips, 171; Thos. K. Beecher, 178; Pillsbury on execution of John Brown, 180; Mrs. Stanton on white manhood, 181; Abby Kelly Foster, Geo. B. Cheever, 182; Judge Ormond on Wom. Rights and Anti-Slavery, 183, 184; Mrs. Stanton will cross the Alps, 187; A. J. Colvin, 189; Mary S. Anthony on injustice to teachers, 191, 192; on Divorce, from noted people, 195-197; Pillsbury on Boston conv., 197; Mrs. Stanton will dress A.'s thoughts, 199; Garrison and Phillips on returning child to mother, 203; Beriah Green on Abolitionists, 214; Phillips and Tilton on lectures in Rochester, 217; Anna Dickinson on War, 220; Greeley on Lincoln, 221; Tilton and Stanton on Emancip. Proclam., 226; mother on sale of home, 231; Tilton on birth of child, 232; noted men on Wom. Loyal League, 233; Sumner on slavery, 236; Phillips on A.'s cleverness, 237; Mrs. Stanton and others urge A. to return East, 244; Pillsbury on negro suffrage, 246; Mrs. Stanton on women's first appeal to Cong. for suff., 251; Purvis approving woman suff., 258; Anna Dickinson on speaking for suff., 258; Beecher on "hay fever," 263; Mrs. Stanton on petitions for woman suff. in 1866, 268; Lucretia Mott on same, 268; Purvis on negro suff., 269; Gen. Rufus Saxton for rights of women, 272; Beecher on dislike of working in organizations, 274; Lucy Stone on woman and negro suff. in Kas. and on Hovey Fund, 275; Anna Dickinson on adverse suff. rep. of N. Y. Constitl. Conv., 280; Mrs. Starrett describes A. in 1867, 285; Mrs. Stanton on A.'s judgment, 293; on Train and The Revolution, 297, 298; Lucy Stone and others on woman's paper, 299; Mrs. Stanton on treatment of herself and A. by Equal Rights Assn., 300; on The Revolution, 301; Grace Greenwood on A. and her associates, 314; Mrs. Livermore in appreciation of A., 316; Train withdraws from The Revolution, 319; Mrs. Stanton on forgiveness, 320; Mrs. Livermore on The Revolution, 321; Anna Dickinson to A., 321; Gail Hamilton, same, 322; Mrs. Livermore on Equal Rights Assn., A.'s lectures and Natl. Wom. Suff. Assn., 328; Mrs. Mott on A.'s labor for others, 329; Mrs. Hooker on admiration for A. and Mrs. Stanton, 332; on A. and other pioneers, 334; Dr. Kate Jackson, Sarah Pugh on The Revolution, 335; Mary Clemmer on Natl. Suff. Conv. of 1870, 340; Mrs. Stanton on anything for peace, 347; Catharine Beecher on Divorce, 352; Mary S. Anthony urges A. to give up The Revolution, 356; Mrs. Hooker on taking the paper, 357, 358; Mrs. Stanton opposed to changing name, 357; get rid of paper, 361; Pillsbury on giving it up, 363; Mrs. Hooker, Mrs. Stanton and others on the Natl. Suff. Conv. of 1871, 371-374; Mrs. Hooker asks noted men to speak, 373; on Sister Catharine and Mrs. Woodhull, 378; Mrs. Stanton on Social Purity, 379; interest in woman suff. felt in Washtn., 381; encouraging signs in Congress, 381; Mrs. Stanton and Mrs. Hooker on Repub. party, 382; Phoebe Couzins on Natl. Assn., 383; Mary S. Anthony on case of Mrs. Fair, 392; Mrs. Duniway on A.'s lectures in Ore., 399; indignant husbands and wives in Victoria, B. C., 402; Blackwell urges women to support Repub. party, 416; Cochran to Mrs. Stanton, 418; Henry Wilson to A., 420; Mrs. Stanton's bitterness against polit. parties, 420; B. F. Butler on woman's right to vote under U. S. Constn., 429; same, favoring woman suff., Senator Lapham, same, 455; A. G. Riddle on great strength and little working power of woman suff. cause, 455; lets. of faith in A., 458; Lucretia Mott, 480; Garrison opposed to 16th amend., Phillips in favor, 484; Mary Clemmer on treatment of woman suff. petits. by U. S. Senate, 485; Mrs. Stanton on friendship for A., 488; Annie McDowell tribute to A. in Phila. Press, 489; Mrs. Stanton, Mrs. Sargent, Mrs. Minor and Miss Couzins on prayer meet. in Capitol, need of A.'s management of natl. convs., 494; to 30th annivers. in Rochester, 495; Mary Clemmer on woman suffrage, 501; lady asking forgiveness, 505; Sens. and Reps. ask seats for women, 518; Garfield to A. on woman suffrage, 521; Mrs. Stanton on A.'s "dragooning," 526; on Hist. of Wom. Suff., 532; Mrs. Pillsbury to A., 535; Mrs. Harbert on her love and Zerelda G. Wallace's, 535; Phillips' cordial letter, 538; Mrs. Eddy's legacy, 539; lawsuit, 540; Mrs. Blatch on writing Biog., 544; Sen. Ingalls, 547; Rochester people to A. when starting abroad, 548; Mrs. Stanton and Mrs. Sargent welcome her, 553; editors of Italian Times ask A. to write, 557; to A. from editor of Le Soir, 561; Mrs. McLaren on A.'s visit, 569; Mrs. Bright on A.'s impression on son, 577; Bishop Simpson on woman suff., 588; eminent foreigners, 588; Sen. Palmer urges agitation for woman suff., 593; J. Ellen Foster, 598; Mrs. Sewall on A.'s energy, 600; Mrs. Blatch on friendship of mother and A., 602; Mrs. Stanton on esthetic convs., 605; Sen. Blair on A.'s persistence, 606; G. W. Childs, 607; Mrs. Merrick, 608; Olympia Brown, 608; Sen. Anthony, Mary L. Booth, D. W. Wilder, Sarah B. Cooper on Hist. of Wom. Suff., 614-616; Miss Booth on woman suff., 615; Mary Rogers Kimball, 616; Sen. Ingalls, 622; Mrs. Stanton advises A. to destroy letters, 625; Lucy Stone on union of two suff. assns., 628; Alice Stone Blackwell on same, 628; Zerelda G. Wallace and others on A. or Mrs. Stanton for pres., 630, 631; Fred. Douglass on first Woman's Rights Conv., 634; Maria Mitchell on work, 635; Mrs. Stanton's friendship for A. but she won't come to Intl. Council, 635; Miss Willard on A. at Council, 638; tribute from Mrs. S. E. Sewall, 640; Miss Shaw's first let. to A., 645; Adeline Thompson's love for A., 651; Marie Deraismes, 652; Laura C. Holloway, 653; Harriet Hosmer, 655; from S. Dak., 656; nephew D. R. on his aunt Susan, 658; Mrs. Sewall, Mrs. Avery on A.'s 70th birthday banquet, 664; on 70th birthday from Lucy Stone, Whittier, Miss Willard, Curtis, Garrison, Hoar, Reed, Olympia Brown, Mrs. Logan, Mr. and Mrs. Gannet, T. W. Palmer, Nordhoff, F. G. Carpenter, Mrs. Johns, etc., 668-671; Lillian Whiting on A.'s contemporaries, 672; Mrs. Livermore, Mary Grew, Lucy Stone, 676; Mrs. Avery on woman's gratitude to A., 678; to A. regarding S. Dak. campaign in 1890, 679, 680; Miss Shaw on financial management of, 683; Mrs. Wallace on A.'s leadership, 683, 685; Miss Shaw's account of treatment by S. Dak. Repub. Conv., 687; John Hooker, Clara Barton, Anna Shaw on campaign, 689; Mrs. Howell's account of A.'s and her experiences, 690, 691; same by Miss Shaw, 692, 693; Mrs. Catt's summing up, 693; her tribute to A., 695; N. M. Mann, 697; E. B. Taylor, 700; Lucy Stone inviting A. to Mass. Conv., on A.'s illness, 701; from the Pillsburys, 702; Mrs. Bottome, on A.'s "Christ-like spirit," 703; Sen. Blair's "pious fraud," 704; Secy. McCulloch, Miss Balgarnie, 704; Charles Dickinson, 707; Mrs. Stanton on home of one's own, 707; Miss Willard on Chautauqua, 709; Mrs. Johns begs A.'s help for Kas., 715, 719; members of Cong. on woman suff., 716; Mrs. Stanton, 717; Mrs. Susan Look Avery on A.'s popularity, 720; A. objects to male sculptor for her bust, Miss Willard protests, Mr. Taft's apology, Lady Somerset's approval, 721, 722; Miss Willard on loneliness of great spirits, 725; Bishop Vincent, 727; Mrs. Greenleaf on taxation without representation, 732; on carving A.'s face on theatre in Mich., 733; John Boyd Thacher, 733; last message from Lucy Stone, 738; wide range of letters to A., 740; Mrs. Sewall on A. during Columb. Expos., 746; Frances Willard, Lady Somerset, Florence Fenwick Miller on same, 747; to A. during Columb. Expos., 748; Mrs. Palmer, 748, 749; Mrs. Eagle, 749; Mary H. Krout on A. at World's Fair, 751; A. W. Tourgee, 754; to A. on N. Y. campaign in 1894, 773; Miss Willard on A. before N. Y. Repub. Conv., 774; Col. women invite A., 775; Mrs. Johns on party action, 777, 778; Case Broderick and others on woman suff. in Kas. campaign, 778; Mrs. Johns on planks, 779; Mrs. Catt, same, 780; Mr. Blackwell, same, 780; Rev. Anna Shaw, same, 781; to A. on alliance with Popu. party, 791; Mrs. Catt on attitude of polit. parties in Kas., 792; Garrison on life of reformer, 793; Mr. Breidenthal, 794, 796; Mrs. Diggs to A. on campaign, 795; Mrs. Johns, Mrs. Catt on same, 795; Mary B. Willard, Jenkyn Lloyd Jones, 804, 805; H. W. Thomas, 805; Mrs. Stanton on A.'s reading her speeches, 811; invitation to Calif., 819; Mrs. Cooper's welcome, 820; to A. from Fourth of July Com., 835; from Calif. friends, 838; Samuel May urging A. to rest, 841; Parker Pillsbury, Mrs. Cooper, Mrs. Stanton, same, 842; Mrs. Blake on Mrs. Stanton's 80th birthday celebr., 846; Tilton on same and debt of women to her and A., 848; Mary Lowe Dickinson's tribute to A., 850; Mrs. Stanford, same, 850; Mrs. Greenleaf on Woman's Bible, 856; begging A. to assist In Calif. suff. campaign, 861, 862; Mrs. McComas on A.'s coming, 862; Mrs. Harper in San Fr. Call on appearance of women before Repub. St. Com., 870; Mrs. Duniway, Mrs. McCann on A. in campaign, 871; Mrs. Harper in Call on action of Dem. St. Conv., 873; Mrs. Stanton longs to help in campaign, women left to fight alone, 879; sent out by Calif. liquor dealers, 886; Major Pond, 896; H. W. Thomas on crowning woman, 900; Mrs. Henrotin, 900; John W. Hutchinson, 900; Mary Lowe Dickinson, 901; Mrs. Catt on A.'s 77th birthday, 907; "the attic work-room," 910; Miss Willard to A. on agreeing to differ, 924; from N. Y. county official, 925; extent and variety of A.'s correspond., 935-938; Berkshire Hist. Soc. to A., 939, 940; Mrs. Stanton on her book and A.'s, 951; on A.'s 50th birthday, Sen. S. C. Pomeroy, Lieut.-Gov. J. P. Root, D. R. Anthony, Whitelaw Reid, Abby Hopper Gibbons, 974; Frances Ellen Burr, Laura Curtis Bullard, Matilda Joslyn Gage, Eliz. R. Tilton, Ellen Wright Garrison, Anna E. Dickinson, 975; Mary S. Anthony, Dr. Clemence S. Lozier, Kate N. Doggett, 976; Mrs. Sewall to Gen. Harrison in 1888, 1013.
LIQUOR DEALERS, 17, 51, 71, 650; in S. Dak. campaign, 695; in Col. campaign, 753; in Kas. campaign, 779; same, 784; same, 786; 835; in Calif., 882, 886, 887 (see Intemperance).
LOVE AFFAIRS, 38; in 1840, 43; in 1845, 46; in 1846, 50; in 1855, 126; 142, 175; Tilton on, 218; in 1863, 237; in Oregon, 400; opinions of on and off stage, 555; if A. had married, 860; 972, 973.
LOVE OF FAMILY, 20, 31, 42, 45; letter to brother Merritt in Kas., 144; to sister, 158; 161; longs to stay at home, 168; affection between father and mother, 223; A.'s love of father, mother and home, 231; 242, 279; A. in Yosemite, 394; mother's birthday, 403; 434, 447; devotion during brother D. R.'s illness, 470, 471; 482, 492, 493; affection of A.'s mother, 512; A.'s letter to sister, 516; A.'s thought for nieces and nephews, 552; 557; memory of mother, 558; longing for sister, 562; recognizes her powers, 578; family helped A., 668; Miss Shaw's love for mother, 689; 916, 944.
MARRIAGE, of grandparents, 4, 6; of parents, 10; A.'s comment as girl, 30, 39; of Sister Guelma, 43; of Hannah, 46; drawbacks to, 52; under Common Law, 74; intemperance and, 84; Mrs. Greeley on, 87; Lucy Stone, 91; effect on women's public work, 128, 151, 158, 178; A.'s answer to minister, 108; N. Y. legislator's idea of, 109; degeneracy in, 135; picture of early days, 139; great privileges of wives, 140; different temperaments, 141; A. objects to twaddle about wives, 163; woman's position compared to man's, 169; wife's loss of name, 170, 183; A. protests against wife's loss of individuality and self-annihilation, 170; true woman not dwarfed by, 170, 171; Lydia Mott disagrees, 171; good effect on suff., 176; moments of solitude, 180; wife's name on tombstone, 183; why women marry, 186; wife should be supreme, 193; Mrs. Stanton on, 193; one-sided contract, 194; A.'s tilt with Mayo, 196; A. the picket, married women the army, 197; rights of husbands, 204; in Adam Bede, 216; married life of A.'s parents, 223; A. scores wife for advocating low wages for women, 272; how husbands represent wives, 279, 491, 771; A. on women's proposing, 316; wives object to A.'s statements, 331; Catharine Beecher and Mrs. Woodhull on, 378; A. on love in, 388; in Victoria, B. C., 402; incidents in Washtn. Ty., 403; A. on mistake of outside confidences, 459; opposed to second, wives should not live with unfaithful husbands, 463, 1009; should be only for love, 469; women should travel first, 559; Platonic friendship, 568; of Frederick Douglass, A.'s view, 586; objects to crucifying wives according to St. Paul, 595; U. S. Sens. on effect of woman suff., 618-620; Rachel Foster's, A.'s feelings, 644, 645; of "Robert Elsmere," 648; of niece Helen Louise Mosher, 652; A. on mutual love, 654; of nephew Wendell Mosher, 679; Hooker golden wedding, "no speeches," 709; anti-suffragists put forward by husbands, 766; A. on Mrs. Sewall's, 850; idea of true marriage, 859; woman a doll or a drudge, 860; golden wedding of Sargents, 916; sentiment for nephew's, 923; golden wedding of Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Moore, 929; woes confided to A., 936; wedded to a principle holiest of marriages, 951; A.'s golden wedding, 975; legal slavery in, 987; must be luxury not necessity for women, 1007; statistics, 1008; parents rather daughters marry than work, 1008; laws must be same for husbands and wives, 1009; God will curse mothers for endowing children with father's sins, 1010; God thy law, thou mine, 1011.
MEDALLION, A.'s made in 1897, 917.
MEDICAL PRACTICE in early times, 30, 39, 40, 49; "water cure," 91, 112, 126; 129; at Worcester Institute, 131; its methods, 134.
MINISTERS, Murray (Univ.), 5; Quaker preachers, 6, 15, 19; A. on women in 1838, 40; first ordained, 74; women educate, 68, 76; S. J. May, 65, 69, 151, 270, 927; Luther Lee, 70; Channing, 73, 102, 104, 110, 112; Higginson, 88; treatment of women speakers in early days, 69-80, 87-92, 101, 102, 119, 121, 125;[140] 133; 165; Quaker preacher at Easton, 177; 181; Beecher's power, 464; Stopford Brooke, 564; Dr. Patton in Washtn., 596; Baptist in Kas., 610; sign anti-suff. petition, 620; A. on ordained and non-ordained women, 634; conduct Intl. Council services, 636; in S. Dak. on "original packages," 657; N. M. Mann, 697; women at Natl. Council, 702; A. asks one if willing to be disfranchised, 709; Miss Shaw answers Dr. Buckley, 710; W. C. Gannett, 712, 714, 719, 916; Dr. J. M. Buckley deb. woman suff., 727; A. comments on Thanksgiving sermons, 729; Robert Collyer, 802; Jenkyn Lloyd Jones, 804, 805; H. W. Thomas, 805, 900; J. B. Hawthorne attacks woman suff., 810; in Salt Lake City on Rev. Anna Shaw's address, 824; A. addresses in San Francisco, 830, 834; why they have no polit. influence, 834; coming to aid of woman suff., 856; Louis Zahner (Adams), 942 (see Church).
MISSOURI COMPROMISE, 121, 149.
MOBS, in New York in 1853, 101-103, 163; against Bloomer costume, 113; in Rochester, 165; Phillips' power over, 174; throughout N. Y., 208, et seq.; A.'s account, 210; 217; N. Y. draft riots, 230.
MT. HOPE CEMETERY, Anthony burial place, 218, 241, 445, 719.
MUSIC, mother's voice, 10; Quaker ideas, 11; in Anthony family, 23; the Hutchinson's in 1867, 286, 291; Ristori's, 558; A.'s feeling towards, 859.
NATIONAL COUNCIL. OF WOMEN, organized in 1888, 639; first triennial, 702; work for Columb. Expos., 745; second triennial, 812-814; manage celebr. of Mrs. Stanton's 80th birthday, 845-848; in Boston, 895; 901; at Nashville Expos., not a suff. meeting, 927 (see International Council).
NATIONAL WOMAN SUFFRAGE ASSOCIATION, founded, officers, 327; Mrs. Livermore on, 328; meetings in Saratoga and Newport, 329; annual conv. in Washtn. in 1870, 337; efforts to unite with American Assn., 346-350; conv. in 1871, managed by Mrs. Hooker, 371 et seq.; conv. of 1872, struggle over 14th amend., 409; A. objects to connection with Mrs. Woodhull's new party, 413; saves meeting from disgrace, 414; conv. of 1873, 431; in New York, 434; conv. of 1874, 453; of 1875, 467; action relating to Centennial of 1876, 474; conv. of 1877, 483 et seq.; of 1878, distress over A.'s absence, prayer meet. in Capitol, 494; conv. of 1879, 499-501; in St. Louis, 506; conv. of 1880, 511; of 1881, 526; Mrs. Mott's adherence, 527; first conv. in New England, 533-535; conv. of 1882, 540; of 1883, 546; of 1884, 588; of 1885, 595; of 1886, 607; unites with American, 627-632; A. describes its liberal platform, 631; responsible for Intl. Council of Women, 633 et seq.; conv. of 1888, 639; sends delegates to polit. convs. of 1888, 641; natl. conv. of 1889, 647; of 1890, 674; incorporation, 676; contributes to South Dakota campaign, 675, 676, 680-685; conv. of 1891, 703; conv. of 1892, Mrs. Stanton's last appearance, A. made pres., 717; conv. of 1893, 737; successful effort to take annual conv. from Washtn., A.'s oppositn., 738; connection with Columb. Expos., 748; conv. of 1894, 756; no section, creed or politics, 757; help in Kas. campaign, 780; sends greetings to Prohib. Conv., 790; old workers rebel against "red tape," 805; A.'s advice, 806; conv. of 1895 in Atlanta, 810-812; turns Mrs. Stanton's birthday celebr. over to Woman's Council, 845-847; conv. of 1896, 851, 858; Woman's Bible res., 852; A.'s sp. against, 853; conv. of 1897 in Des Moines, 901; sends greeting on A.'s birthday, 907; an officer 55 yrs. without salary, 925.
NATURALIZATION, as applied to men and to women, 983; what rights it confers, 986 (see Citizenship, Immigrants).
NEGROES, A. first sees, 17; objects to treatment in church, 39; takes tea with, 40; inferiority declared, 78; comments on in Washtn. in 1854, 118; humiliation of, 152; resolutions on at Teachers' Conv., 155; efforts to free by emancipation, 226 et seq.; placed above women, 240; A.'s work for in Kas., 243; A. addresses in Kansas and Mo., 248, 249; their relation to church, 249; after the War, 255; Purvis on "negro's hour," 258; Phillips and Tilton declare their rights paramount to women's, 261; women sacrificed to, 266; "the negro's hour," 267-270; Lucretia Mott on, 268; Purvis refuses to put negroes before women, 269; oppose suff. for women, 275; women sacrificed for, 284; treachery to women, 286; leading men declare this is negro's hour, 300; women abandoned for, 304; position of black woman, 304; oppose women on own platform, 314; A.'s attitude toward, 315; effect of suffrage on, will lead to outrages, 318; placed above women, 323; A. on "the negro's hour," 498; amends. will fail to protect, 500; Repubs. can not protect in use of ballot, 522; A. on Douglass marriage and amalgamation, 586; A. addresses in Atlanta and S. C., 812; no better treated in North than South, 815; discharges stenog. who refuses to serve, 816; in Calif. campaign, 868, 875; A. addresses church in San Fr., 834; speaks at church fair, 860; Pres. Johnson's proclam. disfranchising, 960; A. protests, 961 et seq.; "colonization" proposed, 962; efforts of States to disfranchise, testimony refused in courts, imprisoned for debt, 964; long-continued misrepresentations of, 965; ballot only guarantee of freedom, 966; rights as citizens, 979; discussion of right to vote, 979 et seq.; status compared to married white women, 987; failure of attempts to deport, 1010; Repubs. approve A.'s demand for negro but not for woman suff., 1015; Mrs. Stanton declares 14th amend. will not protect in right to vote, 1016 (see Anti-Slavery, Slavery).
NEWSPAPERS, list used in writ. Biog., vii; treatment of early demand for Woman's Rights, 61, 77-83, 89-92, 264, 267, 271, 272, 367, 504; comment on A.'s voting, 424; on her trial, 441; on paying debts of The Revolution, 473; wide notice of A., 502; changed tone of press, 503, 752, 929; her apprec. of its power, 510, 904; efforts for woman's paper, 509; kindness to reporters, 583, 904; papers emphasize trivial things, 617; on dress and woman suff., 651; reporters of early days, 654; endless requests for A.'s opinions, 740, 753, 803, 925; to write for "women's editions," 803; hysterical editors, 839; on A.'s illness in 1895, 841; A. on "yellow journals," 923; desire for Wom. Suff. Press Bureau, 939; at Anthony Reunion, 942; birthday comment, 972; on A.'s sp. before trial, 993 (see Interviews, The Revolution).
ALABAMA, Birmingham, News, 809; Huntsville, Evening Tribune, 809.
ARKANSAS, Little Rock, The Woman's Chronicle, 722.
CALIFORNIA, on A.'s first visit in 1871, 392, 404, 405; of South. Calif. in 1895, 834; in woman suff. campaign of 1896, 866-869; 9,000 clippings, 868; Alameda, 868, 891; Berkeley, 868; Oakland, Enquirer, 834; 868; Los Angeles, 868; Times, unfriendly to women, 834; caricatures A., 868; Sacramento, Record-Union, 868; San Diego, Union, 833; 868; San Jose, Mercury, 394; 868; San Francisco, Bulletin, 829; has suff. dept., 866; Call, 829, 866; work for woman suff. in St. Repub. Conv., 869; women delegates before com., 870; report smothered in Dem. Conv., 873; women's mass meet., 878; ceases support, 885; Chronicle, A.'s banquet in 1871, 405; Woman's Cong., 828, 829; action in woman suff. campaign, 867; Examiner, Woman's Cong., 829; action in woman suff. campaign, 867; work for woman suff. in Dem. St. Conv., 872; Monitor, 867; Post, 829; assists woman suff. campaign, 866; Report, same, 866; Star, 868; Voice of Labor, 868.
COLORADO, press supports woman suff. in 1893, 753; Denver, News, trib. to A., 388; 821; Colorado women indebted to, 822; rep. of lecture, 823; Times, 822; Tribune, 388.
CONNECTICUT, Hartford, Courant, 339; Post, 333.
DAKOTA, SOUTH, 688.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, Washington, Capital, 486; Daily Patriot, 376; Kate Field's Washington, 791; National Republican, Wom. Suff. Conv. of 1871, 377; petits. for woman suff., 485; Republic, 542; Star, A.'s meet, in 1854, 118; petits. for woman suff., 1877, 485; descript. of A. in 1889, 660; 70th birthday, 665; Union, 130; Woman's Campaign, 509; Woman's Tribune, Intl. Council numbers, 633; 641; A.'s 70th birthday number, 671.
GEORGIA, Atlanta, Constitution, Natl. Suff. Conv., 810; A.'s and Miss Shaw's sp., 811; Sunny South, 810.
ILLINOIS, country press on A.'s Social Purity lect., 469; Chicago, Agitator, 321, 361; Daily News, A. and The Revolution, 473; the Skye terrier, 527; 531; Herald, 651; A. like Pope, 840; Inter-Ocean, Mary H. Krout on A. at Columb. Expos., 751; Journal, 757; Legal News, trib. to A., 346; A.'s trial, 443, 757; Republican, 306; Tribune, A.'s reticence and truthfulness, 462; interview with, 505; fine tribute to, 549; sp. at Press Cong., 750; Union Signal, Miss Willard's trib. to A., 638; grandeur of loneliness, 725; Voice, 844; Springfield, Republic, 517.
INDIANA, Indianapolis, News, 866; Sentinel, 517; Times, 547; Terre Haute, Express, 503.
IOWA, Sioux City, Daily Times, 387.
KANSAS, Iola, Register, 778; Kansas City, Journal, 550; Leavenworth, Commercial, 292; Times, 787; Topeka, State Journal, 789; Wichita, Eagle, 841.
KENTUCKY, Richmond, Herald, 504.
LOUISIANA, New Orleans, Daily States, 598; Picayune, trib. to A., 597; on her lectures, 807; Times-Democrat, 598; Shreveport, Times, 808.
MAINE, Bangor, Jeffersonian, 154; Ellsworth, American, 154.
MARYLAND, Baltimore, Sun, interview bet. A. and Doolittle, 417; A.'s presiding, 637.
MASSACHUSETTS, Adams, Freeman, 942; Boston, Anti-Slavery Standard, 174, 188, 214, 233, 245; Pillsbury made editor, 246; 251, 252, 261; attitude toward woman suff., 262; same, 265, 268, 269; A.'s assistance, 263; 275; women aid, 297; Commonwealth, 297; Congregationalist, 198; Globe, trib. to A., 534; a woman President, 725; Liberator, 174, 188, 214, 233, 251; Traveller, Natl. Suff. Conv., 533; Lillian Whiting on A.'s birthday, 672; Woman's Journal, 361, 419; Worcester, Spy, 994.
NEWSPAPERS—Continued. MICHIGAN, press on A.'s speeches in 1874, 460; in 1893, 740; Bay City, Tribune, 740; Detroit, Free Press, 345; Grand Rapids, Times, 504.
MISSOURI, St. Louis, Globe-Democrat, A.'s personality, 469; same, 506; her sp. when flowers were presented, 507; Post, 495; Republic, 925.
NEBRASKA, Omaha, Bee, 544; Herald, 544; Republican, 544.
NEW YORK, press on woman suff. in campaign of 1894, 763; Albany, Journal, 65; Law Journal, 443; Register, 141; Auburn, Bulletin, 993; Daily Advertiser, 714; Binghamton, Republican, 156; Brooklyn, Times, 651; Buffalo, Commercial 271; Express, trib. to A., 473; A. and Spiritualists, 773; Canandaigua, Times, 441; Dundee, Record, 200; Elmira, Advertiser, 803; Free Press, 542; Fayetteville, National Citizen, 510, 530; Geneva, Courier, 993; New York City, Business Women's Journal, 757; Christian Advocate, 727; Democrat, 384; Commercial Advertiser, abuses temp. women in 1853, 90; on A.'s voting, 425; same, 994; Courier, abuses temp. women in 1853, 91; trib. to A., 973; Evening Mail, 973; Evening Post, 83, 103, 195; op. woman suff., 267; same, 771; A.'s trial, 994; Evening Telegram, 581; Globe, 973; Graphic, cartoons A., 424; trib. to A., 473; absurd comment, 528; Harper's Weekly, 771; Hearth and Home, 339; Herald, attacks suff. advocates, 78, 306; trib. to A. and suff. conv., 458; A.'s birthday, 973; Home Journal, 297; Independent, 192; "the spider crab," 252; 275; fails the women, 281; The Revolution and its editors, 296; Mary Clemmer's trib. to A., 340; on Senators receiving women's petitions, 485; A.'s birthday, 974; Organ, 91, 97; Outlook, 766; Recorder, 771; Standard, 384; Sun, abuses temp. women in 1853, 90; Democrats and woman suff. plank, 305; A.'s voting, 425; her trial, 442, 462; 530, 651; birthday banq., 665; on petit. for woman suff., 760; Mrs. Stanton's articles, 763; 848; Times, 157; The Revolution and editors, 295; A.'s depart. for Europe, 550; birthday, 972; Tribune, 61; rep. of first woman's temp. conv., 66; 83; sustains woman's right to speak, 89, 101, 102; 103; assists A., 122; 147, 157; Wom. Rights Conv., mob rule, 1859, 174; 195; ridicules woman suff., 267; 275; refuses to print Mrs. Stanton's name, 280; woman suff. in Kas., 281; Wm. Winter's trib. to A., 323; charges "free love," 383; compliments A., 384; on birthday, 972; Whig, 131; World, abuses suff. pioneers, 264, 306; A.'s birthday, 341; art. against woman suff., 497; on A.'s presiding, 637; N. Y. City women in 1894, 764; Nelly Bly interview with A., 858; A.'s trial, 995; Rochester, Democrat and Chronicle, 145, 423; A.'s trial, 442; truthfulness, 462; trib. to A., 473; 30th Wom. Rights Anniv., 496; A.'s lect. on Bread and Ballot, 546; her impressions of Europe, 581; 70th birthday, 673; appoint. to office and Chamber of Commerce sp., 731; favors woman suff., 762; A. and Popu. party, 791; 77th birthday, 905; Mary A.'s birthday, 915; A.'s sp. before trial, 993; Herald, 542; A.'s housewarming, 707; A.'s birthday, 906; Mary A.'s birthday, 915; North Star, 59; Post-Express, A.'s voting, 424, 425; trib. to A., 428; on paying debts of Revolution, 473; on "quality and quantity," 766; on 77th birthday celebr., 906; Rochester's opinion of A., 995; Union and Advertiser, before the War, 145; on women's voting in 1872, 424; calls A. corruptionist, 436; Rondout, Courier, 124; Seneca Falls, Lily, 114, 188; Syracuse, Journal, 77; Standard, 72, 77, 729; Star, abuses suffragists, 77; same, 79; other papers, 729; Troy, Times, 272; Utica, Herald, 367; Observer, A.'s trial, 443; trib. to A., 473; Evening Telegraph, 83.
OHIO, Cincinnati, Commercial, The Revolution and its editors, 301; trib. to A., 519; Enquirer, on The Revolution, 296; A.'s paying debts, 473; Times-Star, 582; Cleveland, Leader, A. and woman of future, 582; sp. to W. C. T. U., 800; Dayton, Herald, 331; Toledo, Ballot Box, 509; Blade, on A.'s voting, 425; 509.
OREGON, Portland, Bulletin, 397; Herald, 397; New Northwest, 398; Oregonian, 397.
PENNSYLVANIA, Philadelphia, Press, Grace Greenwood on first suff. conv. in Washtn., 314; A.'s appeal to Congressl. Com., 376; Mrs. Woodhull, 377; Forney on woman suff., 487; Sunday Republic, 489; Times, 547; Pittsburg, Leader, 995. RHODE ISLAND, Providence, Una, 188. SOUTH CAROLINA, Columbia, The Pine Tree State, 812. TENNESSEE, Memphis, Appeal, 807; Avalanche, A.'s dress, 651; 807; Scimitar, 807; Nashville, American, 928. WASHINGTON, Olympia, Standard, 401; Seattle, Despatch, 401. WYOMING, Cheyenne, Tribune, 387. BRITISH COLUMBIA, Victoria, Colonist, 402. FRANCE, La Citoyenne, La Femme, 562; Le Soir, 561. ITALY, Rome, Italian Times, 561.
NON-PARTISANSHIP, A. declares for in 1869, 315; in 1872, 416, 419, 422; in 1878, 497, 498; in 1880, 523; on importance of, 657, 683; of Natl. Wom. Suff. Assn., 757; A.'s in Calif, campaign, 879; scores N. Y. women for going into partisan politics, 928.
ORGANIZATIONS OF WOMEN, Daught. of Temp. in Canajoharie, 53; in Rochester, 62; snubbed at Albany, hold own meet., 64, 65; N. Y. Wom. St. Temp. Soc., 68, 69, 87, 92, 95; N. Y. Working-woman's Assn. in 1868, 307; meet. at Cooper's Institute for Hester Vaughan, 309, 310; Assn. for Advance. of Women, 446; Harriet Hosmer on women's clubs, 655; Genl. Fed. of Wom. Clubs, 720, 877; Daught. Am. Rev., 919; Buffalo, Educat. and Indust. Union, 741; Scribblers' Club, 803; Chicago, Jewish Woman's Council, 921; Woman's Club, 821, 896, 902; Denver, Woman's Club, 822; Des Moines, Woman's Club, 903; Los Angeles, Friday Morn. Club, 862; Memphis, 807; Minneapolis, Woman's Council, 929; New Orleans, Woman's Club, 597; Portia, 807; Arena, 808; New York, Woman's Suff. League, 802; Press Club, 924; Sorosis, 307, 654, 704, 924; Oakland, Ebell, 831, 876; Orange, Woman's Club, 924; Philadelphia, New Century, 705, 753, 799; Portland (Ore.), Woman's Club, Woman's Union, 877; Rochester, Educat. and Indust. Union, 901; Ignorance, 709; Political Equality, 651, 658, 698, 707, 739, 849, 860, 895, 915, 917; clubs in Roch. give recep. to A., 905, 906; San Diego, 833, 862; San Francisco, 830; Century and others, 876; Seattle, Woman's Century, 877; Shreveport, Hypatia, 808; Syracuse, Political Equality, 762; Topeka, Equal Suff., 786; Washington, Wimodaughsis, 700, 718; London (Eng.), Somerville, 564, 567; Natl. Wom. Suff. Soc., 564 (see those specially mentioned).
PASSES, R. R., furnished by Senator Stanford, 390; by D. R. Anthony, 796; by Mrs. Stanford, 830, 888.
PERSECUTIONS, viii, 190, 299, 301, 929 (see Mobs, Newspapers, Pioneers, Temperance).
PERSONAL APPEARANCE, of grandmother, 6; of mother, 9; of A. in 1846, 50; in 1851, 64; 113; in 1855, 124; in 1857, 154; 264, 273; in 1869, 302, 316; 333, 342, 346; in 1876, 469; 504, 505, 506; child's opinion, 577; 582, 583; in 1886, 605; 637, 638, 660, 714, 729, 751; in 1896, 858; 928, 933, 973.
PETITIONS, for Maine Law, 70, 71; presented to Legis., 81; for property rights, guard. of children and suff., 105, 108; presented, 109; continued, 111; insulting recep. in 1856, 140; Mrs. Stanton and A. for civil and polit. rights of women, in 1860, 175; A.'s sacrifices for, 190; to emancipate slaves, 230 et seq.; to N. Y. Constl. Conv. for woman suff., 262, 263, 264; to Cong. to include women in 14th Amend., 265; for woman suff. to N. Y. Constitl. Conv., 278; Greeley checkmated, 279; of 80,000 women to vote in 1871, 378, 431; A.'s to Cong. to remit fine for voting, 449, 450; in 1876-7 for 16th Amend., dif. of opinion, 483-485; Mary Clemmer describes recep. in Cong., 485; in 1879, 500; comments of Mary Clemmer, 501; great number in 1880, 511; to Natl. Repub. Conv. of 1880, 517; preserved by Chicago Hist. Soc., 518; to Greenback-Labor, 518; to Democratic, 519; to Prohib., 520; vast number of women for suff., 589; for and against suff. in 1887, 620; for represent. of women at Columb. Expos., 743, 744; in N. Y. campaign of 1894, 760; eminent signers, 764; vast numbers, 766, 767, 773; of antis, 766; for woman suff. in Calif., 873, 888; for woman suff. ignored in Cong., 970; of Chicago women for Liquor Law, 1012.
PHRENOLOGY, A. in 1837, 30; chart of head, 85.
PICKPOCKETS, A.'s pocket picked at Saratoga, 121; at Chicago by woman, 249.
PIONEERS, persecution and abuse, viii, 69 et seq., 76 et seq., 83 et seq., 88 et seq., 101, 107; 138; A.'s pioneer work, 190; life in Kas., 247, 248, 284; Mrs. Hooker's tribute to, 334; first speakers for woman suff., 369; 384; Mary L. Booth on, 615; Sarah B. Cooper, 616; Miss Willard, 638; A. in temperance, 643; products of, 765, 822, 848; 944, 973.
PLANKS, woman suff. refused by Natl. Liberal Conv. in 1872, 415; Natl. Repub. adopts, 416; Natl. Dem. refuses, 417, 418; in natl. polit. convs. of 1876, 476; convs. of 1880, 518, 519; adopted by Prohib., 520; in 1884, 594; in Repub. Natl. platform of 1888 not intended for women, 642; the one presented by Natl. Suff. Assn. to Rep. Conv. of 1892 for adoption, 723; the one adopted, 724; Prohibs. have woman suff. plank, 726; for woman suff, adopted by Kas. Repubs., 726; action of Popu. Natl. Conv. in 1892, 727; struggle to secure woman suff. plank from Kas. Repubs. in 1894, 777-787; A.'s great sp. demanding planks, 784, 785; action of Popu. Conv., 787-790; text of plank adopted, 789; Prohib. Conv. adopts one, 790; A.'s joy over, 792; for woman suff. by St. Repub. Conv. of Calif. in 1894, 863; action of St. polit. convs. in Calif. on woman suff. in 1896, 869-874; on women, adopted by Repub. Natl. Conv. of 1896, contempt of women for it, 880; Gen. Harrison asked to include women in that of Repub. plat. in 1888, 1013; planks in polit. plat. necessary for woman suff., 1015 et seq. (see Political Parties).
POEMS, Berkshire Hills, 1, 13; 63; on Bloomers, 113; Phoebe Cary on A.'s 50th birthday, 342; "Old Gal" in Oregon, 397; 668; 804; to A. in Calif., 881; A.'s remarks on poetry, 921; 937, 944.
POLITICAL PARTIES, Whigs, A.'s grandfather, 5; in Boston, 42; 44, 59, 121, 149; Know Nothings, 121, 149; A. repudiates proposed party of Mrs. Woodhull and others, 413; attitude of parties toward women, 506; Greenback-Labor, 518; 584; in 1884, 594; A. on third parties, 622; action in Col. on woman suff., 780; action in Idaho, 879; action in Calif., 878, 884; A. on women's power to help reform parties, 898; workingmen in Eng. toward, 998; same and negroes in U. S., 999 (see Non-Partisanship, Planks, Democrats, Republicans and other parties).
POLYGAMY, A.'s views on, 388-390.
POPULISTS, natl. conv. of 1892, res. com. refuses to hear A. and Miss Shaw, action on woman suff., 726, 727; on woman suff. in Col., 753; Kas. St. Conv. in 1894 on woman suff. plank, 787-790; excitement over A.'s and Miss Shaw's endors., 788-791; A.'s attitude toward, 788, 791, 794; results of campaign, 796, 797; press in Calif. in favor of woman suff., 868; St. Conv. adopts plank, 872; invite A. to address ratifi. meet., 878; in Idaho, 879; attitude toward woman speakers in Calif., 883; silenced by Democrats, 884, 885; in Alameda Co., 891; for woman suff. in Col., 1017; in Kas., 1018; adopt res. for, 1021.
POSTMASTERS, women, Grant appoints first, 418, 455.
PRAYER, 44; cannot replace votes, 457; meet. in Natl. Capitol, Mrs. Stanton on, 494; and politics, 643; A.'s ideas in regard to, 709; practice, 859; thinks it would have little effect on voters, 923.
PRESIDENTS, Martin Van Buren, 41, 42; A. on woman, 119; Buchanan's adminis., 150; Lincoln in 1861, 207, 213; criticised by A., 227; delays to free slaves, 227; address to from Wom. Loyal League, 229, 957; Johnson's incapacity, 255; he subscribes for The Revolution, 297; Grant and Wilson, 418; Grant remits inspectors' fines, 453; appoints women postmasters, 455; Hayes ignores women in message, 499; receives delegates, 500; Garfield on woman suff., 520, 521; A. asks candidates' views on, 521; urges Arthur to recommend woman suff., 538; he receives suff. delegates, 588; Cleveland receives Intl. Council of Women, 637; Boston Globe on women, 725; Hayes favors woman suff., 757; Johnson's proclam. to Miss. in 1865, 960; A. scores him for, 961 et seq.; power of to create voters, 965, 966; Lincoln always governed by voice of people, 967; Grant on 15th Amend., 991; Harrison urged to include women in letter of acceptance, 1013.
PROFESSIONS (see Industries).
PROHIBITIONISTS, natl. conv. adopts woman suff. plank in 1880, 520; Natl. Alliance invites A., 537; A. scores for refusing woman suff. plank in 1884, 594; Miss Willard asks A.'s advice as to plank, her answer, 622; A.'s speech does not please, 644; in S. Dak., 657, 681, 683; took best men out of Congress, 709; adopt woman suff. plank in 1892, 726; Kas. St. Conv. adopts woman suff. plank, 790; vote for it, 797; woman suff. more important, 857; St. Conv. in Calif, adopts woman suff. plank, 872; A. objects to connecting prohibit. with woman suff. campaign, 882.
PRONOUNS, masculine and feminine, 982, 983, 990.
PROPERTY RIGHTS FOR WOMEN, first law for, 58; common law, 74; women first work for, 82; convention and petitions for, 105; A. canvasses for, 105, 108; petitioners abused, 109; A.'s argument for, 110; arranges series of convs., 110; hard work of canvass, 111; bill secured from N. Y. Legis. in 1860, 189; owed to suffragists, 549; in England, 563 (see Laws, Marriage).
PUBLIC CAREER, A.'s reasons for entering, 57 et seq.; fairly begun, 64; gradual transformation, 107; 925.
QUAKERS, evolution of A., viii, 107; Anthony family, 6; Hicksites, 7; "high seat," 6, 19, 57; home schools, 9; object to marriage of A.'s father, 10; on music, 10, 11, 23; discipline A.'s father for dress, 20; for allowing dancing, 36; attitude toward children, 21; toward taxes, 37; father disowned, 37; 44; in Rochester, 48; A. first away from, 50; reformers, on voting, 61; attitude toward women, 93; toward capital punish., 165; A. and young preacher, 177; never fail A., 181; meet, at Waterloo, 197; 201, 216; John Bright, 565; in England, 569, 571; in Ireland, 572; settled all questions discussed in "Robert Elsmere," 648; Mrs. Mendenhall, 660; view of Bible, 856; A. member of, 933; feelings of ancients if they could come back in 1897, 941; old meeting house of Anthony family, 947.
RECEPTIONS AND SOCIAL FUNCTIONS, in 1839, 36; temp. supper in 1849, 53; temp. festival in Rochester in 1851, 62; at Lydia Mott's, 173; with Cary sisters, 343, 358; A.'s 50th birthday, 341; in New York in 1870, 368; to pardoned election inspectors, 453; in San Fran. in 1871, 405; in New York in 1873, 435; in Washtn., 512; in Indpls., 517; in Washtn. in 1881, 527; in Boston, 535; in Washtn., 1882, 541; in St. Louis, 546; A.'s 73d birthday in Phila., 546; in London, 555, 563-568; Rachel Foster recd. by Queen, A.'s remarks, 562; in Edinburgh, 569; at home of Harriet Martineau, 571; in Ireland, 572; in London, 577; in Liverpool, 579; in New Orleans, 597; in Racine, 611; in Indpls., 623; Mrs. Ingalls', 626; to Intl. Council of Women in 1888, 637; in Chicago, 641; in Washtn., 647; in St. Louis, 649; at Park Hotel, New York, 651; Akron, O., 652; Seidl Club at Brighton Beach, newspaper account, 653, 654; 70th birthday dinner, 672; in Washtn., A. appreciates value of, 677; in Ft. Scott, 697; in Rochester, 698; of Natl. Council, 702; 704; in Phila., 705; in A.'s own home, 707; in Washtn., 718; in Chicago, 720; in Senate chamber, Topeka, 726; in Washtn., 739; at Columb. Expos., 744, 746, 750, 751; in New York, 753; in Ann Arbor, 755; in Syracuse, 752; New Century Club, Phila., 799; in N. Y., 802; New year's in Roch., 806; in Ky., 806; in Memphis, 807; 809; in Atlanta, 810; in Columbia, 812; in Washtn., 814; in St. Louis, 821; in Denver, 821, 822; in Cheyenne, 823; in Salt Lake, 824, 825; in Calif., 830-834; in New York, 849; in Washtn., 858; in San Diego and Los Angeles, 862; in Stockton, 872; in North. Calif., 876, 877; in Portland, 877; in Seattle, 878; in Des Moines, 903; in Indpls., 903; in Rochester, 895; in Boston, 895; in Providence, 896; in Nashville, 927, 928; Anthony reunion in 1897, 942. |
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