Alice Stone Blackwell letter to Mariana Wright Chapman

    Item Description
    Description

    Alice Stone Blackwell was a suffragist, journalist, and human rights advocate. Written on Woman's Journal stationery. Discusses a letter that was signed by multiple women to be printed in the Women's Journal.

    Linked Agent
    Physical Form
    Date Created
    1897-07-27
    Geographic Subject
    Language
    Extent
    2 pages
    Resource Type
    Internet Media Type
    image/tiff
    Digital Origin
    Institution
    Library
    Shelf Locator
    Mariana Wright Chapman Family Papers, SFHL-RG5-260
    Local Identifier
    A00180044
    PID
    sc:163865
    Record Content Source
    Rights Statement
    Use and Reproduction

    Please cite appropriately, crediting Mariana Wright Chapman Family Papers, SFHL-RG5-260, Friends Historical Library of Swarthmore College as the source and indicating the identifier of the item, A00180044. This work is believed to be in the Public Domain under the laws of the United States. For more information, see http://rightsstatements.org/page/NoC-US/1.0/.

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    [Letterhead]

    Office of The Woman's Journal

    Adams, [Massachusetts], July 27, 1897

    Dear Mrs. Chapman:
    Your letter of July 24
    has been forwarded to me
    here, where the Business
    Committee of the N. A. W. S. A.
    is holding meetings morning,
    afternoon & evening, & turning
    off quantities of business.
    I am very glad to
    have the letter signed by
    Mrs. Fawcett & the other
    English women, and have
    mailed it immediately to
    the printers. I came off
    in such a hurry that I

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    did not get time to put the
    New Jersey items together, or to
    copy from Shafts some points
    that I wanted for the Journal.
    I will do so, & send the
    magazine back to you. It
    is very nice that your
    brother sends you all these
    clippings.
    I write during a committee
    meeting, & the whole committee
    send you their love, & Mrs.
    Upton wishes me to
    add the message that she is
    "alive & kicking."
    Yours cordially,
    Alice Stone Blackwell,
    P.S. Isn't it too bad about Lady
    Henry Somerset!