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Madeleine B. Stern - We the women: career firsts of nineteenth-century America

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Victoria Woodhull is remembered as the first woman to run for the presidency of the United Statesin 1872and as an advocate of a single standard of morality for both sexes. We the Women describes a side of Woodhull less well known: the first woman stockbroker in America, she was successful on Wall Street while lambasting in her journal the railroads, insurance companies, and other special-interest groups. Stern offers biographical sketches of Belva Ann Lockwood, who fought for the right to practice law before the Supreme Court; Isabel C. Barrows, the first woman stenographer in the State Department; Rebecca Pennell Dean, criticized for not knowing her place when she joined a college faculty; Ellen H. Richards, the first university-trained chemist and a relentless worker for public health; Lucy Hobbs Taylor, who led women into the field of dentistry; Sarah G. Bagley, the first woman telegrapher; Rebecca Lukens, a premier captain of industry whose vision helped shape Americas iron age; Mary Ann Lee, the ballerina who introduced Americans to revolutionary dances from abroad; Ann S. Stephen, the author of the first Beadle Dime Novel; Candace Wheeler, who brought women into the profession of home interior decoration; and Harriet Irwin, Louise Bethune, and Sophia G. Hayden, who paved the way for women to become professional architects.These nineteenth-century American women were the first to succeed in professions previously open only to men. Madeleine B. Stern has restored them richly to life in We the Women. The determination and intelligence of these women won for women a place in the arts, science and technology, education and the law, and business and industry. Among Sterns other books are Louisa May Alcott and The Life of Margaret Fuller.

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title We the Women Career Firsts of Nineteenth-century America author - photo 1

title:We the Women : Career Firsts of Nineteenth-century America
author:Stern, Madeleine B.
publisher:University of Nebraska Press
isbn10 | asin:0803292236
print isbn13:9780803292239
ebook isbn13:9780585268538
language:English
subjectWomen--United States--Biography.
publication date:1994
lcc:CT3260.S73 1994eb
ddc:920.72/0973/09034
subject:Women--United States--Biography.
Page iii
We the Women
Career Firsts of Nineteenth-Century America
Madeleine B. Stern
WOOD ENGRAVINGS
BY JOHN DE POL
Page iv Copyright 1962 by Madeleine B Stern Preface copyright 1994 by the - photo 2
Page iv
Copyright 1962 by Madeleine B. Stern
Preface copyright 1994 by the University of Nebraska Press
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Bison Book printing: 1994
Most recent printing indicated by the last digit below:
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Stern, Madeleine B., 1912-
We the women: career firsts of nineteenth-century America / Madeleine B. Stern;
wood engravings by John De Pol.
p. cm.
Originally published: New York: Schulte, 1962. With new pref.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8032-9223-6
i. WomenUnited StatesBiography. 1. Title.
CT3260.S73 1994
920.72 '0973 '09034dc20
93-45996
CIP
Reprinted by arrangement with Madeleine B. Stern
Picture 3
Page v
To
Miriam Y. Holden
Who suggested that this book be written.
Her enthusiasm, her fertile mind, and her
splendid library of books by and about women
helped bring it to completion.
Page vii
Picture 4
We would have every arbitrary barrier thrown down. We would have every path laid open to woman as freely as to man....
Picture 5
Women have taken possession of so many provinces for which men had pronounced them unfit, that though these still declare there are some inaccessible to them, it is difficult to say just where they must stop....
Picture 6
... if you ask me what offices they may fill; I replyany. I do not care what case you put; let them be sea-captains, if you will.
MARGARET FULLER
Picture 7
What gate has been unlocked from the straitness of woman's past which tempts a headlong and multitudinous rush into the world's field of labor?
CANDACE WHEELER
Picture 8
The professions indeed supply the key-stone to the arch of woman's liberty.
JULIA WARD HOWE
Page viii
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
I wish to thank the editor of the Bulletin of The New York Public Library for permission to reprint Chapter 2, which originally appeared as an article in that periodical. Thanks go, too, to The New York Public Library for permission to use the Frederick Lewis Allen Memorial Room, in which much of the research for this book was done.
Acknowledgment of the author's gratitude to the many individuals who have provided information and assistance in connection with the preparation of this book is made at appropriate points in the section, "Notes on Sources."
To Mrs. Miriam Y. Holden, to whom the book is dedicated, the author wishes to express again her deep appreciation for the help and encouragement that persisted at every stage of the work.
The author's gratitude to Leona Rostenberg may be stated and restated, but it is too unbounding for adequate acknowledgment.
Page ix
CONTENTS
Preface to the Bison Book Edition
xiii
"Let Them Be Sea-Captains, If You Will"
1
The Arts
1
The First American Ballerina to Capture the Nation: Mary Ann Lee
5
2
The Author of the First Beadle Dime Novel: Ann S. Stephens
29
3
Three American Women Firsts in Architecture: Harriet IrwinLouise BethuneSophia G. Hayden
55
Science & Technology
4
America's First Woman Telegrapher: Sarah G. Bagley
79
5
The First American Woman Doctor of Dental Surgery: Lucy Hobbs Taylor
95
6
The First Woman Graduate of M.I.T.: Ellen H. Richards, Chemist
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