TY - GEN AU - Blackwell,Alice Stone AU - Blackwell,Antoinette Louisa Brown AU - Blackwell,Elizabeth AU - Blackwell,Emily AU - Blackwell,Henry Browne AU - Blackwell,Kitty Barry AU - Stone,Lucy TI - Blackwell family papers, KW - Algeo, Sara MacCormack, KW - Anthony, Susan B. KW - Beecher, Henry Ward, KW - Blackwell family. KW - Breshko-Breshkovskai͡a, Ekaterina Konstantinovna, KW - Byron, Anne Isabella Milbanke Byron, KW - Catt, Carrie Chapman, KW - Flores Magón, Ricardo, KW - Funk, Antoinette, KW - Garrison, William Lloyd, KW - Grimké, Sarah Moore, KW - Harper, Ida Husted, KW - Howe, Julia Ward, KW - Keljik, Bedros A., KW - Mistral, Gabriela, KW - Mooney, Thomas J., KW - Mott, Lydia KW - Nightingale, Florence, KW - Park, Maud Wood, KW - Phillips, Wendell, KW - Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, KW - Vanzetti, Bartolomeo, KW - American Woman Suffrage Association. KW - National American Woman Suffrage Association KW - Woman's journal (Boston, Mass. : 1870) KW - Abolitionists KW - Antislavery movements KW - United States KW - Congregational churches KW - Clergy KW - Poetry KW - Translations KW - Poets, Armenian KW - Correspondence KW - Poets, Russian KW - Poets, Spanish KW - Prohibition KW - Social problems KW - Women KW - Suffrage KW - Women clergy KW - Women periodical editors KW - Women physicians KW - England KW - New York (N.Y.) KW - Women's rights KW - itoamc KW - Physicians KW - Suffragists N1 - Open to research; Restrictions may apply to unprocessed material; Microfilm edition available; no. 17,630; Microfilm produced from originals in the Manuscript Division; Washington, D.C.; Library of Congress Photoduplication Service; 1979 N2 - Correspondence, diaries (1872-1937), translations of poetry and correspondence with Armenian, Russian, and Spanish poets, and other papers of Alice Stone Blackwell, editor of the Woman's Journal (1909-1917), reflecting her literary endeavors and her role in the woman's suffrage movement and other social reforms. Correspondence, articles, speeches, reminiscences, autobiographical material, and other papers of Henry Browne Blackwell and Lucy Stone relating to their activities on behalf of women's rights (particularly as organizers of the American Woman Suffrage Association and its successor, the National American Woman Suffrage Association) and the abolition of slavery; Correspondence, diaries (1836-1908), speeches, and medical articles and other writings of Elizabeth Blackwell, chiefly relating to her efforts to open the medical profession to women in the United States. Kitty Barry Blackwell's correspondence with Alice Stone Blackwell reflects her life with her mother who had moved to England to practice medicine in 1869; Also includes papers of Emily Blackwell, physician in New York, N.Y., and sister of Elizabeth and Henry Browne Blackwell, and Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell, sister-in-law of the Blackwells and first woman ordained as a Congregationalist minister, active in antislavery, prohibition, and women's rights movements. Other family members are also represented in the collection; Correspondents include Sarah MacCormack Algeo, Susan B. Anthony, Henry Ward Beecher, Ekaterina Konstantinovna Breshko-Breshkovskai͡a (Catherine Breshkovsky), Lady Anne Isabella Milbanke Byron, Carrie Chapman Catt, Ricardo Flores Magón, Antoinette Funk, William Lloyd Garrison, Sarah Moore Grimké, Ida Husted Harper, Julia Ward Howe, Bedros A. Keljik, Gabriela Mistral, Thomas J. Mooney, Lydia Mott, Florence Nightingale, Maud Wood Park, Wendell Phillips, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Bartolemeo Vanzetti UR - http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms998003 UR - http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms998003.3 ER -