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Massachusetts was at the center of the national struggle for women's rights, and the early activities there, described in this well-researched book, enabled the next generation of women to triumph over tradition.
Massachusetts was at the center of the national struggle for women's rights. Long before the Civil War, Lucy Stone and other Massachusetts abolitionists opposed women's exclusion from political life. They launched the organized movement at the first National Woman's Rights Convention, held in Worcester. After the war, state activists founded the Boston-based American Woman Suffrage Association and Woman's Journal to lead campaigns across the country. Their activities laid the foundation for the next generation of suffragists to triumph over tradition. Author Barbara Berenson gives these revolutionary reformers the attention they deserve in this compelling and engaging story.
Paperback, 192 pages.
Inspired by the exhibition American Stories: Revolution to Rockwell on view June 6, 2026 through October 26, 2026 at Norman Rockwell Museum.
Norman Rockwell Museum 9 Glendale Rd., PO BOX 308 Stockbridge, MA 01262
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