This
library is arranged so that, if you wish, you can read the currently available
documents straight through in chronological order, in the manner of a history
lesson. You also can find the documents indexed by author in the
OTHER COLLECTIONS
Document
001:
1588 - Elizabeth I's speech "I have the Heart of a King."
Document
0011 et seq.:
1792 - A Vindication of the Rights of Women
by Mary Wollstonecraft
Document
002:
1848 - Declaration of Sentiments: Report of The Woman's
Rights Convention at Seneca Falls, N.Y.
Document
003:
1848 - Elizabeth Cady Stanton's keynote speech at
the first Women's Rights Convention, Seneca Falls, NY.
Document
0031:
1856 - Lucy Stone's address and progress report to
the seventh Women's Rights Convention, New York City.
Document
00311:
1873 - Susan B. Anthony: On Woman's Right to Suffrage
Speech in support of suffrage.
Document
004:
1892 - Elizabeth Cady Stanton's The Solitude of
Self Immortal speech given before Congress
and the American National Women's Association
Document
0041 et seq.:
1895 - Elizabeth Cady Stanton: The Women's Bible
Document
005:
1896 - Susan B. Anthony on The Woman's Bible Susan
B. Anthony's address in 1896 to the National American Woman Suffrage Association
meeting when a resolution was offered to repudiate Elizabeth Cady Stanton's
Woman's Bible.
Document
006:
1904 - Declaration of Principles
In 1904, the Convention of the National American
Woman Suffrage Association adopted this Declaration of Principles,
sixty years after the initial Declaration of Sentiment adopted at
Seneca Falls.
Document
0061:
1905 - Florence Kelley on Child Labor
Document
0062:
1906 - "The Colored Man's Paradise" Mary
Church Terrell's speech on racial discrimination and segregation.
Document
0063:
1908 - Emma Goldman on Patriotism
Document
0064:
1912 - Mother Jones's speech to West Virginia Coal Miners
Document
00641:
1913 - Emmeline Pankhurst on suffrage
Document
0065:
1915 - What is a Republic by
the Rev. Anna Howard Shaw
Document
007:
1918 - League of Women Voters Formed
Document
008 et seq.:
1918 - Marie Stopes's Married Love
Document
009:
1922 - Woman's Rights Party's Platform
Document
010, Part 1:
1922 - Re: Mrs. Frank Leslie's Will That
Shocks the World by Giving $2 MILLION to GET Woman's Suffrage Approved.
Part 2: How the
Money was Spent; Part
3: A Snow of Publicity; Part
4: An Exact Accounting
Document
0101:
1940 - Eleanor Roosevelt's Civil Liberties Speech to A.C.L.U.
Document
0102:
1969 - Shirley Chisholm on the Equal Rights Amendment
Document
011:
1992 - A Woman's View: Dying of AIDS by
Elizabeth Glaser
Document
012:
1993 - "What other judgment can I judge by but my own?"
The question of freedom of conscience.
Document
013:
1995 - Donna Shalala's speech in Beijing, China at
the World Health Organization conference as part of the Fourth U.N. Women's
Conference.
Document
014:
1995 - Hillary Rodham Clinton's speech in Beijing, China
at the World Health Organization conference as part of
the Fourth U.N. Women's Conference.
Document
015:
1995 - Hillary Rodham Clinton's speech at
the Fourth U.N. conference in Beijing, China, that contains one of the
finest litanies regarding women's rights.
Document
016:
1995 - Rebels aren't always skinny little men wearing bandanas...
by Irene Stuber
Document
017:
1998 - Hillary Rodham Clinton's speech at Seneca Falls
Document
018:
2001- Angela King's speech to the U.N. on women's issues
Inspirational
and educational articles from Irene Stuber's phenomenal
LIZNOTES
TABLE OF CONTENTS | RESEARCH ROOMS
| THE READING ROOM
GENDERGAPPERS
| WOMAN SUFFRAGE
TIMELINE | THE LIZ LIBRARY
ENTRANCE
©
1990-2006 Irene Stuber, Hot Springs National Park, AR 71902. Originally
web-published at http://www.undelete.org/
We are indebted to Irene Stuber for compiling this
collection and for granting us permission to make it available again.
The text of the documents in the women's history library may be freely
copied for nonprofit educational use.
Except as otherwise
noted, all contents in this collection are copyright 1998-06 the liz library.
All rights reserved.
This site is hosted and maintained by the
liz library. Send queries to: sarah-at-thelizlibrary.org
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