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Topics related to "Widows by the thousand: the Civil War Letters of Theophilus and Harriet"

Harriet Harriet
Harriet (1943), a play by Florence Ryerson and Colin Clements. [Henry Miller Theatre, 377 perf.] When Harriet Beecher ( Helen Hayes) marries Professor Calvin Stowe ( Rhys Williams), she is not fully aware that she has done so partly to escape her overbearing family. Her writing, too, begins as... Read more
Harriet Tubman Harriet Tubman
Harriet Tubman c.1820-1913, American abolitionist, b. Dorchester co., Md. Born into slavery, she escaped to Phildelphia in 1849, and subsequently became one of the most successful "conductors" on the Underground Railroad . Returning to the South more than a dozen times, she is generally... Read more
wholesome wholesome
693. Wholesomeness Armstrong, Jack “the all-American boy.” [Radio: Buxton, 121–122] Brady Bunch, The widower and widow marry, producing an instant, wholesome family of eight. [TV: Terrace, I, 115] Miss America annual beauty contest features wholesome contestants. [Am.... Read more
John Evelyn John Evelyn
John Evelyn , 1620-1706, English diarist and miscellaneous writer. Although of royalist sympathies, he took little active part in the civil war. After 1652 he lived as a wealthy country gentleman at Sayes Court, Deptford, where he cultivated his garden and wrote on various subjects, including... Read more
Harriet Hanson Robinson Harriet Hanson Robinson
Harriet Hanson Robinson Harriet Hanson Robinson (1825-1911) wrote an account of her experince in the textile mills, helping to encourage women to flock to the mills for a chance to earn their own wages. Harriet Hanson Robinson was born on August 2, 1825, in Boston, Massachusetts, the second... Read more
Harriet Martineau Harriet Martineau
Harriet Martineau , 1802-76, English author. A journalist rather than a writer of literature, she was an enormously popular author. Her success is the more remarkable since she was deaf from childhood and the victim of various other illnesses throughout her life. The sister of the Unitarian minister... Read more
James Carroll James Carroll
Carroll, James (b. Woolwich, England, 5 June 1854; d. Washington, D. C., 16 September 1907), bacteriology. Carroll was the son of James and Harriet Chiverton Carroll. He attended Albion House Academy, Woolwich, in preparation for an engineering career in the navy. At the age of fifteen, however,... Read more
Harriet Jacobs Harriet Jacobs
Harriet A. Jacobs Harriet A. Jacobs (1823-1897) was a slave who decided she must run away in order to protect her children from harsh treatment by their owners. Delilah Horniblow was a slave to Margaret Horniblow in the town of Edenton, North Carolina, just as Delilah's mother, Molly, had... Read more
Frederick Douglass Frederick Douglass
Frederick Douglass , c.1817-1895, American abolitionist, b. near Easton, Md. The son of a black slave, Harriet Bailey, and an unknown white father, he took the name of Douglass (from Scott's hero in The Lady of the Lake ) after his second, and successful, attempt to escape from slavery in 1838. At... Read more
little magazine little magazine
little magazine term used to designate certain magazines that have as their purpose the publication of art, literature, or social theory by comparatively little-known writers. Distinguishing Features and Pioneering Publications Little magazines differ from the large commercial periodicals and... Read more

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

Widows by the Thousand: The Civil War Letters of Theophilus and Harriet...
Magazine article from: The Arkansas Historical Quarterly Widows by the Thousand: The Civil War Letters of Theophilus and Harriet Perry, 1862...peruse the letters for themselves...trials of war-she faced...the same ...

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