Lingua: Inglese
Data di pubblicazione: 2025
Da: S N Books World, Delhi, India
EUR 21,69
Quantità: 18 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloLeatherbound. Condizione: NEW. BOOKS ARE EXEMPT FROM IMPORT DUTIES AND TARIFFS; NO EXTRA CHARGES APPLY. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. Bound in genuine leather with Satin ribbon page markers and Spine with raised gilt bands. A perfect gift for your loved ones. Reprinted from 1888 edition. NO changes have been made to the original text. This is NOT a retyped or an ocr'd reprint. Illustrations, Index, if any, are included in black and white. Each page is checked manually before printing. As this print on demand book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages, but we always try to make the book as complete as possible. Fold-outs, if any, are not part of the book. If the original book was published in multiple volumes then this reprint is of only one volume, not the whole set and contains approximately 44 pages. IF YOU WISH TO ORDER PARTICULAR VOLUME OR ALL THE VOLUMES YOU CAN CONTACT US. Resized as per current standards. Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Language: English.
Lingua: Inglese
Data di pubblicazione: 2025
Da: S N Books World, Delhi, India
EUR 27,12
Quantità: 18 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloLeatherbound. Condizione: NEW. BOOKS ARE EXEMPT FROM IMPORT DUTIES AND TARIFFS; NO EXTRA CHARGES APPLY. Leatherbound edition. Condition: New. Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. Bound in genuine leather with Satin ribbon page markers and Spine with raised gilt bands. Pages: 128. A perfect gift for your loved ones. Reprinted from 1902 edition. NO changes have been made to the original text. This is NOT a retyped or an ocr'd reprint. Illustrations, Index, if any, are included in black and white. Each page is checked manually before printing. As this print on demand book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages, but we always try to make the book as complete as possible. Fold-outs, if any, are not part of the book. If the original book was published in multiple volumes then this reprint is of only one volume, not the whole set. IF YOU WISH TO ORDER PARTICULAR VOLUME OR ALL THE VOLUMES YOU CAN CONTACT US. Resized as per current standards. Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Language: English Pages: 128.
Editore: Case, Lockwood, & Brainard, Printers, Hartford, CT, 1871
Da: Cleveland Book Company, ABAA, Rocky River, OH, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Folded sheet. Condizione: Fine. First Edition. Large octavo, 4pp. Folded sheet. About fine, perhaps a trifle toned at edges. Printed on thin paper, and with the printing block evidently at a slight angle, typical of a hastily and time-sensitive leaflet such as this one. A significant ephemeral document in the history of women's suffrage in America; a call to action which encouraged women to risk arrest and imprisonment by voting in elections, in order to spur the slow-moving American government along towards full suffrage. The second paragraph begins: "This is pre-eminently the birth day of womanhood [.] Mothers, for the first time in history, are able to assert, not only their inherent first right to the children that they have borne, but their right to be a protective and purifying power in the political society into which those children are to enter." In the few years since the end of the Civil War and the publication of this pamphlet, a handful of western states had afforded women the right to vote, and the National Woman's Suffrage Association believed they had the wind at their backs to agitate for nationwide recognition of a woman's right to vote. While they had been lobbying for a Sixteenth Amendment to officially enshrine votes for women in the Constitution, Susan B. Anthony and other leaders decided on a new strategy, called the "New Departure," which argued that no such amendment was necessary, and that their right to vote was evident in the Fourteenth Amendment (which had been written to give African-Americans the right to vote), and also in the arguments about citizenship and "taxation without representation" which serve as foundation stones for the United States' political system and self-conception. The "New Departure" was presented to the public for the first time with the production of this pamphlet, and it encouraged women to stop waiting for rights to be handed to them by a legislature, but instead to vote in elections, and be willing to be arrested in any place where voting was illegal for woman (the vast majority of the country). Anthony herself and many other leaders of the movement were arrested in 1872 when they tried to vote in the presidential election. These agitations led to a disappointing 1875 Supreme Court decision (Minor c. Happersett), which declared that women were not automatically entitled to vote under the language of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that states had the right to restrict it. Nevertheless, the activism spurred on by the New Departure helped to embolden a new generation of feminists and political agitators. The pamphlet encourages women to send in their name and, if possible one dollar for a printing fund to produce more tracts for wide distribution. In the spirit of unity, solidarity, and reasonableness that defined their movement, they write: "[As] many working women will have nothing to send but their names, we welcome these as a precious gift, and urge those who are able, to send us their fifties and hundreds, which we promise faithfully to use and account for." This pamphlet represents a hinge moment in the long history of women's suffrage, which kick-started a five-decade campaign on all fronts - legal, political, and social - which ultimately culminated in the 20th Amendment. Auction records are scant, but the most recent more than doubled its low estimate.
Editore: Hartford: Case, Lockwood & Brainard, Printers, 1871., 1871
Da: William Reese Company, New York, NY, U.S.A.
An important publication by the National Woman Suffrage and Educational Committee, published in Hartford just after the group's national convention in Washington, D.C., and ahead of the group's next national convention on May 11, 1871, in New York City. The text boldly "calls upon all women who love their children and their country" to take up the cause of suffrage, asserting: "This is pre-eminently the birth-day of womanhood." The main thrust of the text argues for women's suffrage on a Constitutional basis, asserting that women were already granted full citizenship and the right to vote under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments. The authors call for women to assert their right to vote by going to the polls and, if necessary, by suing in court. This last point was a strategy developed by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and other suffragists to seek remedy for the right to vote through the judicial system, a strategy that came to be known as the "New Departure." The National Woman Suffrage and Educational Committee was formed, in large part, to carry out this new strategy. The present text calls for "some test case be brought upon full consultation with the National Committee, that the ablest counsel may be employed and the expenses paid out of the public fund." The most notable test case of the New Departure came the next year, when Susan B. Anthony registered to vote in Rochester, New York and then cast a ballot in the 1872 presidential election. She was arrested for her "crime," and the resulting trial saw Anthony convicted of illegally voting, for which she was ordered to pay a $100 fine. Anthony never paid the fine, nor was she ever penalized further for refusing to do so. The text also prints the group's "Declaration and Pledge of the Women of the United States concerning their Right to and their Use of the Elective Franchise," which was adopted at their first national convention in January 1871. The declaration reads, in part: "We, the undersigned, believing that the sacred rights and privileges of citizenship in this Republic were guaranteed to us by the original Constitution, and that these rights are confirmed and more clearly established by the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments, so that we can no longer refuse solemn responsibilities thereof, do hereby pledge ourselves to accept the duties of the franchise in our several States, so soon as all legal restrictions are removed." The text continues by reporting the creation of the board of the National Woman Suffrage and Educational Committee, with an office in Washington, D.C., "proposed to make the centre of all action upon Congress and the country," and a call to distribute "thousands and thousaads [sic] more" suffrage-related publications across the country. The text ends with a fundraising call, specifically for women to send in their names, recorded by the secretary in a Pledge Book, and suggested donations of $1, along with a request for donations to establish a printing fund, to publish "a series of tracts on subjects vitally affecting the welfare of the country." The text is dated April 19, 1871, and signed in print at the end by the officers and notable members of the National Woman Suffrage and Educational Committee. These include Isabella Beecher Hooker (president), Josephine S. Griffing (secretary), Mary B. Bowen (treasurer), Paulina Wright Davis, Ruth Carr Denison, and Susan B. Anthony. A fundamental document in the women's suffrage movement. KRICHMAR 1866. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, et al., eds., History of Woman Suffrage, Vol. 2 (New York, 1882), p.485. 4pp. on a single folded quarto sheet. Light edge wear. Near fine.
Editore: Printed by Case, Lockwood & Brainard,, Hartford, CT:, 1871
Da: Zephyr Used & Rare Books, Vancouver, WA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
8vo. 24 pp. Self-printed softcovers, sewn at spine (slight age toning, very slight dustsoiling), still NF copy. First edition of the second scarce Women's Suffrage tract published by the pioneering Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association (CWSA) in 1871, subsequent to their second Annual Meeting held in 1870. This tract features the extended letter to Chicago, IL suffragette, and editor, Myra Bradwell from Judge Howe of Wyoming, detailing women serving as jurors on a murder trial jury after the passage of the Wyoming Territory's 1869 Suffrage Act, and that they discharged their duties with skill, and also refutes the spurious claims that the men and women jurors had been improperly sequestered together for 4 days and nights. Following the publication of this tract, Howe was replaced as a judge in the First District by Joseph Fisher, a Union Army veteran who refused to recognize women being in the jury pool, or allowed to set on juries, even though they did have the right to vote. Isabella has also incorporated suffrage reports from the National Society for Woman Suffrage in England, including specific mentions of petitions before Parliament in 1869 & 1870 on the admission of women to the suffrage by Lydia E. Becker, along with excerpts of speeches by Mill delivered to the London Society of Woman Suffrage.Hooker closes with a report on a proposal by the Executive Committee to send women to meet with small local committees to "obtain signatures to the petitions for a 16th Amendment, and to circulate tracts on the subject of Equal Suffrage." See: Jessica Jenkins, The Long Road to Women's Suffrage in Connecticut, Connecticut Explored, Vol. 14, No. 2 (Spring, 2016); Kim Viner, Women on the Jury: Wyoming Makes History Again, Wyoming Historical Society Encyclopedia (Jan. 23, 2020).
Editore: Press of Case, Lockwood & Brainard, Hartford, 1871
Da: Whitmore Rare Books, Inc. -- ABAA, ILAB, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Condizione: Near Fine. First edition. Tracts of the Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association No. 2. Original printed self-wraps stitched at spine. 24 pages. Toning to front wrap; light chipping to outer edge of rear wrap and a small split at lower joint holding well. Signed in type on the rear by Isabella Beecher Hooker, in her capacity as chair. A critical organ of this influential state organization, the present Annual Meeting and Executive Report reports on what was only the group's second meeting after its founding one year before. Scarce in trade and institutionally, with OCLC reporting 8 known copies. Nationally, 1870-1871 were landmark years for the women's movement because of both the successes and failures it encountered. Suffragists faced major disappointment in the 15th Amendment; for while it widened the franchise to include freedmen, it did not address women's voting. At the same time, in the territories, women's rights were expanding; and Utah Territory became the first to grant suffrage to women. The National Woman Suffrage Association continued to operate as a unifying agent for the suffrage message, but it also recognized that it could only accomplish its mission through grassroots work at the regional and state levels. Only by getting state suffrage and by gaining Congressmen's support could an Amendment be presented and ratified. During this same period, Isabella Beecher Hooker and Frances Ellen Burr founded the Connecticut Woman Suffrage Association. Much like the NWSA, the CWSA advocated women's suffrage alongside other equality issues, including employment and education. While the CWSA began small, focusing on campaigning for women's suffrage on a local level, it gained momentum under Hooker's guidance, becoming influential in the state and on the national state. The Annual Meeting and Report of the Executive Meeting inform members of the strides being made at this moment in history, urging suffragists to harness energy from these to charge ahead in the fight. It is a fight in which each state must advocate not as a separate entity, but as a part of a greater national whole. It is also a fight that will take practical and persistent action in addition to eloquence, as Hooker shows: "It becomes more and more evident that as a political measure, our main reliance must be upon the action of Congress passing an amendment to the Federal Constitution. On this account we urge every member of the Society to keep on hand forms of petition that they may obtain signatures from time to time, and return them to the Secretary as soon as filled. Of the importance of flooding Congress with these petitions from all parts of the country, no one can doubt." Near Fine.
Data di pubblicazione: 2024
Da: Gyan Books Pvt. Ltd., Delhi, India
EUR 59,40
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloLeather Bound. Condizione: New. Language: English. Language: English. Presenting an Exquisite Leather-Bound Edition, expertly crafted with Original Natural Leather that gracefully adorns the spine and corners. The allure continues with Golden Leaf Printing that adds a touch of elegance, while Hand Embossing on the rounded spine lends an artistic flair. This masterpiece has been meticulously reprinted in 2024, utilizing the invaluable guidance of the original edition published many years ago in 1902. The contents of this book are presented in classic black and white. Its durability is ensured through a meticulous sewing binding technique, enhancing its longevity. Imprinted on top-tier quality paper. A team of professionals has expertly processed each page, delicately preserving its content without alteration. Due to the vintage nature of these books, every page has been manually restored for legibility. However, in certain instances, occasional blurriness, missing segments, or faint black spots might persist. We sincerely hope for your understanding of the challenges we faced with these books. Recognizing their significance for readers seeking insight into our historical treasure, we've diligently restored and reissued them. Our intention is to offer this valuable resource once again. We eagerly await your feedback, hoping that you'll find it appealing and will generously share your thoughts and recommendations. Lang: - English, Pages: - 128, Print on Demand. If it is a multi-volume set, then it is only a single volume. We are specialised in Customisation of books, if you wish to opt different color leather binding, you may contact us. This service is chargeable. Product Disclaimer: Kindly be informed that, owing to the inherent nature of leather as a natural material, minor discolorations or textural variations may be perceptible. Explore the FOLIO EDITION (12x19 Inches): Available Upon Request. 128 128.