ISNI: |
0000 0000 8110 8013
https://isni.org/isni/0000000081108013
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Name: |
Coffin, Lucretia
Coffin Mott, Lucretia
James Mott Mme, Lucretia
Lucretia C. Mott
Lucretia Mott (Amerikaans feminist (1793-1880))
Lucretia Mott (attivista statunitense)
Lucretia Mott (Suffragist)
Lucretia Mott (US-amerikanische Frauenrechtlerin)
Mott, James (Mrs)
Mott, Lucretia
Mott, Lucretia Coffin
Mott, Lucretia Coffin (married name)
Лукриша Мот
Мотт, Лукреция
ലുക്രീഷ്യ മോട്ട്
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Dates: |
1793-1880 |
Creation class: |
Language material |
Creation role: |
author
creator
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Related names: |
American Equal Rights Convention (isAffiliatedWith)
Faulkner, Carol
Greene, Dana
New-England Anti-Slavery Society (isAffiliatedWith)
Ochoa, Holly Beyers (1951-)
Ochoa, Holly Byers (1951-))
Palmer, Beverly Wilson (1936-...)
Palmer, Beverly Wilson (1936-))
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Titles: |
Correspondence. Selections
James and Lucretia Mott, life and letters
Selected letters of Lucretia Coffin Mott
sermon to the medical students ... 1849., A
Slavery and "the woman question"; Lucretia Mott's diary of her visit to Great Britain to attend the World's Anti-slavery Convention of 1840.
Speeches
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Notes: |
Antislavery movements
Associated Group: American Equal Rights Convention
Associated Group: New-England Anti-Slavery Society Free Religious Association (Boston, Mass.) naf
Encyclopedia of African American History, 1619-1895: From the Colonial Period to the Age of Frederick Douglass, accessed February 27, 2015, via Oxford African American Studies Center database (Mott, Lucretia Coffin; abolitionist, women's rights advocate; born 03 January 1793 in Nantucket Island, Massachusetts, United States; was a Quaker minister and member of the New England Anti-Slavery Society (1832); attended the first national gathering of sixty-two antislavery societies, which gave rise to the American Anti-Slavery Society; founded and organized antislavery groups for women; was among the five delegates to the World Anti-Slavery Convention held in London (1840); co-wrote the Declaration of Sentiments that was read at the first women's rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York (1848); was the first leader of the American Equal Rights Convention; co-founded the Free Religious Association (1867); shared a platform with Frederick Douglass, receiving a standing ovation (1878); died 11 November 1880 in Chelton Hills, Pennsylvania, United States)
Her A sermon to the medical students ... 1849
Lucretia Mott was an abolitionist
NUCMC data from Nantucket Hist. Assoc. for Mott family. Papers, 1765-1960 (Lucretia (Coffin) Mott, 1793-1880; originally of Nantucket, Mass.; Quaker teacher of Philadelphia, Pa.; Hicksite; abolitionist; promoter of women's rights, temperance, and peace)
Quaker missionaries
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Sources: |
NLN
NTA
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