6,242 research outputs found
Postcard addressed to Clara MacNaughton from Rachel Foster Avery
Postcard addressed to Clara MacNaughton from Rachel Foster Avery; first line reads"Yours of Mch. 4 here today." Rachel Foster Avery mentions they could not attend the meeting and will explain why in a letter.Incoming correspondence to Dr. Clara W. MacNaughto
Envelope addressed to Clara MacNaughton from Rachel Foster Avery
Envelope addressed to Clara MacNaughton from Rachel Foster Avery; intact; Rachel Foster Avery notes care of Miss Emma Gilllette (Emma Millinda Gillett)Incoming correspondence to Dr. Clara W. MacNaughto
Correspondence from Rachel Foster Avery to Clara MacNaughton
Typed and signed correspondence from Rachel Foster Avery to Clara MacNaughton; first line reads "Dear Dr. McNaughton,/ Here is the first letter of your series." mentions they have sent the money and include some words in the letters being sent out from their Philadelphia office to carry more weight; Rachel Foster Avery provides the list of names: Mrs. Lucretia L. Blankenburg (President of the Pa. W.S.A. (Pennsylvania Woman Suffrage Association)" Mrs. Lavinia Hoopes, Mrs. Helen Mosher James; National Council of Women of the United States letterheadIncoming correspondence to Dr. Clara W. MacNaughto
Letter of Recommendation for Rachel Ezekiel
Letter of recommendation for Rachel Ezekiel from Rachel Foster Avery; Rachel Foster Avery mentions that Rachel Brill Ezekiel has worked with the Woman Suffrage Association (National American Woman Suffrage Association) as the active secretary, performing stenographer work for the past fourteen months; mentions Rachel Brill Ezekiel has written many letters on their behalf, working from the Washington office.Incoming correspondence to Dr. Clara W. MacNaughto
Correspondence from Rachel Foster Avery to Clara MacNaughton
Typed and signed correspondence from Rachel Foster Avery to Clara MacNaughton; first line reads "Dear Dr. Mac Naughton,/ I sent you a card promptly on receipt of your letter asking me about going to Washington for your mass suffrage meeting." Rachel Foster Avery mentions they went to Wisconsin to work on the state compaign then traveled to Madison to visit their daughters at University of Wisconsin; mentions their throat has been troubling them and doctors advice to stop public speaking in order to recover, they will travel to Chicago to see a throat specialist; Rachel Foster Avery mentions they can help at the big meeting but are not confident on persuading people to give money, suggests to reach out to Mrs. Upton (Harriet Taylor Upton) who is popular in Washington to help raise money; notes that the regular Wisconsin Woman Suffrage Association has not yet received the money they deserve for the work Olympia Brown has contributed to the association, mentions the new Political Equlity League has been given a good deal by the National (National American Woman Suffrage Association).Incoming correspondence to Dr. Clara W. MacNaughto
Correspondence from Rachel Foster Avery to Clara MacNaughton
Handwritten and signed correspondence from Rachel Foster Avery to Mrs. Edwards; first line reads "Mrs. Edwards/ Dear Madam,/ I learn from a card of annoucement sent out to the members of the National W.S.A." mentions that only NWSA members have membership tickets that admit them to the convention, membership to the District of Columbia Woman Suffrage Association does not provide that; Rachel Foster Avery mentions that unless the District Association becomes a paying auxilary to the National Woman Suffrage Association, only paying members receive the association reports; writes that Monday sessions on opening day of the convention are free and tickets for the rest of the convention are on sale at the church; National Woman Suffrage Association letterheadIncoming correspondence to Dr. Clara W. MacNaughto
Correspondence from Rachel Foster Avery to Clara MacNaughton
Typed and signed correspondence from Rachel Foster Avery to Clara MacNaughton; first line reads "Dear Dr. McNaughton,/ Yours of September 20th was sent on to me from Philadelphia and received this evening." writes they see no reason for the suggestion of working for a Home Department in the Presiden'ts Cabinet when there is already a committee but will think on it; Rachel Foster Avery mentions they see no reason why their spokesman was not given time to present before the Executive Committee or Session at the N.A.W.S.A. (National American Woman Suffrage Association) Convention happening in February; Avery mentions a hint Clara MacNaughton has provided about Mrs. Ewing's (likely Hazel Buck Ewing) intentions; Avery writes they rejoice in MacNaughton's daughter's (Marie MacNaughton) new position; National American Woman Suffrage Association letterheadIncoming correspondence to Dr. Clara W. MacNaughto
Letter, 1898, January 11, Rachel Foster Avery to Mrs. Martha McClellan Brown
A letter from Rachel Foster Avery, Acting Chairman of the Program Committee for the National American Women Suffrage Association to Martha McClellan Brown referencing a previous exchange of letters between Carrie Chapman Catt and Brown. The letter discusses a program being already full and that the program committee had an excess of programming that they turned down.https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/special_ms147_correspondence/1009/thumbnail.jp
Author interview: Q&A with Rachel O’Neill on Seduction: men, masculinity and mediated intimacy
In this author interview, we speak to Rachel O’Neill about her recent book, Seduction: Men, Masculinity and Mediated Intimacy, which offers an ethnographic study of the ‘seduction industry’. In the interview, she discusses the seduction industry as part of a continuum of mediated intimacy, the ways in which neoliberal rationalities are shaping masculine subjectivity today, how the book relates to contemporary discussions surrounding consent and women’s sexual agency and the particular challenges of undertaking this fieldwork. If you are interested in this interview, you can read a review of Seduction on LSE RB here. Q&A with Rachel O’Neill, author of Seduction: Men, Masculinity and Mediated Intimacy (Polity, 2018
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