Frances E. Willard
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Frances E. Willard was a major figure in nineteenth century
America and, indeed, the entire English-speaking world. After her
death in 1898 her admirers placed her statue in the United States
Capitol Building.
The Microsoft Bookshelf provides the following information about
Willard (except that it makes the common error with the WCTU,
which is the Woman's Christian Temperance Union-showing that you
cannot always trust a statement to be accurate just because it
is in an encyclopedia! Another error: Willard did not help found
the Prohibition Party, which dates to 1869 and is the longest lived
minor party in American history; however, she did align the WCTU
with the Prohibition Party.):
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Willard, Frances, 1838-1898, American educator and temperance
leader; b. Churchville, N.Y. She believed women could gain political
power through the temperance crusade. As president of the Women's
Christian Temperance Union, she supported women's suffrage. She
helped found the Prohibition party (1882) and wrote Women and
Temperance (1883).
You may read a speech by Willard delivered in 1891 (and taken from the
Library of Congress
server) to an "umbrella" women's organization that was
fostering what historians are now calling "women's political
culture." We offer it in an edited version, somewhat shortened,
in Hyper Text Markup Language
or as a Portable Document File.
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