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  1. 4 de ago. de 2022 · Alice Stone Blackwell was an American feminist, suffragist, journalist, radical socialist and human rights advocate. Alice was born on September 14, 1857, in Orange, New Jersey. She was the daughter of Lucy Stone and Henry B. Blackwell. She grew up in a family immersed in the fight for suffrage and human rights. When she was young, her family moved to Dorchester, Massachusetts.

  2. Biography. Alice Stone Blackwell was born September 14, 1857 in Orange, New Jersey before her parents returned to Boston in 1870. She was the only child of Henry Browne Blackwell and Lucy Stone. Her mother, Lucy Stone, was the first woman to earn a college degree in Massachusetts, the first woman to keep her maiden name when she married and she ...

  3. In 1870, Stone and her husband, Henry Browne Blackwell, founded the weekly paper Woman’s Journal in Boston, which soon became the unofficial and then official voice of the suffrage movement. The couple’s daughter, Alice Stone Blackwell, worked as one of the Journal’s writers and later editor.

  4. Sus tías Elizabeth Blackwell y Emily Blackwell fueron la primera y la tercera mujeres que se graduaron de médicas en los Estados Unidos . Alice, intelectualmente precoz, desde joven trató de forjar su propia identidad, creciendo en medio de fuertes personalidades: su madre y sus tías. Se graduó en 1881 a los 24 años, en la Universidad de ...

  5. Alice Stone Blackwell, född 14 september 1857 i Orange, New Jersey, död 15 mars 1950 i Cambridge, Massachusetts, var en amerikansk journalist och feminist. Blackwell, som var dotter till Lucy Stone och Henry Browne Blackwell, utexaminerades från Boston University 1881 och var därefter under 35 år redaktör för Woman's Journal.

  6. Expansion. In 1881, Alice Stone Blackwell (daughter to Lucy Stone and Henry Blackwell) became an editor of the Woman’s Journal.Together, the Stone-Blackwell family continued to nurture the paper’s growth into the late 1800s. Lucy Stone, Henry Blackwell, and Alice Stone Blackwell dedicated both time and financial resources to the publication while also seeking to expand its influence.

  7. Alice Paul expressed her concerns to Alice Stone Blackwell noting “that it would be unfortunate if we had any large number of negroes in our Suffrage Procession” in segregated Washington. Alice Stone Blackwell expressed relief that Alice Paul had not excluded African Americans but shared her hopes for a low turnout “in view of the wicked and irrational color prejudice so prevalent” in ...