Yahoo España Búsqueda web

Search results

  1. 3 de nov. de 2021 · The name Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell is often only mentioned in connection with the history of women’s rights. She was one of the pioneers of feminism at the very beginning of a journey where so much remained to be done. In her life story summed up in a single sentence, her greatest personal achievement was becoming the first ordained woman Protestant minister in the USA.

  2. 18 de jul. de 2023 · Abstract. This chapter will show that Antoinette Brown Blackwell’s criticisms of Charles Darwin and other evolutionists in the mid-1870s were based on views about the equivalence of the sexes that she had developed two decades earlier.

  3. BLACKWELL, Antoinette Brown. Born 20 May 1825, Henrietta, New York; died 5 November 1921, Elizabeth, New Jersey. Daughter of Joseph and Abby Morse Brown; married SamuelBlackwell, 1856. Antoinette Brown Blackwell, the seventh of 10 children, grew up in a small town in New York.Valuing education, her parents sent her to the Monroe County Academy, where, with the exception of Greek, she quickly ...

  4. Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell (1825–1921) was an American philosopher of the late nineteenth century; she was also the first woman minister to be ordained in America and preach before the Civil War, a suffragist, poet, and novelist. Blackwell’s philosophy comprises six books. The most extensive, The Philosophy of Individuality ...

  5. Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell was the first woman ordained as a minister in the Congregational Church. She later became a Unitarian. Active in the antislavery, women’s rights, and prohibition movements, Antoinette Blackwell was the author of The Island Neighbors (New York: Harper, 1871), The Sexes Throughout Nature (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1875), and other works.

  6. Antoinette Brown Blackwell, a biography by Cazden, Elizabeth, 1950-Publication date 1983 Topics Blackwell, Antoinette Louisa Brown, 1825-1921, Unitarian Universalist churches, Feminists Publisher Old Westbury, N.Y. : The Feminist Press Collection internetarchivebooks; americana; inlibrary; printdisabled Contributor

  7. Antoinette Brown Blackwell 325 the women's movement, the AA Wand the AAAS, into the National American Woman Suffrage Association, NAWSA. She attempted to synthesize, "orthodox Christianity with reform politics and especially with woman's rights," and to "integrate and harmonize" the viewpoints of both workers and managers.