Henry Browne Blackwell | |
---|---|
Born | May 4, 1825 Bristol, Gloucestershire, England |
Died | September 7, 1909 Dorchester, Massachusetts, United States | (aged 84)
Occupation | Activist |
Spouse | |
Children | Alice Stone Blackwell |
Henry Browne Blackwell (May 4, 1825 – September 7, 1909),[a] was an American advocate for social and economic reform. He was involved in the nascent Republican Party and the American Woman Suffrage Association. He published Woman's Journal, starting in 1870 in Boston, Massachusetts, with Lucy Stone.[1][2][3]
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Henry B. Blackwell, the venerable advocate of equal suffrage, and husband of the late Lucy Stone Blackwell, has written to Mrs. Alexander Christie, President of the Woman's Political Study Club of Bayonne, recounting some interesting researches he has made of the early struggles of women for the ballot. He says that the time of the Revolution women in New Jersey had the right to vote, but later, by various enactments, they were disfranchised.