Rare Books
Personal reminiscences of the anti-slavery and other reforms and reformers
Image not available
You might also be interested in
Image not available
Anti-Slavery Constitutional Amendment photomontage
Visual Materials
A large photographic montage composed of portraits of President Abraham Lincoln, Vice President Hannibal Hamlin, and the 157 Congressional senators and representatives who voted in favor of the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which abolished slavery. An accompanying picture key identifies each of the 159 legislators. The photomontage was produced by George May Powell of Powell & Co. to celebrate the formal legislative adoption of the Emancipation Proclamation, the 13th Amendment, on January 31, 1865. Powell, a Lincoln supporter and statistician in the Treasury Department during the Civil War, produced the image in various sizes, and this item is among the largest. In compiling photographs of the legislators, Powell most likely used many of Mathew Brady's photographic portraits. Lincoln's face is cropped from a photograph taken by Anthony Berger of Brady's studio on February 9, 1864.
photPF 26045
Image not available
Reform Movements: Anti-vivisection - Miscellaneous Reform
Manuscripts
There are 631 manuscripts, 525 of which are by Caroline Severance. These include speeches, poetry, essays, articles, notebooks, commonplace books, miscellaneous notes, and a 347-page unpublished autobiography by Caroline Severance entitled "Own Story." The majority of the 10,634 pieces of correspondence is made up of family letters; only 232 letters are written by Caroline Severance. The rest of the correspondence is made up of letters written to Caroline Severance by over 1,700 different authors. The collection contains 9,007 pieces of ephemera, which is made up of address books, appointment books, brochures, business papers, greeting cards, legal documents, newspaper clippings, postcards, fliers, brochures, programs, notebooks, photographs, and financial papers of the family. The manuscripts, correspondence, and ephemera cover the following subjects: African American women suffrage and clubs, Susan B. Anthony, Jessie Benton Frémont, Isabella Beecher Hooker, Julia Ward Howe, child labor reform, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Friedrich Fröbel and the Kindergarten movement, Charles Fletcher Lummis and the Southwest Museum in Los Angeles, Helen Modjeska, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, dress reform, suffrage, temperance, Unitarianism, women's rights, women's clubs, and the history, politics and social life of 19th and 20th century Los Angeles, California.
mssSeverance papers