
Suzanne Schnittman, author of "Provocative Mothers and Their Precocious Daughters: 19th Century Women's Rights Leaders," will share her stories about Abby Kelley Foster and her daughter, plus three other mother/daughter teams. Books will be available for purchase and signing.
Mothers and daughters share a special bond that ebbs and flows throughout their lives. It may not always be solid, but no matter what difficulties they face, their relationships are usually unbreakable.
Take a step back in time to uncover the engaging lives of four mothers and daughters. As pioneer women’s rights leaders, Martha Wright, Abby Kelley Foster, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Lucy Stone worked diligently for what they believed women deserved. Letters, diary entries, and journals reveal the strong mother-daughter relationships that not only enriched their personal lives, but the woman suffrage movement as a whole.
From the mid-1800s to the early 1900s, these women struggled to make the world a better place. Through their actions and beliefs, they forged a path for future generations and raised daughters to be determined young women who merit our attention today.
Sɛ wo hunu nwumadie no nyinaa a ɛwɔ Worcester beaeɛ ɛfiri yɛn ayɔnkofoɔ a yɛ gye wɔn di hɔ, mia hae.
Hwehwɛ nwumadie ma ne asom a ayɛ krado ma wo hae.
Nwumadie a wo de ato hɔ no nyinaa no Discover Central Massachusetts foɔ no bɛ hwehwɛ mu na Kuropɔn Worcester Dwadie Mpuntuo Mansini adwumayɛfoɔ no adikan agye atom. Mesrɛ wo fa wo nwumadie no bra anyɛ koraa no nnaawɔtwe mmienu ntɛm sɛdeɛ ɛbɛyɛ a dwumadie no bɛtumi apue yɛn nwumadie abunna nhoma no so wɔ nna nsonn de kɔsi nna nkronn akyi. Mesrɛ wo dwumadie nhwehwɛmu nhwɛsoɔ no WƆ HAE.