Constellation Similarity Assertions

Howland, Emily, 1827-1929

Emily Howland was a Quaker reformer, educator and philanthropist. In the mid 1850s, she was a teacher in a school for African American girls. During the Civil War she helped organize the Freedman's Village at Camp Todd for refugee slaves, where she worked as nurse and teacher. After the war, she opened a school for African Americans. She took an interest in Southern normal and industrial school and left money for them in her will. The president of her county Woman's Suffrage Association, she worked for the voting rights of women alongside Susan B. Anthony and others. She was involved in the temperance movement and, in her later years, was a tireless champion of international peace. The University of the State of New York conferred on her a Litt.D. in 1927 for service to education.

From the description of Letter : Sherwood, NY to A.S. Russell, 1876 February 2. (Haverford College Library). WorldCat record id: 714614944

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Howland, Emily, 1827-1929

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hg46r5 (family)

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Emily, Howland 1827-1929.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6zt8kq8 (person)

Educator, reformer, philanthropist. Emily Howland was born in Sherwood, New York in 1827, daughter of Slocum and Hanna (Tallcott) Howland. Her parents were prominent in the Society of Friends, and Emily was educated both at a private school in Sherwood and a Friends' school in Philadelphia. Early in life she became an active abolitionist, and during 1857-1859 was a teacher in a school for colored girls in Washington, D.C. In 1863-1864 she worked in a large camp for freed...

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