Way, Amanda M., 1828-1914

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Amanda M. Way (b. July 10, 1828, Randolph, IN–d. Feb. 24, 1914, Whittier, CA) was part of the temperance and women's equal rights movements and a nurse during the Civil War. She was a schoolteacher by profession but began working as a milliner and seamstress to support her family after her father's death in 1849. She joined the Winchester Total Abstinence in 1844 and, in 1854, led a group of Winchester women in what is known as the "whiskey riots" or the "Page Liquor Case." During the Indiana women's rights convention (1851), Way served as vice-president and was a member of Indiana Woman's Suffrage Association. During the Civil War she served as a nurse in the Union Army and she received a pension for her service.
Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Indiana Woman's Suffrage Association. Record book of the IWSA, 1851-1881. Indiana Historical Society Library
referencedIn Indiana Woman's Suffrage Association. Record book 1851-1886. Indiana Historical Society Library
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
memberOf Indiana Woman's Suffrage Association. corporateBody
memberOf Indiana Woman's Suffrage Association. corporateBody
memberOf Union Army corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Randolph County IN US
Whittier CA US
Indiana IN US
United States 00 US
Subject
Suffrage
Feminists
Temperance
Women abolitionists
Occupation
Activist
Milliners
Ministers
Nurses
Seamstresses
Activity

Person

Birth 1828-07-10

Death 1914-02-24

English

Information

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Ark ID: w63p2sj3

SNAC ID: 83900141