Commonplace book, 1824.
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Sigourney, Lydia Howard, 1791-1865
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w63g5gbr (person)
Lydia Huntley Sigourney (born September 1, 1791, Norwich, Connecticut–died June 10, 1865, Hartford, Connecticut), poet, also known as the “Sweet Singer of Hartford", was the only daughter of a gardener. She attended private school with the assistance of her father’s employer, and founded a Hartford school for girls in 1814. At this school, without any specialized training, Sigourney taught a deaf student, Alice Cogswell, to read and write in English. Cogswell would later be the first student enr...
Bates, Elisha, 1781-1861
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Pennington, Mrs.
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6hm5kvt (person)
Fothergill, Samuel, 1715-1772
http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w65q5g7f (person)
Samuel Fothergill (1715–1772), was a Quaker minister from Yorkshire, England. He was the sixth son of John Fothergill and his wife Margaret, well-to-do Quakers of considerable means at Carr End, Wensleydale, Yorkshire. He was born in November 1715. He was educated at Briggflats, near Sedbergh, and afterwards at a school at Sutton in Cheshire, kept by his uncle, Thomas Hough. At the age of seventeen he was apprenticed to a Quaker shopkeeper at Stockport. As soon as his apprenticeship was over,...
Peirce, Rebecca B.
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