Women's Rights
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CHAPTER SIX:
ENDNOTES

1. Conversation with Judith Wellman. Becker, History of Waterloo, p. 135.

2. Ibid.

3. Becker, Waterloo Citizens, entry under "Thomas McClintock.

4. Conversation with Wellman.

5. Becker, Waterloo Citizens, entry under "Thomas McClintock.

6. File #592, Surrogate Court Office, Seneca County Courthouse, Waterloo.

7. Becker, Waterloo Citizens, entry under "Richard P. Hunt."

8. Burlington Monthly Meeting, Friend's Biography, (Philadelphia Historical Society).

9. Becker, Waterloo Citizens, entry under "Thomas McClintock."

10. "House is Women's Rights Shrine," Doris Wold, undated article from an unidentified newspaper at the Waterloo Historical Society.

11. Bacon, Life of Mott pp. 43-4.

12. Cowing and Frazier, "Early Churches," p. 28. Untitled paper read before the Waterloo Civic Club by Mrs. Sidney A. Eshenour on January 9, 1943 - owned by the Waterloo Historical Society.

13. Cowing and Frazier, "Early Churches," pp. 28-9.

14. Bradley, "Progressive Friends," pp. 99-100.

15. Ibid., pp. 97-8.

16. Conversation with Wellman.

17. Bradley, "Progressive Friends," p. 101.

18. McClintock, "Basis of Religious Association."

19. Ibid.

20. Bradley, "Progressive Friends," p. 103.

21. U.S. Census Records, 1850.

22. Becker, Waterloo Citizens, entry under "Thomas McClintock." Interestingly, the 1850 federal census lists son C.W. McClintock, a druggist born in Philadelphia, as living in a boarding house in Seneca Falls. Among his fellow boarders were Isaac Fuller and his family with whom the Blommers had stayed in 1840.

23. Becker, History of Waterloo, p. 156.

24. Stanton, et al., Woman Suffrage, p. 67.

25. Stanton, Eighty Years, p. 148.

26. Ibid.

27. Stanton, et al., Woman Suffrage, p. 67.

28. Stanton, Eighty Years, pp. 148-9.

29. Stanton and Blatch, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, p. 18.

30. Stanton, et al., Woman Suffrage, p. 68.

31. Ibid., pp. 68-9.

32. Geneva Daily Times, March 17, 1915.

33. Conversations with Wellman.

34. "Report of the Woman's Rights Convention," pp. 3, 9.

35. Bull, "Women's Rights," p. 50.

36. Stanton, et al., Woman Suffrage, p. 69.

37. "Report of Convention," p. 9.

38. "Proceedings of the Woman's Rights Convention, Held at the Unitarian Church, Rochester, New York, August 2, 1848" (New York, 1870), p. 3.

39. Ibid.

40. Stanton, et al., Woman Suffrage, p. 75.

41. Ibid.

42. Ibid.

43. Ibid., p. 76.

44. Stanton, Eighty Years, p. 152. "Proceedings of Rochester Convention," p. 12.

45. Ibid.

46. Typescript copy of a letter from Lucretia Mott to unknown correspondent, Oct. 25, 1849, located at Women's Rights NHP.

47. "Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of Friends of Human Progress held at Waterloo, N.Y. on the Third, Fourth, and Fifth, of the Sixth Month, 1855" (Syracuse) p. 23.

48. Ibid., p. 24.

49. Conversation with Wellman.

50. Bradley, "Progressive Friends," p. 103.

51. Friends Biography - Philadelphia Monthly Meeting (Hicksites), Philadelphia Historical Society.

52. "Proceedings of Annual Meeting, 1855," p. 11.


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