JULIA WARD HOWE - AUTOGRAPH NOTE SIGNED 04/25/1892 - HFSID 297548
Sale Price $425.00
Reg. $500.00
JULIA WARD HOWE
She pens her appreciation for a color sketch sent with a
letter.
Autograph Note signed: "J. W. H.", 1 page, 4¼x4. Groton
[Connecticut], 1892 April 25. In full: "Much obliged for the pretty
water color sketch sent with / or rather on your letter." Julia
Ward Howe (1819-1910, born in New York City), a social reformer
and poet, is best known for writing the poem The Battle Hymn of the
Republic, which she was inspired to write after visiting army camps in
Washington, D.C. during the Civil War. Howe's poem, first published in the
February 1862 issue of The Atlantic Monthly, was later set to music to
the tune of the popular antislavery song John Brown's Body and became the
unofficial song of the Union Army. Howe later turned her fervor against
slavery into a crusade for women's rights. She was a co-founder (1868)
and first President of the New England Woman's Suffrage Association, co-led
(with Lucy Stone) the American Woman Suffrage Association (1869) and
founded the Women's International Peace Association (1871). In 1870, Howe
assisted Stone and her husband, Henry Blackwell, to establish the Woman's
Journal, and served as an editor and writer for the publication for 20
years. Howe, who also wrote poems for other women's journals and founded
the Boston Authors Club, was the first woman elected to the American Academy
of Arts and Letters (1908). Toned. Heavy mounting residue on verso.
Otherwise, fine condition.
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