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The remarkable story of one of the early women movement's most effective leaders, a newspaper publisher who took the campaign for suffrage to Bleeding Kansas. In the mid-1800s brave women began breaking the taboo of remaining silent at public gatherings. They began signing their names to petitions and flexing political muscle long before they had the vote. No one represented this early struggle better than Clarina Howard Nichols (1810-1885), the subject of Diane Eickhoff's engaging biography for YA readers and up.
Nichols was the victim of a failed marriage, a magnet to abused and mistreated women, and as a Vermont newspaper publisher she had a strong voice at a time when women were just learning to speak up.
Nichols was the victim of a failed marriage, a magnet to abused and mistreated women, and as a Vermont newspaper publisher she had a strong voice at a time when women were just learning to speak up.