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  1. Early life and education. Career. Writing. Activism. Marriage. Death. Legacy. Works. Books with Ernest Thompson Seton. Musical scores. References. Further reading. External links. Grace Gallatin Seton Thompson (28 January 1872 – 19 March 1959) was an American writer and suffragist. [2] [3] Early life and education.

  2. Grace was a staunch suffragist, playing a leadership role at both the state and national levels. She became a leading advocate of women’s rights. Ironically, when the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified in 1920, Grace could not vote!

  3. In 1894, Grace encountered the writer and naturalist Ernest Thompson Seton while she was traveling in Europe, and they married two years later in Manhattan. To accommodate her enjoyment of city living and his desire for country life, the couple wintered in New York and summered in the country.

  4. Materials in English. Correspondence, journals, legal and financial documents, etc., of Grace Gallatin Seton-Thompson, author, feminist, and world traveler, and committeewoman. Access. Collection is open for research.

  5. Grace Gallatin Thompson Seton (1872–1959) lucinda h. mackethan North Carolina State University I n 1912, Good Housekeeping, one of America’s leading women’s magazines, published an article titled “Feminine Charms of the Woman Mili-tant” to give readers a look at several prominent leaders of the women’s suffrage move-

  6. Collection Overview. Collection Inventory. Digital Material (289) Overview. Correspondence, journals, legal and financial documents, etc., of Grace Gallatin Seton-Thompson, author, feminist, and world traveler, and committeewoman. Dates. Creation: 1860s-1993. Creator. Seton-Thompson, Grace Gallatin (Person) Language of Materials.

    • 3 James St, Cambridge, 02138, MA
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  7. 28 de abr. de 2020 · Speaking of Suffrage … Despite being a patriot, adventurous explorer, artist and writer, Seton was, above all, a feminist who, in her own words, was “one of those people born believing in suffrage.” Active in the women’s movement since age 17, she led the Connecticut Women’s Suffrage Association for a decade (1910-1920).