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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities

Letter, 1895, October 19, Harriet Taylor Upton To Dear Friend [Martha Mcclellan Brown], Harriet Taylor Upton Oct 1895

Letter, 1895, October 19, Harriet Taylor Upton To Dear Friend [Martha Mcclellan Brown], Harriet Taylor Upton

Martha McClellan Brown Correspondence

A letter from Harriet Taylor Upton, the Treasurer of the National-American Woman Suffrage Association to asking for contributions to the organization's treasury.


Letter, 1895, October 18, Carrie Chapman Catt To Mrs. M. Mcclellan Brown [Martha Mcclellan Brown], Carrie Chapman Catt Oct 1895

Letter, 1895, October 18, Carrie Chapman Catt To Mrs. M. Mcclellan Brown [Martha Mcclellan Brown], Carrie Chapman Catt

Martha McClellan Brown Correspondence

A letter from Carrie Chapman Catt of the National-American Woman Suffrage Association to Martha McClellan Brown.


Letter, 1895, July 29, Carrie Chapman Catt To Dear Friend [Martha Mcclellan Brown], Carrie Chapman Catt Jul 1895

Letter, 1895, July 29, Carrie Chapman Catt To Dear Friend [Martha Mcclellan Brown], Carrie Chapman Catt

Martha McClellan Brown Correspondence

A letter from Carrie Chapman Catt of the National-American Woman Suffrage Association to Martha McClellan Brown.


Milton Wright Diaries: 1895, Milton Wright Jan 1895

Milton Wright Diaries: 1895, Milton Wright

Milton Wright Diaries

Bishop Milton Wright, father of Wilbur and Orville Wright, regularly recorded entries in his diary from 1857 until his death in 1917. This diary’s entries began on January 1895 and continue until December 1895. Wright records a variety of information regarding his travels, family history, and expenditures. View the transcript of the Milton Wright diaries.


Majors And Minors, Paul Laurence Dunbar Jan 1895

Majors And Minors, Paul Laurence Dunbar

Paul Laurence Dunbar Books

Majors and Minors reflects the dual styles of Dunbar's poetry. The "major" poems were works written in standard English, while the "minor" poems were his dialect poems. However, it was the "minors" section which caught the attention of reviewer William Dean Howells, editor of Harper's Weekly. Howells' review of the book singled out and praised Dunbar's use of dialect, bringing national attention to those works to the detriment of his poetry in standard verse.