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Catt and Stone
Starting early in January, 1891, Carrie Chapman Catt visited Stone repeatedly at Pope's Hill, for the purpose of learning from Stone about the ways of political organizing.
Stone had previously met Catt at an Iowa state woman's suffrage convention in October, 1889, and had been impressed at her ambition and sense of presence, saying " Mrs. Chapman will be heard from yet in this movement.
" Stone mentored Catt the rest of that winter, giving her a wealth of information about lobbying techniques and fund-raising.
" Stone met with Carrie Chapman Catt and Abigail Scott Duniway to form a plan for organizing in Colorado, and Stone attended two days of meetings about getting a woman suffrage drive re-started in Kansas.

Catt and went
Most of the group's records were produced by Ian Catt, who later went on to develop the pop dance sound of " Missing The Moon " further with Saint Etienne ( whose second single was a cover version of The Field Mice's " Kiss & Make Up ").

Catt and together
Local sources and texts together with early maps and drawings refer to the opening of the estuary variously as Catwater, Cat Water and Catt Water.

Catt and January
Carrie Chapman Catt ( January 9, 1859 – March 9, 1947 ) was a women's suffrage leader who campaigned for the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution which gave U. S. women the right to vote in 1920.
The forerunner to the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, the Woman's Peace Party ( WPP ) was formed in January, 1915 in Washington, D. C. at a meeting called by Jane Addams and Carrie Chapman Catt.

Catt and NAWSA
Paul split from the large National American Woman Suffrage Association ( NAWSA ), which favored a more moderate approach and supported the Democratic Party and Woodrow Wilson, led by Carrie Chapman Catt, and formed the more militant National Woman's Party.
Susan B. Anthony was the dominant figure in NAWSA from 1890 to 1900, at which time she stepped down in favor of Carrie Chapman Catt.
Catt was president of NAWSA from 1900 to 1904 and again from 1915 onward.
Operating under the tight control of Carrie Chapman Catt and her allies, NAWSA by 1916 had enough strength in the states for the final push toward a constitutional amendment.
Catt became a close colleague of Susan B. Anthony, who selected Catt to succeed her as head of the National American Woman Suffrage Association ( NAWSA ).
NAWSA was by far the largest organization working for women's suffrage in the U. S. From her first endeavors in Iowa in the 1880s to her last in Tennessee in 1920, Catt supervised dozens of campaigns, mobilized numerous volunteers ( 1 million by the end ), and made hundreds of speeches.
After the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, Catt retired from NAWSA.
Catt founded the League of Women Voters in 1920 as a successor to NAWSA.
< http :// www. nwhm. org / education-resources / biography / biographies / anna-howard-shaw />.</ ref > In 1915, she resigned as NAWSA president and was replaced by her ally Carrie Chapman Catt.

Catt and .
It was arranged that he would board in the home of one of the old members of the church, a woman named Catt who, as Wilson afterward found, was briefly referred to as The Cat because of her sharp tongue and fierce initiative.
Ann Catt was a lonely, devoted soul, never married, conducting a spotless home and devoted to her church, but a perpetual dissenter and born critic.
`` Talk to Mrs. Catt '', she said.
And after Wilson had talked to Mrs. Catt and to others, he was absolutely amazed.
Objects include furnishings from Carrie Chapman Catt and Charles Curtiss, a wide variety of quilts, a modest collection of textiles and apparel, and various china and glassware items.
One of Mitchell's most vivid memories of her mother was a women's suffrage rally led by Carrie Chapman Catt.
In early Irish literature, Shetland is referred to as Inse Catt —" the Isles of Cats ", which may have been the pre-Norse inhabitants ' name for the islands.
The All Saints Episcopal Church and Carrie Chapman Catt House are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
In the UK an 80-year-old pensioner John Catt and his daughter Linda ( with no criminal record between them ) were stopped by City of London Police while driving in London, UK in 2005, had their vehicle searched under section 44 of the Terrorism Act 2000 and were threatened with arrest if they refused to answer questions.
Women ’ s rights activist Carrie Chapman Catt and a majority of the women ’ s suffragists considered Rankin ’ s vote against war to be a handicap to the women ’ s movement.
By placing herself in a situation of ridicule, Catt and her fellow suffragists saw Rankin ’ s vote as a discredit to her authority in Congress.
Four of those tries came in New Zealand ' semifinal win over England, including an iconic try in which he bulldozed England's Mike Catt on his way to the try line.
Catt later used the teaching to good effect in leading the final drive to gain women the vote in 1920.
Some Cameramen who worked on the shows over the years, Max Cleary, Allan Catt, Bob Henderson, Keith Watson, Dennis Livingston, Ian O ' Brien, Chris Fraser, John Bott, Roy Chivers, Murray Kelso, Phil Lomas.
In addition to the league ( played on a home and away basis for the first time ), the team won the Pilkington Cup ( beating Leicester, with tries from Tony Swift and a youthful Mike Catt ), the Middlesex Sevens ( beating Orrell in the Final ) and the Worthington Tens.
" While she mocked conservative suffrage activist Carrie Chapman Catt when Catt admonished would-be suffrage orators never to " hold a militant pose ," or wear " a dress that shows your feet in front ," Barnes was supportive of progressive suffragists.
Barnes suggested that Catt's conservatism was an obstacle to the suffrage movement when Catt tried to ostracize fellow suffragists Alice Paul and Lucy Burns, who sought the vote for women through media attention directed at their strikes and non-violent protesting.

Stone and Blackwell
* Blackwell, Alice Stone.
Friends and Sisters: Letters between Lucy Stone and Antoinette Brown Blackwell, 1846-93.
Harry Blackwell, an abolitionist from a reform-minded family in Cincinnati, Ohio, saw Stone speak on further occasions and wrote of her, saying " I decidedly prefer her to any lady I have met, always excepting the Bloomer costume which I don't like practically, tho theoretically I believe in it with my whole soul — It is quite doubtful whether I shall be able to succeed in again meeting her, as she is travelling around — having been born locomotive, I believe.
" Blackwell gained an introduction to Stone through his late father's friend William Lloyd Garrison, proposing marriage to her within an hour of their first meeting.
Blackwell was soundly refused, but he began an irresistible two-year courtship with Stone.
In October 1853, following the National Women's Rights Convention held in Cleveland, Ohio, Blackwell arranged for Stone a series of speaking engagements in the South during which she was invited to stay in Walnut Hills, Cincinnati, with the Blackwell family.
From Louisville, Kentucky, Stone wrote to Blackwell " I am holding meetings here which are wonderfully successful.
Stone sent much of the remaining money to Blackwell for him to invest as he saw fit.
In late 1854, Stone agreed to marry Blackwell.
In the months leading up to their wedding, Blackwell wrote a letter to Stone saying " I want to make a protest, distinct and emphatic, against the laws of marriage.
William Lloyd Garrison's paper The Liberator reprinted the item, adding " We are very sorry ( as will be a host of others ) to lose Lucy Stone, and certainly no less glad to gain Lucy Blackwell.
In the wedding card and subsequent announcements, Stone represented herself as " Lucy Stone Blackwell ".
Blackwell wrote to his new wife in the summer of 1855, saying " Lucy Stone Blackwell is more independent in her pecuniary position than was Lucy Stone.
" In August 1855, she was referred to as " Mrs. Blackwell " in the minutes of the annual Woman's Rights Convention at Saratoga, New York, with the report that Antoinette Brown introduced her to the assemblage as Lucy Stone Blackwell.
Stone was referred to by the court as " Mrs. Lucy Stone Blackwell " and was asked if she wanted to defend herself ; she preferred to address the assembly off the record after adjournment, saying "... With my own teeth I would tear open my veins and let the earth drink my blood, rather than wear the chains of slavery.
In May 1856, Stone was recorded as " Mrs. Lucy Stone Blackwell " in the minutes of the 23rd anniversary meeting in New York of the American Anti-Slavery Society.
Social propriety required certain rules of the day to be followed, and Stone was often referred to in print as " Mrs. Henry Blackwell " or Lucy Stone Blackwell.

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