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Mott and Stanton
During the Kansas campaign, organization founders Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony had accepted the help of a known racist, alienating abolitionist members as well as AERA president Lucretia Mott.
In 1840, at the urging of Garrison and Wendell Phillips, Lucretia Coffin Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton traveled with their husbands and a dozen other American male and female abolitionists to London for the first World's Anti-Slavery Convention, with the expectation that a motion put forward by Phillips to include women's participation in the convention would be controversial.
Lucretia Mott met with Elizabeth Cady Stanton in Boston in 1842, and discussed again the possibility of a woman's rights convention.
After Quaker service on Sunday July 9, 1848, Lucretia Coffin Mott joined Mary Ann M ' Clintock, Martha Coffin Wright ( Mott's witty sister, several months pregnant ), Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Jane Hunt for tea at the Hunt home in Waterloo.
On July 16, Lucretia Mott sent a note to Stanton apologizing in advance for James Mott not being able to attend the first day, as he was feeling " quite unwell ".
After a pause for refreshment in the 90 ° heat, an afternoon session began with Stanton and then Mott addressing the audience.
After Mott opened the meeting, the minutes of the previous day were read, and Stanton presented the Declaration of Sentiments.
James and Lucretia Mott were against the resolution ; Lucretia said to Stanton, " Why Lizzie, thee will make us ridiculous.
Although Lucretia Mott's reputation as a speaker drew the audience, Mott recognized Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Mary Ann M ' Clintock as the " chief planners and architects " of the convention.
In 1870, Paulina Wright Davis authored a history of the antebellum women's rights movement, and received approval of her account from many of the involved suffragists including Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
The seed for the first Woman's Rights Convention was planted in 1840, when Elizabeth Cady Stanton met Lucretia Mott at the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London, the conference that refused to seat Mott and other women delegates from America because of their sex.
* Women's rights movement — Founded by Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton who organized the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 and published a Declaration of Sentiments calling for the social and legal equality of women.
Early women's rights leaders Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Coffin Mott, Martha Coffin Wright, Mary Ann M ' Clintock and Jane Hunt hastily organized an influential Women's Rights Convention, also known as the Seneca Falls Convention, held in 1848 at the Wesleyan Methodist Chapel.
This Convention was inspired by the fact that in 1840, when Elizabeth Cady Stanton met Lucretia Mott at the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London, the conference refused to seat Mott and other women delegates from America because of their gender.
Stanton, the young bride of an antislavery agent, and Mott, a Quaker preacher and veteran of reform, talked then of calling a convention to address the condition of women.
In the 1840s and 1850s, Rose joined the " pantheon of great American women ", a group that included such influential women as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Lucretia Mott, Paulina Kellogg Wright Davis and Sojourner Truth and fought for women's rights and abolition.
His family included a number of eminent reformers, particularly his grandmother, Martha Coffin Wright and her sister, Lucretia Coffin Mott, who were organizers of the world's first women's rights conference, the 1848 Seneca Falls Convention, with Elizabeth Cady Stanton, in Seneca Falls, New York.
Her writings gave suffrage workers such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott several arguments and ideas that they would need to help end slavery and begin the women ’ s suffrage movement.
Chapter 6, " The Intimately Oppressed " describes resistance to inequalities in the lives of women in the early years of the U. S. Zinn tells the stories of women who resisted the status quo, including Polly Baker, Anne Hutchinson, Mary Dyer, Amelia Bloomer, Catharine Beecher, Emma Willard, Harriot Hunt, Elizabeth Blackwell, Lucy Stone, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Margaret Fuller, Sarah Grimké, Angelina Grimké, Dorothea Dix, Frances Wright, Lucretia Mott, and Sojourner Truth.
Prominent leaders of the feminist movement in the United States include Lucretia Coffin Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, and Susan B. Anthony ; Anthony and other activists such as Victoria Woodhull and Matilda Joslyn Gage made attempts to cast votes prior to their legal entitlement to do so, for which many of them faced charges.
Activists Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were galvanised to organise a United States movement advocating woman's rights.

Mott and became
At the same time the non-album single " John, I ’ m Only Dancing ", and " All the Young Dudes ", a song he wrote and produced for Mott the Hoople, became UK hits.
Seward Mott, the director of the Federal Housing Administration's Land Planning Division, helped design the city, gaining national print and broadcast attention, and it became a model for postwar community development.
Mott climbed into the Top 10 of the UK Albums Chart, and became the band's best seller to date in the US.
After Nigel Benjamin quit in 1976, Mott added John Fiddler ( formerly of Medicine Head ) and became British Lions, recording two albums, British Lions ( 1978 ) and Trouble With Women ( posthumously released on Cherry Red Records 1980 ) before finally splitting up without any chart success.
Before Radiohead became successful, Selway studied Literature, Life and Thought ( English and History ) at Liverpool Polytechnic's CF Mott Campus near Prescot ( prior to it being renamed Liverpool John Moores University ).
He taught at Birkenhead School before lecturing at CF Mott College ( became Liverpool Polytechnic ) from 1970-5, at the City of Liverpool College of Higher Education from 1975 – 85, and at Liverpool Polytechnic from 1985-90.
Mott College of Education ( which later became Liverpool Polytechnic ), gaining a Postgraduate Certificate in Education ( PGCE ) in 1972.
Reared in the Episcopal church, she subsequently became a prominent member and preacher in the Society of Friends, and was married to Robert Mott, of New York, in 1797.
In 1913, Thomas Mott Osborne became chairman of a commission for the reform of the New York prison system and introduced a Mutual Welfare League at Auburn with a committee of 49 prisoners appointed by secret ballot from the 1400 inmates.
During the fighting around Spotsylvania, Mott's 4th Division became so depleted by casualties, and by the loss of several regiments whose term of service had expired, that it was discontinued and merged into Birney's Division, Mott retaining the command of a brigade.
The 1st and 2nd Divisions were transferred to the II Corps, and, with Generals Birney and Gershom Mott in command, became respectively the 3rd and 4th Divisions of that corps.
The fourth division was incorporated into the third at the Battle of Spotsylvania, and Mott became one of Birney's brigade commanders.
With the band signed to Chris Blackwell's Island Records, Guy Stevens was hired to produce the album ( he later became notable for producing early albums for Mott the Hoople and The Clash's legendary album London Calling ).

Mott and London
F. Mott and Co., London ( for online version of relevant pages, click here )
* ICE London Civil Engineering Excellence Awards 2012 – Two Mott MacDonald projects won three awards: the Lee Tunnel claimed both the Infrastructure Award and the Greatest Contribution to London Award while the Blackwall Tunnel Northbound Refurbishment won a Special Award for Re-engineering London.
Shortly after Greathead's death in October 1896, Benjamin Baker formed a partnership with Mott for the design of the Central London Railway.
Subsequently, the partnership of Mott and Hay ( now Mott MacDonald ) worked on extending the Central London Railway, the building of escalators in London Underground and the construction of the Tyne and Southwark bridges.
When work began on London Underground's Victoria Line in the early 1960s, responsibility for the tunnelling works was split between Mott, Hay and Anderson and Sir William Halcrow and Partners, each acting as Engineer for approximately half the length of the line.
The firm of Mott MacDonald has since expanded its field of operations far beyond traditional consulting engineering ( for example, it currently runs the education department of the London Borough of Islington ).

Mott and on
During World War II, he worked for the Admiralty Research Laboratory, from which emerged a group of many notable scientists, including David Bates, Robert Boyd, George Deacon, John Gunn, Harrie Massey, and Nevill Mott ; he worked on the design of magnetic and acoustic mines, and was instrumental in designing a new mine that was effective against German minesweepers.
This model drew upon the theories of Neville Mott and others on conduction in disordered materials.
Between 1868 and 1877, Carte wrote and published the music for a number of his own songs and instrumental works, as well as several comic operas: Doctor Ambrosias – His Secret, at St. George's Hall ( 1868 ); Marie, with librettist E. Spencer Mott, at London's Opera Comique in 1871 ; and Happy Hampstead, with librettist Frank Desprez, which debuted on an 1876 provincial tour and then played at the Royalty Theatre in 1877.
After the initial successes of the Ecumenical Movement in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, including the Edinburgh Missionary Conference of 1910 ( chaired by future WCC Honorary President John R. Mott ), church leaders agreed in 1937 to establish a World Council of Churches, based on a merger of the Faith and Order Movement and Life and Work Movement organisations.
The notice specified that only women were invited to the first day's meetings on July 19, but both women and men could attend on the second day to hear Lucretia Mott speak, among others.
Lovecraft ), " The Doll ", " Green Fingers ", " Lindemann's Catch ", and " The Messiah on Mott Street " ( heavily influenced by Bernard Malamud's " Angel Levine ").
The practice of referring to married women by their husband's first and last names has also been criticized, beginning in the nineteenth century: when the Reverend Samuel May " moved that Mrs Stephen Smith be placed on a Committee " of the National Women's Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, Lucretia Mott " quickly replied: Woman's Rights ' women do not like to be called by their husbands ' names, but by their own ".
A lion dance | Chinese lion in the 2006 Chinese New Year on Mott Street near Worth
It has been speculated that he may have been Ah Ken who kept a small boarding house on lower Mott Street and rented out bunks to the first Chinese immigrants to arrive in Chinatown.
Chinatown started on Mott Street, Park, Pell and Doyers streets, east of the notorious Five Points district.
The Chinese jewelry shop district is on Canal Street between Mott and Bowery.
On August 2011, a new branch of New York Supermarket opened on Mott Street in the center district of grocery and food shopping of Manhattan's Chinatown.
The Fuzhou immigration pattern started out in the 1970s very similarly like the Cantonese immigration during the late 1800s to early 1900s that had established Manhattan's Chinatown on Mott Street, Pell Street, and Doyers Street.
Its first park director, William Penn Mott, Jr. went on to become the 12th director of the U. S. National Park Service.
The name, suggested by a Dr. Mott, is probably a reference to the townsite's location on the English River.
* The song appears on Mott the Hoople's 1974 live album, Live, in a medley.
On 10 October 1970, Mott the Hoople and Bridget St John were showcased on BBC Two's, Disco 2.
Mott the Hoople are name-checked on two other hit singles.
's, " Man on the Moon " begins with ' Mott the Hoople and the Game of Life, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah ...'
K-tel were subsequently fined for supplying goods with a false description, but the tracks and album continued to circulate under the name Mott the Hoople, often appearing on compilation albums.
During the encore of the Ian Hunter Band's 17 April performance, Hunter was joined onstage by Bender and Allen for a version of " Walkin ' With A Mountain "; Allen performed on the original studio version of the song, whilst Bender performed an extended solo during performances of the song on Mott The Hoople's 1973-74 tours.

0.321 seconds.