12018-08-20T17:48:05-07:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a23042514timeline2018-11-08T19:56:53-08:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2Explore the timeline above to understand the conflict between Frances Willard and Ida B. Wells.
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1media/truthtelling-header.gif2018-07-12T16:16:21-07:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2IntroductionThe Center for Women's History and Leadership11image_header2018-11-08T20:36:31-08:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2
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1media/truthtelling-header.gif2018-11-08T20:11:07-08:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2"Miss Hood's Protest"6A white WCTU leader defends Frances Willard.gallery2018-11-08T20:26:42-08:0006-23-1894The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2
12018-11-08T17:59:41-08:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2The Race Problem - Miss Willard on the Political Puzzle of the South4Frances Willard's interview with the prohibitionist New York Voice newspaper, given when she was in Atlanta in October 1890 for the WCTU's annual convention. A crucial document in many waysplain2018-11-08T19:02:53-08:0010-23-1890The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2
12018-11-06T19:49:13-08:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2Frances, A Temporizer4Editorial in the African-American newspaper The Cleveland Gazette condemning Frances Willard's attacks on Wells and accusing Willard of being a "temporizer" intent on placating southern whitesplain2018-11-08T20:01:03-08:00The Cleveland Gazette, Volume 1211-24-1894November 24, 189402_03A.gifFrances WillardIda B. WellslynchingraceThe Cleveland GazetteThe Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2
12018-11-06T19:49:02-08:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2"Let Us Help the Colored People" song2Music and lyrics to a Women's Christian Temperance Movement song about recruiting black women and children to the temperance movement. Sung to the tune of the spiritual "Cheer the Weary Traveller."plain2018-11-08T18:25:30-08:001880IMG_2571.jpgWCTUNational Women's Christian Temperance Union Publishing House, Evanston, ILThe Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2
12018-11-06T19:49:12-08:00The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2Am I Not a Woman and a Sister?2Unsigned black and white illustration used in The Slave's Friendplain2018-11-08T18:26:21-08:001836Am I not a Woman and a Sister from The Slaves Friend vol 1 1836.jpgUnsigned black and white illustration used in The Slave's Friend, Vol. 1 (New York: Published by R. G. Williams, for the American Anti-Slavery Society, 1836).In defense against accusations of racism, Frances Willard consistently cited reading "The Slave's Friend," an anti-slavery children's publication, as evidence of her upbringing in an abolitionist household.The Center for Women's History and Leadership396bd2bebf501b08ca215cf721fbba097eb2e1a2