+ | . 7 : f | : A MONTHLY ILLUSTRATED MAGAZINE { \ ‘ MARCH—OCTOBER. 1888 , NEW YORK THE COSMOPOLITAN MAGAZINE CO., PUBLISHERS i888: ive than formidats 3 : ct gt eon be get Yeu Taere us Suits Fis morte format f ageneral uprising | oug the line, as to indicate that a gotta! “perolekon isimpending. The thought awak. net lo the gecetch geet spportor testaine “pow gives in our public schools ; the multi- aplying of seminaries and colleges especially, and the gradual opening up to theat of the elder justitutions of leamming, formerly de- ginning to bear legitimate fruit. ©. Add to these the organized “Ch tauqua” “with its well selected course, now introduced -into nearly every city anid village ofany note ; “the weekly and monthly magazine, contain- ing the well digested thought of the best thinkers and writers, male and female, of the day ; with the great metropolitan journals, whose editors ard writers have their fingers on the pnise of sixty millions of people, ready for delivery at the homes in nearly every remote town, by tea o'clock in the morning, and you have irfiuences at work — that ought to, and have quickened into life the reasoning forces of the mass of American women. . : “With the light of literature, the develop- -qnent of thought, and the growth of her own personality, there has come to woman a de- sire to be recognized in the fields of literature, of journalism, and of authorship, not only as _an inherent right, but as means to an end, ‘namely, money ‘to relieve necessities, to fur- nish luxuries,-and to supply means for a higher culture. a _ To the moral, sensitive, thinking woman, ‘dependence has always been galling. Her study has been to find a way out of this con- - dition without losing caste,—the respect of ‘society, and that nameless deference vouch- safed to woman since the days of the ern- sades, that sought to make of her an angel ora goddess,—a mythical thing, ‘still pat- ronizved in some of the so-called, higher walke of life, OS - ‘Phe kindergarien is the gecmofa newerg in & ene Pho ey Deen : Seige othe ebiid at the most suscept or roman, within the last three decades; - woted to masculine genius only, are all be So 8 Gng from “duce” te draw ont, to unicid bike “the petals of a rosebud. The act of creating to digest ec fe ada rat vite Sey RGao tp A FS. has Ca & . ge A ethene at agee 4 Ahicking and right acting. It makes oledu-, cation a joy, a pastime, becaus¢ the chicd at ~ ‘onee Tears to create something for himset, ‘to combine colors and shapes, (0, reason, to think. Here we have the whole process of education ina mutshell, the term itself com- <= “something, of making something thet shall be her own handiwork, is as much of a de- light to the little girl as to the girl grown tall, and perhaps aiere, as she hhas cot yet Jearned, as the older girl has dose, to com- pare her industry with that of more skilled artisans. .. Already has the kindergarten, the thought of Froebel, left its impress upon the woman- hood of this generation ; and the free kinder- garten now being introduced by generous hacds into our large cities for the education of the little boys atid girls of the poor, will save to good citizenship, to self-help and culture, many a poor girl. . :’ Twin sister to this,so far as women are ‘concerned, are ‘Women’s Industrial and Educational Unions," the conception’ of Abby Morton Diaz of Boston. This takes — the woman adrift as it were, gives to her shelter, culture and bread; finds her work adapted to her education, and competent pay ; inculcates self-respect, and gives to _ her companionship and surroundings worthy . of respectable womanhood. When these Unions become established in every city, and in every considerable town, the objec- tion made by the editor of a New York journal, that ‘women are of little walue as reporters because they cannot go into the shums,’? will be overcome, because there will be no sluus. These Unions, while they pro- pose toenlist the sympathies, the roney and the time of the highest, will reach down to £. t eaeek® ee f Ete pt hs . . vugh ape fs £% tho fawest of Ged's eveatires, and HA therm 968 ‘matter how degraded, aa yet sore sod in her, some epark of womanhood tha be reached by kindly, sympathetic woman- hood ; that ala itself ig the result of Igno- These Unions act’tpon the principle also, that those who necd help, and culture, and sympathy, are sot always the miserably poor, orin workhouses, almshouses or jails, but that often they are the well-todo and rich among whom there exists such intense selfishness, euch a poverty of mental and moral power, such entire neglect of heart culture, as to make them truly objects of charity, although the most difficult to reach. They know that persons in jail are sot neces- sarily criminal, any more than those outside of itareinnocent. These Unions, as prevent- ive and educational factors, are yet in their infancy; but their trend, if successful, will be to elevate, to purify, to enlighten the lower strata of society ; to teach to the highest that wealth and position are only the acci- dents of life, levers to Hf the lower higher, to ameliorate suffering, and incidentally to elevate woman. But while the Union is a collateral branch of the Kindergarten, the Industrial Schoo! for both boys and giris, or manual training in the common school, the seminary and the college, is to complete the revolution from the old methods so lony in vogue inthe education of girls, which was frequently, after years of work, a mere smattering of the things that ought to bx known, with an artificial: ity of manner and hfe as unlovely as un- profitable. Many a woman who has had thousands of dollars spent upon her edu cation, when suddenly thrown upon ber own resources, although supposed to be well educated, has found herself unable to teach a single branch of the education . She has followed or of the accomplish “ments that she was supposed to have mas. tered. She has studied as a matter of course, without anv interest in) study,--heheving that papa was rich, and that she was to marry rich, go into society, and always be supported, without rendering back ao guid pro que for all of the benefits received. She suddenly wakes up, but usually too late for remedy, to the absolute helplessness of her condition. The ravages of the late war threw thousands of wives, mothers and Gervhterc afr ift unas thastoveae eps at Vite tes ing Mine between the N TH PRES ANT PHASE OF THe HWOMAN QUESTION, yl ‘eiptvas and pitiable condition; and the hithe4jo false teachings of many of our schoois, aid the false foundation upon which socicty ‘8 At present based, has added to the mumber. Tiving ss {t were upon the divid- and the South, the civilization of the East and West, with @ reputation for some independence of thought and action, I bave been appealed to by hundreds of women of these various sections for advice, for sympathy, for influ- ence, for money, for work, for shelter, and sometimes alas! to hide their shame, urti! T have sought to solve the underlying cause of the masses of helpless women in the world. Not unfrequently have they come to me for protection from the abuse of drunken busbands, and sometimes alas‘ the woman herself has fallen into habits ef drink, the opium habit or chloral. or worse yel, the deadly morphine needi+. Sometimes the very wretchedness of the housekeeping, and the slatternliness of th- wife and children have driven the husban: to drink, and sometimes the two base learned to drink together. The growing tendency todrunkenness ar! other forms of dissipation among womens: the large cities, is something appalling A good sister of the WoC. TT. U. told me that over five thousand women had been inca: ceratedin the Moyamensing Pnson. Phila delphia, within the last few years for drunk. enness Hut what of New York, Cincingiat Chicago and St. Louis ? What is the remedy?) Educate girs fer usefulness teach them to be selfesuppart- ing no miutter what them condition in irfe. instruct them ano mght living instead of making? marrage the acme of ambit: as heretofore, teach them to earn an! spend the: own pocketinoney, and alos no main te pay Chere bills at lecture, theate: or other place of amusement Commence inoearly dife to mold the muind= of the cor to night thinking . te look upon marrnase not as a necessity, but as a sacred and on violable contract into which she has no ry ht to enter until able to be self-supporting and that entered upon, its duties and respons: bilities belong as much to her as to the man so that should death or accident deprive her and her children of the assistance of het life partner, she may be able to take up the Preveteeere fheet bre Joe have Grote d ane? a | not be thrown upon the world helpless and’ dependent. — . - Hitherto the subjection of woman has brought about most of the conditions named; and her chains have been forged by common and statute law. But at the present time it is largely caused by that mighty force, pudlic opinion—-old time cus- tom, the fear of being laughed at if she has her own ideas. But what women most fear is to lose the admiration of men. And, strangely enough, men in the majority of instances, have given encouragement to this frivolousness and sickly sentimental- ism in the education and training of girls, and have frowned upon and scoffed at. any woman who in the past has had the courage to leave the old paths of helpless- ness, ignorance and dependence. The trades and professions, aye, the seminaries and col- leges have opened to her grudgingly ; and only after repeated and long-continued knockings ; and even yet the highest priv- ileges of Harvard, and Yale, and Princeton have not been accorded to her. The members of the legal profession, always conservative, have been especially jealous of her, and only in recent years, and by the midst indefatigable zeal, has she been enabled to work her way into the profession of the law. Even when there, the chilliness and unconge- niality of her surroundings have often saused her to beat a hasty retreat rather than to fight the unequal contest of justice for her clients, and respect for her sex. But woman is there. The law schools and the courts have been opened to her, and there is no legal barrier to-day, not even under the old common law, to prevent her from wearing the cap and gown, or Sit- ting on the wool-sack. And yet 1 suppose that the Chief Executive of this nation, in casting around for some worthy individual to fill the high judicial chair of Chic Justice of the United States Supreme Court, so re cently made vacant by the unlooked-for death of that eminent jurist and kind: hearted gentleman, Morrison R. Waite, will never think of elevating a woman to that position, Wet England, to whom we have always looked for precedents, has had two women as Supreme Chancellors of the Realm, who sat in the au/a@ regia, and per- formed the duties of that important office THE PRESENT PHASE 0." it t i) THE WOMAN QUE:.TION, FOM Aht 469 Womiun's ladvent in reedicine was ear- © lier, and th. contest, while shorter, was_ more bitter ind disgusting. (To-day she is — an importan’ factor of every great city, and _ the only wonder is that she, shold have been kept ort so long, and tHen hdve been admitted ec grudgingly to a profession which she i: so eminently fitted to fill. Very chary yt are the old schdol physicians and the old {me practitioners from counsel- ing with he: o: recoguizing h@r work. - Why womcn physicians havg not been ap- pointed or elected as such to flo service in hospitals, almshouses, insane asylums and jails, where women compose: s0 large a ‘proportion of the inmates, and women physicians are so much needed, isa conun- | drum that I leave for some move astute indi- — vidual tosol-e. I know that rupeated efforts of committees of women physicians have failed to secure the appointment of one of their numbe to the Columbia ‘Hospital at Washington I). C., an institution founded and built by women for women.: But there : em to be notable exceptions to all rules, an: the faith and hope'ofa few in- dividuals ha e often kept the human heart from despair snd have left a beacon light for others to follow. James A. Garfield em- ployed Dr. Susan A. Edson as his family physician, and the late Morrisoh R. Waite employed Dr. Caroline B, Winslow as his family physician. Washington has eigh- teen registered female physicians, but Phila- delphia and New York have many more, and a goodly number of them have won wealth and position. In the pulpit, too, women have won their way by shee persistency. They might ex- hort, read the scripture. pray, teach the in fant class, ar | the Bible class, but to occupy the pulpit; t) < ordained to preach ; to ac- tually stand in the holy of holies, caused hands to be? .cd in holy Jhorror. But the atl “Women pot there, and they stay. The popularity of this innovation is largely due to the eloquence and persuasive- ness of the Woman's Christian Temper- ance Union. When these women began their notable, commendable and ever to be remembered reform, they selected the churches of their several towns for their rendezvous, generally first enlisting the minister's wife, and later the minister him- wot ft PU ae De nF tt eer be asses 2 tn oy we 470° have been given to the women of the church, __ And what a wonderful and blessed work it has been! It has converted and united churches, ramified with its organizations all ovel the Jand, and pushed more talented wortien to the front than all other organiza- _ tions in the land combined. Hitherto the church had been conservative, but the women learned the sesame, aud not only sre churches of every denomination granted to them, but they are invited and urged to fill these churches, and to-day their grand moral and educational reform with the churches behind them, is accomplishiag incalculable good. But they have done more than this. As an auxilliary to their work for the prolii- bition of the liquor traffic ;—as a lever to con- tro! legislation, they are almost in one Solid phalanx demanding that badge of Amer- ican citizenship—sée dallot. As they are pow two hundred thousand strong, the out- come may be foreshadowed. Women had occupied the pulpit before, and the efforts of Phebe A. Hannaford, Mary A. Livermore, Olympia Brown Willis, and the sainted Lucretia Mott, will not soon be forgotten, or undervalued. They hewed the way - braved the storm of censure that the innovation called forth, but the WoC. T. U. came in and possessed the land. ' But years before this, Hliz#beth Cady Stan- ton and her coadjutors, who had also been engaged in the anti-slavery reform, feeling the burden of the law pressing heavily on them, demanded the ballot for themselves and their sisters. Never before or since has any crusade in which women have been en gaged, not even the fanious Trish Women’s Parliament in 1609, received such a storm of ridicule from pulpit and press as did) Unis. The caricatures and head lines of the news: paper press, the cautions from the pulpit to ’ 3 < a 6 * aoe i ‘ al . WE PRESENT PHASE OF THE WOMAN QUESTION, parishioners not to be led away by this heresy, the delicate tarned-p noses of fine beaux, lest their chances of matrimony should be spoiled, were all terrorizing to the brave women who bad dared to stand and speak for the right. A large majority of those who early espoused the cause beat a hasty retreat from the field. But the specter ‘would not down. Some ofthe women brave the tempest and died at their posts. Some still survive, and have added thousands of converts to the idea of woman's equality before the law. A few years hence the world will wonder why women have not always voted, why they have not always possessed property rights, why they were so long held as sul, jects and inferiors, instead of partaers and equals. There is no reason in nature. There should be none in law. Now all along the line women are orgas- zing for temperance work, for religions work, for political work, for press work, fer literary work | organizing in trades unions in labor reforms, in building associations Never before has there been such an exter: sive and comprehensive demand for oolleye courses by women as now. Never in history has there been such a general quickening in the woman mind, and the conception of such: comprehensive and extensive reforms as at this time, 7 Now Ido not expect to see the milleniic. in a few years to come, but 1 do expect t see oa freer and inore exalted womanhon! and T know that there will come with it. purer and a nobler manhood Texpect to see the idle women working, and the laboriny women resting and studving a little. apt ad stg ei ‘Jadies and leaders of the fon, the frowns of ° ere husbands, the disclaimers of any sympathy with the movement by young girls to their