Introduction: Heretic and Saint
1 Nantucket
2 Nine Partners
3 Schism
4 Immediate Abolition
5 Pennsylvania Hall
6 Abroad
7 Crisis
8 The Year 1848
9 Conventions
10 Fugitives
11 Civil War
12 Peace
Epilogue
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments
Gallery appears after page 108
Carol Faulkner is Associate Professor of History at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University, and author of Women's Radical Reconstruction: The Freedmen's Aid Movement, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press.
"This much-needed, coherently argued, and beautifully written
biography does justice to Mott's centrality to the history of
antislavery, woman's rights, Quakerism, and Philadelphia."—Lori D.
Ginzberg, author of Elizabeth Cady Stanton: An American Life
"Mott did not make her biographer's task easy; except for a three-
month period in 1840, she kept no diary, and although, like her
compatriot Elizabeth Cady Stanton, she often spoke publicly, unlike
Stanton, she seldom wrote for publication. Faulkner has more than
met the challenge; her book is interesting and well written,
offering fresh perspectives at every turn on Mott's roles within
Quakerism and the antislavery and women's rights movements while
also providing glimpses of her personal life. . . . With this
timely book, Faulkner makes a compelling case for Mott's
contemporary significance."—Journal of American History
"Lucretia Mott is as important to the birth of the women's rights
movement as Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony.
Sophisticated, lively, direct, and often riveting, Lucretia Mott's
Heresy will be the definitive biography of Mott for decades to
come."—Bruce Dorsey, author of Reforming Men and Women: Gender in
the Antebellum City
"This is the first biography of Mott in thirty years, and it proves
to be thoroughly researched, well written, and fascinating.
Faulkner's accessible writing style makes this book appropriate for
any reader interested in women's history generally or the history
of the U.S. abolitionist and women's suffrage movements."—Library
Journal
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