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Incluye el nombre: Abigail (Scott) Duniway

Créditos de la imagen: May Wright Sewall Collection, Library of Congress (cropped at Wikimedia Commons)

Obras de Abigail Scott Duniway

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Duniway, Abigail Scott
Otros nombres
Scott, Abigail Jane
Fecha de nacimiento
1834-10-22
Fecha de fallecimiento
1915-10-11
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Groveland, Illinois, USA
Lugar de fallecimiento
River View Cemetery, Portland, Oregon, USA
Lugares de residencia
Lafayette, Oregon, USA
Portland, Oregon, USA
Ocupaciones
pioneer
women's rights activist
suffragist
newspaper publisher
editor
novelist (mostrar todos 7)
autobiographer
Biografía breve
Abigail Jane Scott was one of 10 children born to a farming family in Illinois. She worked on the farm and attended school sporadically. At age 17, she moved west with her family in a covered wagon on the Oregon Trail. Her mother and a brother died along the route. The rest of the family settled in the Willamette Valley of the Oregon Territory. In 1853, she married Benjamin C. Duniway, another farmer, with whom she had six children. While working on their homestead, Abigail Scott Duniway wrote and published a novel, Captain Gray's Company or, Crossing the Plains and Living in Oregon (1859) -- it was the first book commercially published in Oregon.

Her husband lost the farm in 1862 and was disabled in an accident soon after. It was up to Abigail to support the family.
She ran a boarding school for a while, and then a shop, and in 1871 moved the family to Portland. There she established a weekly newspaper, The New Northwest, serving as its editor until 1887. She also wrote for the paper and published her own serialized novels in it. She was a dedicated supporter of women's rights and women's suffrage, and one of her first projects was managing a speaking tour of the Northwest by Susan B. Anthony. Abigail Scott Duniway founded the Oregon State Women Suffrage Association, and in 1873 she organized the Oregon State Equal Suffrage Association, which she served as president. She lectured throughout the state on behalf of women's rights, for which she was attacked both verbally and physically. In 1884, a women's suffrage referendum was defeated in Oregon, and the state's suffrage association fell apart. Abigail moved to Idaho and worked for female suffrage there. After an Idaho suffrage bill succeeded in 1896, she returned to Oregon and revived the suffrage association there. She also started another publication, The Pacific Empire. When the 1912 Oregon referendum granting women the right to vote was finally passed, Governor West asked Abigail to write the bill's proclamation, in recognition of her long struggle. She was the first woman registered to vote in Multnomah County, and is credited with being the first woman in Oregon to actually cast a vote.

She published her autobiography, Path Breaking, in 1914, and died the following year.

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Obras
6
Miembros
32
Popularidad
#430,838
ISBNs
8