[164]. See chapter on Red Cross.
[165]. See chapters on Woman in the Ministry, Woman in Law, Woman in Medicine.—Ed.
[166]. See chapter Hospitals and Training Schools managed by Women.—Ed.
[167]. See chapter Woman in Journalism.—Ed.
[168]. See chapter on Woman’s Work in the W. C. T. U.—Ed.
[169]. See Appendix E, for Civil Rights of Women.—Ed.
[170]. Wyoming was admitted to statehood, with equal suffrage for men and women incorporated in her constitution, by an Act of Congress, July, 1890.
[171]. And yet co-education had its birth in Ohio (Oberlin, 1833).—Ed.
[172]. “Women as Inventors.” Mrs. Gage, North American Review, 1883, p. 478.
[173]. “For generations,” writes Johnstone, in his ‘History of Connecticut,’ “merchants and mechanics had been outranked by farmers.”