vekvm.blogg.se

Bloomer Girls by Debra A. Shattuck
Bloomer Girls by Debra A. Shattuck













Bloomer Girls by Debra A. Shattuck

Nannie Miller, a grand-daughter of Gerrit Smith, is the Captain, and handles the club with a grace and strength worth of notice.” Conflicting information in the anonymous report, and a misleading date on a newspaper photograph at the Baseball Hall of Fame, created a mystery for many years on just what happened with women’s baseball in Peterboro.Īt 2 p.m. During a three week visit in August 1868 at the Peterboro home of her cousin, abolitionist Gerrit Smith, Stanton wrote three letters for her women’s rights publication The Revolution.Ī letter written on August 1, and published on August 5, included a description of a female baseball club that began with this statement: “We were delighted to find here a base ball club of girls. Thanks to Elizabeth Cady Stanton and an anonymous reporter, the baseball club in Peterboro was the best documented of the women’s teams in the 1860s. At least twenty-six newspaper articles published around the nation in 1868 reported the existence of women’s baseball clubs.















Bloomer Girls by Debra A. Shattuck