224:, where the couple lived for the first 2 1/2 years of their marriage. They then lived in Gerrit Smith's mansion from 1846 to 1850. Elizabeth and Charles both worked for a stretch in Gerrit Smith's land office in Peterboro. However, neither Elizabeth nor Charles had a regular career with income from work; Gerrit provided them with an annual income of $ 8,000 (equivalent to $ 244,160 in 2023). After a period in Washington, D.C., they occupied for 18 years the "Cottage Across the Brook", on her father's estate at
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321:" were worn by leaders of the women's rights movement as an act of rebellion, until the amount of attention the protest received in the popular press became a distraction from the movement.
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Dress reform was seen as essential in liberating women from the functional constraints imposed on their activities by conventions reinforcing a male-dominated society. "
248:(1852), Elizabeth was the author of a motion to create state-based women's rights organizations when the motion to create a national organization failed. She was with
276:, Elizabeth ordered the publisher to recall the tomes, break their bindings, and remove the information. In her later years, she penned a home economics treatise.
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there are seven volumes of scrapbooks kept by
Elizabeth and her daughter Anne Fitzhugh Miller. They have been digitized and are available online.
294:, Elizabeth Smith Miller received intense publicity and criticism for wearing the Turkish pantaloons and knee-length skirt later popularized by
201:(1835–1836), then at a Quaker school in Philadelphia (1839–1840). While she was not much interested in politics, she met a continuing stream of
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232:, where Charles died in 1896 and Elizabeth on May 23, 1911, aged 88. Her estate was worth $ 782,667 (equivalent to $ 25,593,211 in 2023).
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173:; September 20, 1822 – May 23, 1911), known as "Libby", was an American advocate and financial supporter of the women's rights movement.
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Gerrit Smith Estate, National
Historic Landmark Nomination, NPS Form 10-900 USDI/NPS NRHP Registriation Form (Rev. 8-86) OMB No. 1024-
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577:"Miller NAWSA suffrage scrapbooks, 1897-1911 : from the collection of Elizabeth Smith Miller and Anne Fitzhugh Miller"
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Following her father's death in 1874, Elizabeth Smith Miller, along with author
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performed the ceremony. Charles was at one point a bank manager in nearby
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Elizabeth Smith Miller and Anne
Fitzhugh Miller NAWSA Suffrage Scrapbooks
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was similar to utilitarian outfits also worn by women of the utopian
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Ballots, Bloomers and
Marmalade. The Life of Elizabeth Smith Miller
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333:, Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1875. 592 pp. Full text available at
528:. Rochester. Associated Press. May 24, 1911. p. 12.
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Webcast-Catch the
Suffragist's Spirit: Miller Scrapbooks
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U.S. Department of the
Interior, National Park Service,
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has volumes from the library of
Elizabeth Smith Miller.
185:. She was the daughter of antislavery philanthropist
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216:In 1843, Elizabeth married Charles Dudley Miller;
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302:, and known as “bloomers.” The apparel and its
181:Elizabeth Smith was born September 20, 1822, in
157:Elizabeth Smith Miller, from a 1908 publication
522:"Mrs. Elizabeth Smith Miller Dead Near Geneva"
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626:by Elizabeth Smith Miller. From the
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628:Katherine Golden Bitting Collection
354:American Woman Suffrage Association
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405:"GSENHL - Elizabeth Smith Miller"
236:National Women's Right Convention
189:and his spouse, the abolitionist
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195:Young Ladies' Domestic Seminary
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270:Octavius Brooks Frothingham
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552:"Elisabeth Smith Miller"
452:Dann, Norman K. (2016).
385:"Elizabeth Smith Miller"
335:the Library of Congress
256:in the founding of the
657:American abolitionists
292:Victorian dress reform
250:Elizabeth Cady Stanton
162:Elizabeth Smith Miller
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76:May 23, 1911 (aged 88)
25:Elizabeth Smith Miller
314:of native Americans.
193:. She studied at the
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101:Charles Dudley Miller
191:Ann Carroll Fitzhugh
146:Ann Carroll Fitzhugh
118:; died
632:Library of Congress
616:Library of Congress
607:Library of Congress
581:Library of Congress
460:: Log Cabin Books.
409:www.gerritsmith.org
358:Library of Congress
226:Peterboro, New York
183:Peterboro, New York
58:Peterboro, New York
458:Hamilton, New York
356:Collection at the
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54:September 20, 1822
526:The Buffalo Times
394:(April 21, 2011).
348:Archival material
264:Literary activity
199:Clinton, New York
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652:1911 deaths
647:1822 births
338:Archive.org
641:Categories
561:January 4,
414:January 4,
364:References
211:John Brown
207:temperance
72:1911-05-23
50:1822-09-20
605:from the
222:Cazenovia
177:Biography
138:Parent(s)
556:rrlc.org
530:Archived
505:Archived
485:Archived
388:Archived
319:Bloomers
310:and the
300:The Lily
286:Bloomers
246:Syracuse
130:Children
630:at the
614:at the
536:July 8,
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82:, U.S.
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171:Smith
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110:(
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538:2020
482:0018
462:ISBN
416:2023
252:and
120:1896
116:1843
66:Died
40:Born
298:in
197:in
167:née
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.