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Sarah Margaret Fuller (May 23, 1810 – July 19, 1850), sometimes referred to as Margaret Fuller Ossoli, was an American journalist, editor, critic, translator, and women's rights advocate associated with the American transcendentalism movement.
Margaret Fuller, from the frontispiece to an 1855 edition of Woman in the Nineteenth Century. An 1860 essay collection, Historical Pictures Retouched, by Caroline Healey Dall, called Fuller's Woman in the Nineteenth Century "doubtless the most brilliant, complete, and scholarly statement ever made on the subject". [7]
The Margaret Fuller House was the birthplace and childhood home of American transcendentalist Margaret Fuller (1810–1850). It is located at 71 Cherry Street, in the Old Cambridgeport Historic District area of Cambridge, Massachusetts, in the neighborhood now called "The Port" (formerly known as "Area Four") (north of Massachusetts Avenue, between Central and Kendall Squares).
Margaret Fuller wrote the book based on her travel journals while visiting the Great Lakes region and places like Chicago, Milwaukee, Niagara Falls, and Buffalo, New York. [1] Along the way, she interacted with several Native Americans, including members of the Ottawa and the Chippewa tribes, [ 2 ] which she considered anthropologically in the ...
July 1843 issue of The Dial, featuring Margaret Fuller's "The Great Lawsuit" Members of the Hedge Club began talks for creating a vehicle for their essays and reviews in philosophy and religion in October 1839. [2] Other influential journals, including the North American Review and the Christian Examiner refused to accept their work for ...
Female members included Sophia Ripley, Margaret Fuller, Elizabeth Peabody, [4] Ellen Sturgis Hooper, and Caroline Sturgis Tappan. [5] Frederic Henry Hedge. Originally, the group went by the name "Hedge's Club" because it usually met when Hedge was visiting from Bangor, Maine. [1]
Margaret "Minx" T. Fuller is an American developmental biologist known for her research on the male germ line and defining the role of the stem cell environment (the hub cells that establish the niche of particular cells) in specifying cell fate and differentiation.
Mortar Board is an American national honor society for college seniors. [1] It was established on February 16, 1918, in Syracuse, New York, by the merger of four local women's organizations from four institutions. [1]