Dorchester Illustration 2589 Lucy Stone

Today we have a scan of a print made from an 1844 Daguerrotype in the Prints and Photographs Division of Library of Congress showing Lucy Stone as a young woman.

Born in West Brookfield in 1818, Lucy Stone came from an old New England family. Her father, Francis, was a well-to-do farmer and tanner who believed that men were divinely ordained to rule over women. Her mother, Hannah, accepted this view, but Lucy became resentful. Though her brothers were sent to college, her father was shocked when she asked to go, and he gave her no financial support. She determined to educate herself, and at age sixteen, she began to teach district school at a dollar per week.

During this time her hostility toward the existing status of women increased, especially when she learned that women had no vote in the affairs of the Congregational Church in West Brookfield of which she was a member. Finally in 1843 she had earned the money to enter Oberlin College. At college she was looked upon as a dangerous radical, for she was an ardent abolitionist, was uncompromising on the question of women’s rights and became Unitarian in religion. In 1847 she graduated from Oberlin, the first Massachusetts woman to earn a college degree. She refused an invitation to write a commencement address because she would not have been permitted to read it herself, owing to the prevailing belief that it was improper for women to participate in public exercises with men. The injustice was corrected thirty-six years later when Lucy Stone was an honored speaker at Oberlin’s semicentennial jubilee.

In 1850 she led in calling the first national woman’s rights convention at Worcester, Mass. Lucy, who was only barely recovered from typhoid fever, made a speech that converted Susan B. Anthony to the cause. She married Henry Browne Blackwell, a Cincinnati hardware merchant and abolitionist in 1855 but kept her own name, calling herself Mrs. Stone. Her action added the phrase “Lucy Stoner” to the language to denote a married woman retaining her maiden name. The birth of Alice Stone Blackwell in 1857 led Lucy to give up some of her traveling and lecturing, but she continued to organize many campaigns for woman’s suffrage.

The Dorchester home of Lucy Stone and her family was located on Boutwell Street on Pope’s Hill. The seventeen-room house was named Pope’s Hill after the land on which it stood.  She lived there from 1870 until her death in 1893.

Perhaps Lucy Stone’s greatest contribution was in founding and largely financing the weekly newspaper of the American Woman Suffrage Association, the Woman’s Journal. During a run of forty-seven years, under the editorship of Lucy, her husband Henry and later Alice Stone Blackwell, the Woman’s Journal more than any other journal was the voice of the woman’s movement. After 1887 Lucy’s voice failed, and she spoke only to small gatherings. Her last lectures were delivered at the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893.

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