More to Explore
People and Groups
Themes
Events
This Day in History
Feb 10
Civil War
Davis learns he is Confederate president, 1861
On this day in 1861, Jefferson Davis, a former U.S. senator from Mississippi who served as U.S. secretary of war in the 1850s, receives word he has…
Recommended Articles
-
Freedmen's Bureau
Congress created the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands in March 1865 to assist former slaves in post-Civil War America.
-
The 1960s
Discontent, rebellion and social change defined the 1960s in the United States, shaking the country to its core.
-
Jeannette Rankin
(1880-1973), suffragist, pacifist, and congresswoman.
-
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Stowe wrote Uncle Tom's Cabin, her most celebrated work, in response to the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850.
(Born October 28, 1842, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.died October 22, 1932, Goshen, New York) American lecturer on abolitionism, women's rights, and other reform topics, remembered for the articulate but emotionally blistering rhetoric that characterized her speaking style.
Dickinson grew up in poverty. Her formal education took place mainly at the Friends' Select School of Philadelphia, but she was an avid reader and early developed the habit of expressing herself on public questions. At age 14 she published an article in William Lloyd Garrison's The Liberator. In 1860 she addressed the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society, and in early 1861 she spoke in Philadelphia on Women's Rights and Wrongs to such effect that she received invitations to speak from several platforms throughout New England. For a short time in 1861 she held a position at the U.S. mint in Philadelphia, but she was fired for publicly accusing General George B. McClellan of treason in the loss of the Battle of Ball's Bluff. Thereafter she devoted herself to the speaker's platform.
Much of Dickinson's work in 1863 was in behalf of the Republican Party. In January 1864 she addressed a gathering, including President Abraham Lincoln, at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C. Her oratory was marked by fiery passion and remarkable vituperation, and these, together with the novelty of her sex and youth, made her enormously popular. After the Civil War she went on the lyceum circuit, delivering addresses across the country on Reconstruction, in which she advocated harsh treatment of the South; Woman's Work and Wages; Whited Sepulchres, her attack on Mormonism; Demagogues and Workingmen; Between Us Be Truth, on the social evil (venereal disease); and her favourite, Joan of Arc. She published What Answer? (1868), on the topic of interracial marriage; A Paying Investment (1876), on various social reforms; and A Ragged Register (of People, Places, and Opinions) (1879), a memoir.
Dickinson's considerable income went as fast as it came, and when her popularity as a lecturer dwindled she turned to other fields. In May 1876 she appeared in Boston in a play of her own, A Crown of Thorns; both she and the play were dismissed by critics. She wrote several more plays, most of which remained unproduced and unpublished, although An American Girl was a success for Fanny Davenport in 1880. After a ridiculed appearance as Hamlet in 1882, Dickinson retired from the public view.
In 1888 Dickinson returned to the platform at the invitation of the Republican National Committee, but her undiminished gift for denunciation and epithet now proved an embarrassment, and she was let go. Growing signs of mental instability led to her incarceration in a state hospital in Danville, Pennsylvania, for a short time in 1891. On her release she sued those responsible and was awarded nominal damages. Dickinson lived out the rest of her life quietly in New York.
Copyright © 1994-2011 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. For more information visit Britannica.com.
Fact Check We strive for accuracy and fairness. But if you see something that doesn't look right, contact us!
Shop HISTORY
-
Civil War: Rebellion to Reconstruction DVD Set
Experience the turbulent events that ignited the bloodiest, most divisive war this country has known.
$111.99
-
The American Civil War DVD Set
Experience for yourself the historical and personal impact of the Civil War.
$99.95
-
Email Updates
Keep up with the latest History shows, online features, special offers and more.
Sign upClassroom Study Guides
-
Vietnam in HD Teacher's Guide (PDF)
Classroom companion for the new HISTORY series Vietnam in HD.






