Troy, Helen F.
Truth, Sojourner
Turtle Island
Tuscarora
Tuscarora Chief, Elias Johnson
Tyler, Oren
Underground Railroad
United States Supreme Court
violence against women
see
battering, marital,
also
rape
voluntary motherhood
vote see
also
suffrage African American women
Anthony
beyond the
Cayuga
concept of
consensus
Council of Matrons
Gage found guilty of
illegal for women
Minor’s case
19th Amendment
right to
Seneca
United States Supreme Court
woman’s struggle for
Waite, Chief Justice Morrison R.
wampum
codes
instructions of
materials
strings of purple
womans’ nominating belt
Wampum, Book of the Sacred
Wampum, Keeper of the
Warren, Mercy Otis
Webster, Ephraim
White Bear Clan
wife battering
see
battering, marital
Wilkinson, Jemima
Wilson, Dr. Peter
Winnebago
witch trials
Wolf Clan
Wollstonecraft, Mary
Woman’s Bible, The
Woman’s Rights Catechism
Woman, Church and State
woman, divinity of
Women’s Nominating Wampum Belt
Women’s Rights National Historical Park
Wright, Ashur
Wright, Frances
Wright, Laura M. Sheldon
Zurita
Sally Roesch Wagner
One of the first women to receive a doctorate in this country for work in women’s studies, (U.C. Santa Cruz), Sally Roesch Wagner was a founder of one of the first college women’s studies programs (C.S.U. Sacramento). Having taught women’s studies for twenty years, she now tours the country as a writer, lecturer and historical performer, “bringing to life” Matilda Joslyn Gage and her better-known woman’s rights ally, Elizabeth Cady Stanton. A scholar in residence for the Women’s Rights National Historical Park in Seneca Falls, New York during Celebrate 98, Wagner curated two exhibits, developed a curriculum and performed as both Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Matilda Joslyn Gage. Dr. Wagner is currently the Executive Director of the Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation in Fayetteville, New York.
Wagner appeared as a “talking head” in the Ken Burns PBS documentary, “Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony” for which she wrote the accompanying faculty guide for PBS. She was also an historian in the PBS special, “One Woman, One Vote” and has been interviewed several times on National Public Radio’s “All Things Considered” and “Democracy Now.” The Jeanette K. Watson Women’s Studies Distinguished Visiting Professor in the Humanities at Syracuse University in Spring 1997, Wagner has been a Research Affiliate of the Women’s Resources and Research Center at the University of California, Davis and a consultant to the National Women’s History Project.
The theme of her work has been telling the untold stories. The exhibit and her monograph of the same name, “She Who Holds the Sky: Matilda Joslyn Gage” reveals a suffragist written out of history because of her stand against the religious right 100 years ago, while her traveling exhibit and Women’s Rights National Historical Park curriculum, “Sisters in Spirit,” documents the influence of Haudenosaunee women on early women’s rights activists. Wagner keynoted the opening session of the 1998 National Women’s Studies Association convention with a lecture on this topic. She also briefed the First Lady, the White House Millennium Council and the press during Hillary Rodham Clinton’s historic sites tour.
Her recent essays have appeared in
The Encyclopedia of Women and World Religion; Women Public Speakers in the United States, 1800-1925; Indian Roots ofAmerican Democracy; Iroquois Women: an Anthology;
and
Hand book of American Women’s History.
Published articles include:
National Women’s Studies Association Journal, On the Issues, Northeast Indian Quarterly, Indian Country Today, Hartford Courant, Women’s History Network News,National NOW Times
and the
Sacramento
Bee.
Recent books include: She
WhoHolds the Sky: Matilda Joslyn Gage;
a modern reader’s edition of Matilda Joslyn Gage’s 1893 classic,
Woman, Church and State; Daughters of Dakota
(six volume series);
The Untold Story of the Iroquois Influence on Early Feminists; ATime of Protest—Suffragists Challenge the Republic: 1870-1887
and
Celebrating Your Cultural Heritage by Telling the Untold Stories.