Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 6.djvu/286

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HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE.

272 HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE Garrison on December 10. He had been a life-long champion of equal rights for women and his last public speech was made at a suffrage hearing in the State House. There was a note- worthy memorial meeting for Mrs. Edna D. Cheney, long a pillar of the suffrage association and of the New England Hos- pital for Women and Children. Catherine Breshkovsky, "the little grandmother of the Russian revolution," visited Massachu- setts this year and addressed a number of meetings arranged by the suffragists, including a large one in Faneuil Hall. The convention was held in October, 1906, at Lowell in the Trinitarian Congregational Church. Harriet A. Eager gave a stone from the pavement of the little church at Delft Haven in Holland, where the Pilgrims attended their last religious service before sailing for America and the association presented it to the Cape Cod Memorial Association to be placed in the monu- ment. The World's W. C. T. U. convention in Boston this month aroused much interest and enthusiasm. At the opening banquet Miss Blackwell gave the address of welcome in behalf of the women's organizations. 1907. The annual meeting took place in Worcester at Trin- ity Church. Letters were read from Colonel Thomas W. Hig- ginson and Mrs. Elizabeth Smith Miller, the only two survivors of the 89 men and women who signed the Call for the first Na- tional Woman's Rights Convention, held in Worcester in 1850; and a poem from the Rev. Antoinette L. Brown Blackwell, D.D., the only survivor of the speakers on that occasion. Dr. Shaw gave an address and conducted a question box and there was a symposium on Why I am a Suffragist by five young women, one a grandniece and namesake of Margaret Fuller. A noteworthy meeting was held on March 23, 1907, by the Boston Equal Suffrage Association to consider "the indebtedness of women of collegiate and professional training to the leaders of the suffrage movement." Every woman's college in the State was represented, as well as law and medicine. Mrs. Fanny B. Ames presided and college girls in cap and gown acted as ushers. The speakers were Mrs. Howe, Miss Georgia L. White, Assist- ant Professor of Economics at Smith College; Professor Helen M. Searles of Mt. Holyoke; Dr. Emma Culbertson of the New