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  1. Life Story: Ernestine Rose

    ernestine rose biography

  2. Ernestine Rose

    ernestine rose biography

  3. Ernestine Rose

    ernestine rose biography

  4. Ernestine Rose (1810-1892)

    ernestine rose biography

  5. Ernestine Rose, the First Jewish Feminist.

    ernestine rose biography

  6. Ernestine Rose (1880 -1961):Harlem Librarian and Social Activist

    ernestine rose biography

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COMMENTS

  1. Ernestine Rose

    Ernestine Louise Rose (January 13, 1810 - August 4, 1892) [1] was a suffragist, abolitionist, and freethinker who has been called the "first Jewish feminist." [2] Her career spanned from the 1830s to the 1870s, making her a contemporary to the more famous suffragists Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. [3] Largely forgotten in contemporary discussions of the American women's ...

  2. Ernestine Rose

    Ernestine Rose (born Jan. 13, 1810, Piotrków Trybunalski, Russian Poland—died Aug. 4, 1892, Brighton, Eng.) was a Polish-born American reformer and suffragist, an active figure in the 19th-century women's rights, antislavery, and temperance movements.. Born in the Polish ghetto to the town rabbi and his wife, Ernestine Potowski received a better education and more freedom than was typical ...

  3. Ernestine Rose

    Ernestine Rose's speeches on religious freedom, public education, abolition, and women's rights earned her the title "Queen of the Platform." In the 1850s, she was more famous than her co-workers Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. Yet soon after her death in 1892, she was forgotten because of her status as an immigrant, an atheist, a radical, and a woman.

  4. Life Story: Ernestine Rose

    Ernestine met William Rose during one of her speaking engagements. William was a trained silversmith who also supported the causes of worker's liberation, women's equality, and free thought. The two fell in love and married in 1836. Ernestine and William knew that marriage in England put women at a legal and economic disadvantage, so ...

  5. About Ernestine Rose

    William Rose died in London in January of 1882. In 1883 Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton visited Ernestine Rose in London and tried unsuccessfully to persuade her to return to America. Rose was unwilling to do so. She died in Brighton, England on August 4, 1892 and was buried next to her beloved William at Highgate Cemetery in London ...

  6. The Immigrant Activist Who Loved America's Ideals, If Not Its Actions

    Wikipedia. On May 22, 1869, at age 59, the famous activist and orator Ernestine Rose became an American citizen in her own right. Her decision to do so, at such a late stage of her life, was ...

  7. Ernestine Rose biography. Atheist, feminist and abolitionist with

    Biography of Ernestine Rose Ernestine Louise Rose, an atheist, feminist, and abolitionist with American citizenship, possessed remarkable intellectual abilities that became a powerful force in the struggle for women's rights in 19th-century America. She was born on January 13, 1810, in Piotrków Trybunalski, Russia-Poland. Her father was a wealthy rabbi, and her mother was the daughter of a ...

  8. Ernestine Louise Rose

    Ernestine stayed in England for three years, lecturing alongside Owen on the principles of human equality. In 1832, she married a man of her own choosing, an Owenite and jeweler named William Ella Rose, and in 1836 the couple moved to New York. The Roses arrived at a time when slavery which Ernestine Rose considered an abomination, was dividing ...

  9. The Rabbi's Atheist Daughter: Ernestine Rose, International Feminist

    Abstract. Famous in the 1850s, Ernestine Rose has been undeservedly forgotten. An outstanding orator and activist for women's rights, free thought, anti-slavery, and pacifism, Rose became admired despite being the only foreigner and atheist in all these US movements. This biography restores her amazing life to history.

  10. Women's History Month: The Story of Ernestine Rose

    In the 1850s, Ernestine Rose (1810-1892) was one of the most famous women in America — far better known than her co-workers Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony.

  11. Rabbi's Atheist Daughter: Ernestine Rose, International Feminist

    Ernestine Rose became a major figure in the nineteenth-century woman's rights movement in the United States and played an important role as a forceful delegate to conventions and as a popular public speaker and writer. ... These identities come together seamlessly in this highly engaging biography by Bonnie S. Anderson, a scholar rightfully ...

  12. Rabbi's Atheist Daughter: Ernestine Rose, International Feminist

    Equally disappointing is the lack of historiographical context. Though she briefly mentions Yuri Suhl's 1959 biography of Rose (reprinted in 1970) as the inspiration for her research, she inexplicably makes no mention of Carol A. Kolmerten's more recent (1999) study or any other scholarly works about Rose.

  13. Project MUSE

    Like recent treatments of Lucy Stone, Lucretia Mott, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton (among others), Bonnie S. Anderson's biography of the remarkable Ernestine Potowska Rose explores a once-famous activist and utilizes her life to offer new insights about the movement for rights in antebellum America and beyond.

  14. Rescuing Ernestine Rose (1880-1961): Harlem Librarian and Social Activist

    Ernestine Rose was an only child, born in 1880 to two Anglo Americans, farmer Stephen Rose and teacher Anna Chatfield. Her parents and paternal grandparents lived in Hay Ground, a settlement considered at the time to be part of the hamlet of Bridgehampton, located on the South Fork of the eastern end of Long Island, about 100 miles from Manhattan.

  15. Ernestine Rose (1810-1892)

    Ernestine Rose, address to the First National Infidel Convention in New York City, 4 May 1845. Ernestine Louise Potowski was born 13 January 1810 in Piotrkow, Poland, the daughter of an orthodox rabbi. While still a teenager, following the death of her mother, her father attempted to arrange a marriage for Ernestine, who rejected his chosen ...

  16. Ernestine Rose, the First Jewish Feminist

    Ernestine was born in the Jewish Quarter of Piotkrow, Russian Poland on January 13, 1810. She was the only child of a Rabbi and the daughter of a wealthy businessman. She received a robust secular and Jewish education. She was a "rebel at age five", rejecting the religion of her father and questioning the justice of a God who would enact ...

  17. The Pioneering Feminist, Freethinker and Abolitionist History Forgot

    In the 1850s, Ernestine Rose (1810-1892) was one of the most famous women in America -- far better known than her co-workers Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony.

  18. Forgotten Feminisms: Ernestine Rose, Free Radical

    As a public speaker, Ernestine Rose was more famous—and notorious—than Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony were, at least in her heyday, and she mentored them both. An immigrant from Poland, a communitarian socialist, an atheist, and a Jew, she was more "ultraist," to use a then-faddish term, than anyone she shared a stage with. Anthony wrote in her diary in 1854: "Mrs. Rose ...

  19. The Rabbi's atheist daughter : Ernestine Rose, international feminist

    The only child of a Polish rabbi, Ernestine Rose rejected religion at an early age, legally fought a betrothal to a man she did not want to marry, and left her family, Judaism, and Poland forever. She would eventually move to London, where she became a follower of the manufacturer-turned-socialist Robert Owen and met her husband, fellow Owenite ...

  20. Ernestine Rose Society

    Ernestine Rose was selected by the Museum of the City of New York as one of the 400 most influential New Yorkers over the city's 400-year history. Bicentennial Celebration. 2010 was the bicentennial of the birth of Ernestine Rose. It was an important time to recognize and honor Rose's contributions to women's rights and suffrage, abolition of ...

  21. Ernestine Rose presides over national women's rights convention

    October 19, 1854. Ernestine Rose (1810-1892) was a pro-suffrage, anti-slavery orator in the United States whose activism was recognized by contemporaries as a key contribution to the suffrage movement. This photo is in the public domain. Ernestine Rose was born in Poland in 1810. Fleeing an arranged marriage at the age of 16, Rose traveled ...

  22. The Immigrant Activist Who Loved America's Ideals, If Not Its Actions

    Her second book, Joyous Greetings: The First International Women's Movement, 1830-1860, introduced her to Ernestine Rose. Her new biography, The Rabbi's Atheist Daughter: Ernestine Rose, International Feminist Pioneer, tells the story of Rose's life, using new materials and sources. Primary Editor: Eryn Brown. Secondary Editor: Sara Catania.

  23. Eloquent Crusader: Ernestine Rose

    Books. Eloquent Crusader: Ernestine Rose. Yuri Suhl. J. Messner, 1970 - Biography & Autobiography - 191 pages. A biography of the woman whose life-long crusade for women's rights and other social reforms began at age sixteen when she went to court to prevent her marriage to a man she didn't love.