Item #16338 Pioneering Leader in Girls’ Education Mary Carpenter Two Pamphlets. Mary Carpenter, Women's Education.
Pioneering Leader in Girls’ Education Mary Carpenter Two Pamphlets

Pioneering Leader in Girls’ Education Mary Carpenter Two Pamphlets

Pamphlets

Archive of 2 pamphlets related to Mary Carpenter's work building reform schools in 19th century England. Mary Carpenter was one of the foremost public speakers of her time and is best remembered for the significant contribution she made to educational and penal reform. She opened the first "ragged school" in 1829 to provide an education to the children of the poor and introduced reformatories which took a caring and constructive stance for young offenders. At the time that this description is being written, no copies are recorded in American institutions. OCLC search results are at best an estimate and can vary over time. “Red Lodge Reformatory for Girls, Bristol,” Pamphlet, Dec. 9, 1904—With a portrait of Mary Carpenter inside. The pioneering Leader in Girls’ Education Announcing the Fiftieth Anniversary of Red Lodge. Inside, a program of events, list of trustees and officers, and a photograph of girls learning to sew at Red Lodge. 1875 lecture delivered by Carpenter's associate E.A Manning before the Social Sciences Congress on "Moral Teachings in our Schools," is rare with only 4 copies in OCLC. 16 pages. Following a meeting with Frederick Douglass, Mary Carpenter became fervently opposed to the slave trade, particularly the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850. She traveled extensively in America, Europe and India, where she sought reforms similar to those she pursued in Britain. She was a pioneer in the field of equality for women and stood almost alone as a female orator who was widely listened to and respected. A rare archive from an early global icon of social reform. Very good condition.

Item #16338

Price: $250.00

See all items in England