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Hannah Maria <I>Conant</I> Tracy Cutler

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Hannah Maria Conant Tracy Cutler Famous memorial

Birth
Becket, Berkshire County, Massachusetts, USA
Death
11 Feb 1896 (aged 80)
Ocean Springs, Jackson County, Mississippi, USA
Burial
Ocean Springs, Jackson County, Mississippi, USA GPS-Latitude: 30.420997, Longitude: -88.8226253
Memorial ID
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Social Reformer. Hannah Tracy Cutler, as she known by her peers, was an abolitionist in addition to holding leadership rolls in many temperance and women's suffrage movements in the United States. She served as president of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA). She later helped merge the feminists factions into the combined National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). In addition to her volunteer work, and lectures on physiology, she wrote journals, newspapers and drafted laws and authored several books. Throughout all of this she was able to obtain a medical degree at the age of 53. She continued to present petitions to state and federal legislatures and helped form suffrage and woman's aid societies in Ohio, Iowa, Nebraska, Vermont and Illinois. In her early life when her family moved to the nearby Oberlin College she asked her family to send her there after they opened classes to women. After her father refused, she married John Martin Tracy, who was an Oberlin theology student in 1834. She studied from her husbands texts and the newly wed couple discussed what he had learned in class. John Tracy turned to study law, and his wife continued to study his legal homework with him. She soon found the common law limitations places on women. Later her husband became an anti-slavery lecturer and activist. The couple has two children with on on the way when her husband died of phenumonia. The young widow returned to her parents home with her children. To earn money Tracy wrote articles for Ohio newspapers, including the "Cassius Marcellus Clay's" True American (writing under a pseudonym) and for Josiah A. Harris at the Cleveland Herald. Tracy also taught school, and hekped to form a temperance society and a Women's Anti-Slavery Socitety, which attracted only three members at first. In 1847 Tracy enrolled at Oberlin to study more directly. There she joined Lucy Stone's clandestine debating society for women, and formed a warm friendship with Stone. She supported herself and children by running a boarding house and by writing for newspapers. At the end of her studies Tracy accepted the position of matron of the Deaf and Dumb Asylum at Columbus, Ohio. She met Frances Dana Barker Gage, another abolitionist and feminist; both were interested in advancing the Free Soil Party with its anti-slavery platform. Tracy helped in the effort to elect abolitionist Salmon P. Chase to he United States Senate. Because the Deaf and Dumb Asylum allowed only one of the children to remain in residence with her, in 1849 Tracy accepted a position as principal of the "female department" at Columbus' new public high school. Tracy attended a Presbyterian church in Columbus. After her many lectures abroad she returned home stopping in Pittsburg, to attend the Free Soil Convention; there she was urged to take the platform and speak about human rights. At the convention in Massillon, Ohio held in 1852, Tracy was chosen president of the Ohio Woman's Rights Association. Later that year Tracy met Colonel Samuel Cutler, a widower who had children of his own. The two bought farm land in Dwight, Illinois near a proposed rail line, and together assumed farm duties. It was here she home schooled her children in addition to taking on the many farm duties. Cutler wrote an article for "The Una" defending the essential differences between men and women: "The Objector meets us with the oft repeated cry, "would you unsex women and render her the same selfish being that you find in man, when immersed in the strife and chicanery attendant upon political relations?" Once and for all, let the answer be and emphatic NO!! But since, because men here have had no appropriate balance, all this evil has occurred, we feel that the moral harmony of the world demands woman's interest and influence. We ask to use it, not that we may become like men in our moral natures, but because that we are unlike them; and hence harmony demands the counterbalancing influence of our softer sympathies, our more gentle natures, to balance the stern, cold, calculating spirit of the other sex." She sad the following in a speach during her address at the annual AWSA convention in Philadelphia: "Some day it is not right but a privilege. I maintain the contrary. I say it is an inalienable right. You can not maintain a republican form of government and deny to half the population its right to vote." After the death of her second husband Cutler, she attended the Ninth Annual Meeting of the AWSA, held at the Masonic Hall in Indianapolis in 1878. Regarding the battle for woman suffrage she stood up to say; "Many of us have grown old in this work, and yet some people say "Why do you work in a hopeless cause?" the cause is not hopeless. Great reforms develop slowly, but truth will prevail, and the work that we have been doing for thirty years has paid as well as any work that has ever been done for humanity." On December 21, 1887, Cutler was appointed by Anthony and Stone to a committee tasked with joining the AWSA with the NWSA to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). For the next two years, Cutler worked with Alice Stone Blackwell and Rachel Foster Avery to help establish a common structure and mission for the combined organization.
Social Reformer. Hannah Tracy Cutler, as she known by her peers, was an abolitionist in addition to holding leadership rolls in many temperance and women's suffrage movements in the United States. She served as president of the Ohio Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA). She later helped merge the feminists factions into the combined National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). In addition to her volunteer work, and lectures on physiology, she wrote journals, newspapers and drafted laws and authored several books. Throughout all of this she was able to obtain a medical degree at the age of 53. She continued to present petitions to state and federal legislatures and helped form suffrage and woman's aid societies in Ohio, Iowa, Nebraska, Vermont and Illinois. In her early life when her family moved to the nearby Oberlin College she asked her family to send her there after they opened classes to women. After her father refused, she married John Martin Tracy, who was an Oberlin theology student in 1834. She studied from her husbands texts and the newly wed couple discussed what he had learned in class. John Tracy turned to study law, and his wife continued to study his legal homework with him. She soon found the common law limitations places on women. Later her husband became an anti-slavery lecturer and activist. The couple has two children with on on the way when her husband died of phenumonia. The young widow returned to her parents home with her children. To earn money Tracy wrote articles for Ohio newspapers, including the "Cassius Marcellus Clay's" True American (writing under a pseudonym) and for Josiah A. Harris at the Cleveland Herald. Tracy also taught school, and hekped to form a temperance society and a Women's Anti-Slavery Socitety, which attracted only three members at first. In 1847 Tracy enrolled at Oberlin to study more directly. There she joined Lucy Stone's clandestine debating society for women, and formed a warm friendship with Stone. She supported herself and children by running a boarding house and by writing for newspapers. At the end of her studies Tracy accepted the position of matron of the Deaf and Dumb Asylum at Columbus, Ohio. She met Frances Dana Barker Gage, another abolitionist and feminist; both were interested in advancing the Free Soil Party with its anti-slavery platform. Tracy helped in the effort to elect abolitionist Salmon P. Chase to he United States Senate. Because the Deaf and Dumb Asylum allowed only one of the children to remain in residence with her, in 1849 Tracy accepted a position as principal of the "female department" at Columbus' new public high school. Tracy attended a Presbyterian church in Columbus. After her many lectures abroad she returned home stopping in Pittsburg, to attend the Free Soil Convention; there she was urged to take the platform and speak about human rights. At the convention in Massillon, Ohio held in 1852, Tracy was chosen president of the Ohio Woman's Rights Association. Later that year Tracy met Colonel Samuel Cutler, a widower who had children of his own. The two bought farm land in Dwight, Illinois near a proposed rail line, and together assumed farm duties. It was here she home schooled her children in addition to taking on the many farm duties. Cutler wrote an article for "The Una" defending the essential differences between men and women: "The Objector meets us with the oft repeated cry, "would you unsex women and render her the same selfish being that you find in man, when immersed in the strife and chicanery attendant upon political relations?" Once and for all, let the answer be and emphatic NO!! But since, because men here have had no appropriate balance, all this evil has occurred, we feel that the moral harmony of the world demands woman's interest and influence. We ask to use it, not that we may become like men in our moral natures, but because that we are unlike them; and hence harmony demands the counterbalancing influence of our softer sympathies, our more gentle natures, to balance the stern, cold, calculating spirit of the other sex." She sad the following in a speach during her address at the annual AWSA convention in Philadelphia: "Some day it is not right but a privilege. I maintain the contrary. I say it is an inalienable right. You can not maintain a republican form of government and deny to half the population its right to vote." After the death of her second husband Cutler, she attended the Ninth Annual Meeting of the AWSA, held at the Masonic Hall in Indianapolis in 1878. Regarding the battle for woman suffrage she stood up to say; "Many of us have grown old in this work, and yet some people say "Why do you work in a hopeless cause?" the cause is not hopeless. Great reforms develop slowly, but truth will prevail, and the work that we have been doing for thirty years has paid as well as any work that has ever been done for humanity." On December 21, 1887, Cutler was appointed by Anthony and Stone to a committee tasked with joining the AWSA with the NWSA to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA). For the next two years, Cutler worked with Alice Stone Blackwell and Rachel Foster Avery to help establish a common structure and mission for the combined organization.

Bio by: Shari Hanson Frey



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Shari Hanson Frey
  • Added: Aug 29, 2009
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/41302448/hannah_maria-tracy_cutler: accessed ), memorial page for Hannah Maria Conant Tracy Cutler (25 Dec 1815–11 Feb 1896), Find a Grave Memorial ID 41302448, citing Evergreen Cemetery, Ocean Springs, Jackson County, Mississippi, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.