Lucinda Hinsdale Stone, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Lucinda Hinsdale Stone

American feminist, educator, traveler, writer, philanthropist

Date of Birth: 30-Sep-1814

Place of Birth: Hinesburg, Vermont, United States

Date of Death: 14-Mar-1900

Profession: writer, educator, journalist, philanthropist, traveller, suffragist, feminist

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Libra


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About Lucinda Hinsdale Stone

  • Lucinda Hinsdale Stone (pen name, L.
  • H.
  • S.; September 30, 1814 – March 14, 1900) was an early American feminist, educator, traveler, writer, and philanthropist. Stone came to Kalamazoo, Michigan with her husband as president of Kalamazoo College, which was then a part of the University of Michigan.
  • She taught there and she established co-education at the University.
  • Through her influence, women were placed in the university's faculty and scholarships were awarded to women.
  • Stone was the first woman in the United States to take classes of young women abroad to study, that means to illustrate history and literature.
  • She believed in self-development for service and was directly responsible for founding fifty woman's literary and study clubs in the Midwestern United States.
  • She was awarded the Honorary Degree LL.D., by the University of Michigan.Stone advocated for women's voting rights and educational opportunities, in addition to abolition of slavery.
  • At the end of the 19th-century, Stone was the oldest woman journalist in Michigan, and was the honorary president of the Michigan Woman's Press Association.
  • In 1890, she traveled the length of the Southern Peninsula to become a charter member and help organize the first Michigan Woman's Press Association.

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