<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="no"?>
<!-- Transformed with v1v2002_4_cornell.xsl -->

<!DOCTYPE ead PUBLIC "+//ISBN 1-931666-00-8//DTD ead.dtd (Encoded Archival Description (EAD) Version 2002)//EN" "../dtds/ead.dtd">
	 
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="../styles/style.xsl" ?>
<ead>
   <eadheader repositoryencoding="iso15511" relatedencoding="MARC21" countryencoding="iso3166-1" scriptencoding="iso15924" dateencoding="iso8601" langencoding="iso639-2b">
      <eadid mainagencycode="nic" countrycode="us" publicid="-//Cornell University::Cornell University Library::Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections//TEXT(US::NIC::RMM02681::Emily Howland papers)//EN">RMM02681.xml</eadid>
      <filedesc>
         <titlestmt>
            <titleproper>Guide to the Emily Howland papers,1797-1938.</titleproper>
            <titleproper type="sort">Emily Howland papers,1797-1938.</titleproper>
            <author>Compiled by Patricia H. Gaffney</author>
         </titlestmt>
         <publicationstmt>
            <publisher>Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library</publisher>
            <date>December 2006</date>
         </publicationstmt>
         <notestmt>
            <note audience="internal">
               <p>
				
                  <subject>slave</subject>
				
                  <subject>womst</subject>
			 
               </p>
            </note>
         </notestmt>
      </filedesc>
      <profiledesc>
         <creation>Finding aid encoded by Evan Fay Earle, <date>December 2006</date>
         </creation>
      </profiledesc>
      <revisiondesc>
         <change encodinganalog="583">
            <date normal="2007-05-29">2007-05-29</date>
            <item>converted from EAD 1.0 to EAD 2002 </item>
         </change>
      </revisiondesc>
   </eadheader>
   <frontmatter>
      <titlepage>
         <titleproper>Guide to the Emily Howland Papers,<lb/>1797-1938.</titleproper>
         <num>Collection Number: 2681</num>
         <publisher>Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections <lb/>Cornell University Library</publisher>
         <list type="deflist">
            <defitem>
               <label>Contact Information:</label>
               <item>Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections<lb/>
2B Carl A. Kroch Library<lb/>
Cornell University<lb/>
Ithaca, NY 14853<lb/>
(607) 255-3530<lb/>
Fax: (607) 255-9524<lb/>
<extref href="mailto:rareref@cornell.edu">rareref@cornell.edu</extref>
                  <lb/>
<extref href="http://rmc.library.cornell.edu">http://rmc.library.cornell.edu</extref>
                  <lb/></item>
            </defitem>
            <defitem>
               <label>Compiled by:</label>
               <item>Patricia H. Gaffney</item>
            </defitem>
            <defitem>
               <label>Date completed:</label>
               <item>1975</item>
            </defitem>
            <defitem>
               <label>EAD encoding:</label>
               <item>Evan Fay Earle, December 2006</item>
            </defitem>
         </list>
         <date>© 2006 Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library</date>
      </titlepage>
   </frontmatter>
   <archdesc level="collection">
      <did>
         <head id="a1">DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY</head>
         <unittitle label="Title:" encodinganalog="MARC 245">Emily Howland papers, 
		<unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="MARC 245">1797-1938.</unitdate>
		
         </unittitle>
         <unitid label="Collection Number:">2681</unitid>
         <origination label="Creator:">
		  
            <persname encodinganalog="100" normal="Howland, Emily, 1827-1929.">Emily, Howland 1827-1929.</persname>
		
         </origination>
         <physdesc label="Quantity:" encodinganalog="MARC 300">6.8 cubic ft.,</physdesc>
         <physdesc label="Forms of Material:">Correspondence, Research Materials</physdesc>
         <repository label="Repository:">Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library</repository>
         <abstract label="Abstract:">Collection consists primarily of correspondence; letters discuss attempts to establish schools for escaped slaves and freedmen in the South, abolition, Oberlin College President Charles Grandison Finney's opinion of John Brown and other abolitionists, the women's suffrage movement (especially in New York State), women's higher education, temperance, the Universal Peace movement, the National Arbitration League of Washington, aspects of Quaker life, the Society of Friends, the Freedmen's Bureau, and other issues. Correspondents include Isabel Howland, Caroline F. Putnam, Elizabeth Smith Miller, Sallie Holley, Antoinette Brown Blackwell, Cornelia Hancock, Amanda Sanford Hickey, Rev. John D. Read, Emma V. Brown, Booker T. Washington, Herbert Howland (while traveling in England, France, and Egypt), Hanna Letchworth Howland, Joseph and Richard Tallcott, Samuel Parsons, Ebenezer Burnham, George Lincoln Burr (to Isabel Howland), Lillie Devereux
		Blake, Mary E. Bowman, Gulielma Breed, Phoebe Hathaway, Henry Ince, J. R. Johnson, Alfred H. Love, E. Nash, Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, L. W. Stebbins, and Julia A. Wilbur. Also, papers of the related Tallcott and Howland families, and printed items containing letters and other information concerning the Rev. John D. Read and family.</abstract>
         <langmaterial label="Language:">Collection material in <language encodinganalog="041" langcode="eng">English</language>
         </langmaterial>
      </did>
      <bioghist encodinganalog="MARC 545">
         <head id="a2" altrender="biography">BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE </head>
         <p>Educator, reformer, philanthropist.</p>
         <p>Emily Howland was born in Sherwood, New York in 1827, daughter of Slocum and Hanna (Tallcott) Howland. Her parents were prominent in the Society of Friends, and Emily was educated both at a private school in Sherwood and a Friends' school in Philadelphia. Early in life she became an active abolitionist, and during 1857-1859 was a teacher in a school for colored girls in Washington, D.C. In 1863-1864 she worked in a large camp for freed slaves in Arlington, Virginia, teaching them to read and write. With her father's aid, she opened an African-American school in 1867 at Heathsville, Virginia. She continued throughout her life to support this and other African-American schools in the South. In 1882 she took over the Sherwood select school until it was taken over by the New York Board of Regents in 1927. Howland was also active in reform movements such as women's suffrage, and peace and temperance organizations. Her niece, Isabel Howland, daughter of William and Hanna
		  (Letchworth) Howland, also had a lifelong interest in educational and philanthropic activities.</p>
      </bioghist>
      <scopecontent encodinganalog="MARC 520">
         <head id="a3">COLLECTION DESCRIPTION</head>
         <p>Collection consists primarily of correspondence; letters discuss attempts to establish schools for escaped slaves and freedmen in the South, abolition, Oberlin College President Charles Grandison Finney's opinion of John Brown and other abolitionists, the women's suffrage movement (especially in New York State), women's higher education, temperance, the Universal Peace movement, the National Arbitration League of Washington, aspects of Quaker life, the Society of Friends, the Freedmen's Bureau, and other issues. Correspondents include Isabel Howland, Caroline F. Putnam, Elizabeth Smith Miller, Sallie Holley, Antoinette Brown Blackwell, Cornelia Hancock, Amanda Sanford Hickey, Rev. John D. Read, Emma V. Brown, Booker T. Washington, Herbert Howland (while traveling in England, France, and Egypt), Hanna Letchworth Howland, Joseph and Richard Tallcott, Samuel Parsons, Ebenezer Burnham, George Lincoln Burr (to Isabel Howland), Lillie Devereux Blake, Mary E. Bowman,
		  Gulielma Breed, Phoebe Hathaway, Henry Ince, J. R. Johnson, Alfred H. Love, E. Nash, Elizabeth Palmer Peabody, L. W. Stebbins, and Julia A. Wilbur. Also, papers of the related Tallcott and Howland families, and printed items containing letters and other information concerning the Rev. John D. Read and family.</p>
      </scopecontent>
      <controlaccess>
         <head id="a7">SUBJECTS</head>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Names: </head>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 100">Howland, Emily,1827-1929.</persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Blackwell, Antoinette Louisa, 1825-1921.</persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Blake, Lillie Devereux, 1835-1913.</persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Bowman, Mary E. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Breed, Gulielma. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Brown, Emma V. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Burnham, Ebenezer. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Burr, George Lincoln, 1857-1938.</persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Finney, Charles Grandison, 1792-1875.</persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Hancock, Cornelia. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Hathaway, Phoebe. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Hickey, Amanda Sanford. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Holley, Sallie. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Howland family. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Howland, Hanna Letchworth. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Howland, Herbert. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Howland, Isabel. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Ince, Henry. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Johnson, J. R. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Love, Alfred M. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Miller, Elizabeth Smith. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Nash, E. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Parsons, Samuel. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer, 1804-1894.</persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Putnam, Caroline F. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Read, John D., ca. 1812-1864.</persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Stebbins, L. W. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Tallcott family. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Tallcott, Joseph. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Tallcott, Richard. </persname>
            <persname encodinganalog="MARC 600">Wilbur, Julia A. </persname>
            <corpname encodinganalog="MARC 610">National Arbitration League.</corpname>
            <corpname encodinganalog="MARC 610">Society of Friends.</corpname>
            <corpname encodinganalog="MARC 610">United States.Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands.</corpname>
            <corpname encodinganalog="MARC 610">Universal Peace Union.</corpname>
         </controlaccess>
         <controlaccess>
            <head>Subjects:</head>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Freedmen.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">African Americans--Education.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Women--Education.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Women--Suffrage.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Antislavery movements.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Temperance.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Abolitionists.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Social reformers.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Women educators.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Women social reformers.</subject>
            <subject encodinganalog="MARC 650">Philanthropists.</subject>
         </controlaccess>
      </controlaccess>
      <descgrp type="admininfo">
         <head id="a8">INFORMATION FOR USERS</head>
         <prefercite>
            <head>Cite As:</head>
            <p>Emily Howland papers, #2681. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.</p>
         </prefercite>
      </descgrp>
      <dsc type="combined">
         <head>CONTAINER LIST</head>
         <c01 level="series">
            <did>
               <unittitle> 
			 
                  <extref href="http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/EAD/pdf_guides/RMM02681_pub.pdf">Link to a copy of the published finding aid. (4 MB PDF)</extref>
               </unittitle>
            </did>
         </c01>
      </dsc>
   </archdesc>
</ead>