277.
Farmer, Lydia Hoyt. ed. The National Exposition Souvenir: What America Owes to Woman. Introduction by Julia Ward Howe. Chicago: Charles Wells Moulton, 1893. Buffalo, NY: n.p., 1893.

Chapter titles: What America Owes to Isabella of Castile and Madame La Fayette; Columbus at Sante Fe; The Women of Plymouth Colony; The Lady Arabella; Puritan Womanhood: A Power in America; The Women of the American Revolution; Autobiographical Sketch; Wives of the Presidents; Wives and Daughters in the Home; Domestic Science in American Homes; Clergymen’s Wives; The Wives of Army Officers; The American Salon; Social Leaders of Washington; The Southern Women, Past and Present; Physical Culture of American Women; The American Girl, Past and Present; Every-day Women; Farmers’ Wives and Daughters; Women in Literature and Poetry; Women Fiction Writers of America; Women Journalists in America; Women in Education and Science; Kindergartens; Women as Teachers; Massachusetts Normal Schools; Wellesly College Towards Liberal Education; An American Queen; Sketch of Maria Mitchell; Women’s Work at the Harvard Observatory; Women’s Progress; The Work of Women During the War; Women’s Work for Indians; The Woman’s Club Movement; The Influence of Women in American Politics; Woman’s Work in the Church; Working Girls’ Clubs; Woman’s National Christian Temperance Union; Young Women’s Christian Temperance Work; Hospitals, Mission Schools, and Other Charities; Sketch of Dorothea Lynde Dix; Two Women I have known; Women in Medicine; Women in Law; American Women of the Drama; Women in Business and Trade; Queens of the Shop, the Workroom and the Tenement; Women Clerks in New York; Women in Art and Music; Women Artists; Women Art Patrons; Address at the Dedicatory Ceremonies; Ode: Columbia’s Banner; The Board of Lady Managers; The Woman’s Branch of the World’s Congress Auxillary; The Woman’s Building; The Children’s Building; Exhibits by Women.

Multiple female contributors, including Lucy Larcom, Mrs. Ulysses S. Grant, Linda T. Guilford. “Some Women in American History”: Isabella of Castile and Madame de Lafayette. Some collective-anonymous chapters: “The Women of Plymouth Colony”; “Puritan Womanhood: A Power in America”; “Women in the Home”; “Women in Literature”; “Women in Education and Science”; “Women in Philanthropy, Church Work, Home Missions, and Charities”; "Women in Professions, Business, and Trade." Like Eagle, The Congress of Women (1894), a record associated with World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago.



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