Abby Hadassah Smith
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Abby Hadassah Smith (June 1, 1797 – July 23, 1879) was an early American suffragist who campaigned for property and voting rights from Glastonbury, Connecticut.{{Cite encyclopedia|title = Abby Hadassah Smith and Julia Evelina Smith |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|url = http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1353442/Abby-Hadassah-Smith-and-Julia-Evelina-Smith#ref669521|accessdate = 2015-05-05}} She was a subject of the book Abby Smith and Her Cows in which her sister Julia Evelina Smith told the story of a tax resistance struggle they undertook in the suffrage cause.{{cite book|title=Encyclopedia of Women in American Politics|date=1999|publisher=Oryx Press|location=Phoenix, Ariz.|isbn=978-1-57356-131-0|page=212|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LOzfQEP3H8AC&q=Abby%20Hadassah%20Smith&pg=PA212}}
Family background
Born in 1797, Smith was the youngest of five daughters of Hannah Hadassah (Hickock) Smith and Zephaniah Hollister Smith, a Nonconformist clergyman turned farmer.{{Cite web|title = The Smith Sisters, Their Cows, and Women's Rights in Glastonbury |url = http://connecticuthistory.org/the-smith-sisters-their-cows-and-womens-rights-in-glastonbury/|website = connecticuthistory.org|accessdate = 2015-05-05}}
Smith's mother authored one of the earliest anti-slavery petitions, presented to the United States Congress by John Quincy Adams. The family was united in support of her advocacy of education, abolition and women's rights. At Hannah's instigation, the family house on Main Street, Kimberly Mansion, was a stop on the Connecticut Freedom Trail; it is now a designated National Historic Landmark.{{Cite web|title = The Smiths of Glastonbury|publisher = Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame|url = http://www.cwhf.org/inductees/reformers/smiths-glastonbury/#.VUjh_dNVhBc|accessdate = 2015-05-05|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150504011325/http://www.cwhf.org/inductees/reformers/smiths-glastonbury#.VUjh_dNVhBc|archive-date = 2015-05-04|url-status = dead}}
The Smiths of Glastonbury—namely, Smith, her sisters, and her mother—were inducted wholesale into the Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame in 1994.
References
Further reading
- Smith, Julia Evelina. Abby Smith and Her Cows (1877)
See also
External links
- {{Find a Grave|16585486}}
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Category:American tax resisters
Category:American women's rights activists
Category:People from Glastonbury, Connecticut