Paulina Kellogg
Wright Davis was born in Bloomfield, New York on August 7, 1813. She was
raised by a very strict and fanatically religious aunt following the death of
her parents when she was seven. She was continuously forced to participate in
church activities. It was during this time she honed her skills as a staunch
feminist resulting from her objection to the discussion as to whether or not a
woman could be allowed to speak during a religious meeting when men were
present.
Paulina’s aunt was expecting her to become a missionary but
she ran away at the age of twenty to marry Francis Wright. Following Wright’s death in 194 Paulina
traveled across the US with a female mannequin, lecturing to women about
hygiene and health reforms.
While lecturing in Providence, RI she met Thomas Davis a
state representative who shared both her anti slavery and feminist views. They married in 1849 and adopted two
daughters. Three years later he was
elected to Congress and they moved to Washington, DC.
Paulina was elegant, well educated and well spoken and
passionate about her cause an able representative of the women’s rights
movement. She helped organize the first
National Woman’s Rights Convention in Massachusetts in 1850. In 1853 she began
publishing, at her own expense, one of the first women’s rights publications,
UNA a monthly periodical. In 1868 she co-founded the New England Woman Suffrage
Association and the Rhode Island Suffrage Association.
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