Mathilde Franziska Anneke - Women's Suffrage Correspondence, 1866-1884 (Box 5, Folder 6)

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Mathilde Franziska Anneke - Women's Suffrage Correspondence, 1866-1884 (Box 5, Folder 6)

Description
Correspondence, and manuscripts of Mathilde Anneke, an author and woman's rights advocate, who lived primarily in Milwaukee after 1849. The correspondence, practically all of which is in German script, contains much information on the opinions and activities of German-American intellectuals of the nineteenth century.
Metadata

Title: Anneke--Series: Women's Suffrage Correspondence, 1866-1884 (Fritz Anneke and Mathilde Franziska Anneke papers, 1791-1934; Wisconsin Historical Society Archives, Box 5, Folder 6)

Document Title: Anneke--Series: Women's Suffrage Correspondence, Miscellaneous, undated (Fritz Anneke and Mathilde Franziska Anneke papers, 1791-1934; Wisconsin Historical Society Archives, Box 5, Folder 6)

Creator: Anneke, Mathilde Franziska

Folder Description: Correspondence, and manuscripts of articles, plays, poems, and addresses of Fritz Anneke, an exiled leader of the German Revolution of 1848, and of his wife Mathilde, an author and woman's rights advocate, who lived primarily in Milwaukee after 1849. The correspondence, practically all of which is in German script, contains much information on the opinions and activities of German-American intellectuals of the nineteenth century. Anneke was connected with reform newspapers in several American cities, went abroad in 1859 to serve as foreign correspondent during the Italian war, held a colonel's commission in the 34th Wisconsin Infantry during the American Civil War, and died in Chicago in 1872 while agent for the German-American Society. Madame Anneke was the author of poems, dramas, and many short articles; editor of a revolutionary newspaper in Germany and of a women's rights newspaper in America in the fifties; a lecturer; the head of a school for girls in Milwaukee for eighteen years; and a pioneer in the equal suffrage movement in Wisconsin. Much of the collection consists of correspondence between the Annekes, in which they discuss affairs of the family and their compatriots in America; their literary pursuits; the progress of the revolutionary movement; and world events. There is information on the antislavery agitator Sherman Booth; on Peter Engelmann, who conducted a rival English-German academy in Milwaukee; and on other persons prominent in early Milwaukee.

Subject: Miscellaneous

Language: German, English

Source: Fritz Anneke and Mathilde Franziska Anneke papers, 1791-1934; Wisconsin Historical Society Archives, Box 5, Folder 6; WIHVA1610-A

Type: Text

Publisher-Electronic: Wisconsin Historical Society

Publication Date-Electronic: 2016

Rights: We believe that online reproduction of this material is permitted because its copyright protection has lapsed or because sharing it here for non-profit educational purposes complies with the Fair Use provisions of the U.S. Copyright Law. Teachers and students are generally free to reproduce pages for nonprofit classroom use. For advice about other uses, or if you believe that you possess copyright to some of this material, please contact us at asklibrary@wisconsinhistory.org.

Digital Format: XML

Digital Identifier: AnnekeB5F6000

Repository: Wisconsin Historical Society Digital Collections

Source: From: Anneke--Series: Women's Suffrage Correspondence, 1866-1884 (Fritz Anneke and Mathilde Franziska Anneke papers, 1791-1934; Wisconsin Historical Society Archives, Box 5, Folder 6)

IIIF Manifest
https://cdm15932.contentdm.oclc.org/iiif/info/p15932coll9/1889/manifest.json