Salem Thought and Work Club: Difference between revisions

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Kate Tannat Woods  
[[Woods, Kate Tannatt|Kate Tannatt Woods]] (1836-1910) founded the Salem Thought and Work Club in 1891.
Grace A. Oliver was founding vice-president of the club.  
 
Grace A. Oliver (1844-1899) was the founding vice-president of the club.
 
The club flourished in a time when women of means, like Grace Oliver, were in and had "a time of abounding confidence in their own version of a
 
'regenerated world' when American women's achievements would inevitably lead to the vast outlook and the marvelous promise of the twentieth
 
century." Oliver and the club brought a "sense of beauty, elegant practicality, and dedication to building a vibrant
 
intellectual life to Salem, the region and Massachusetts" according to Maggie Smith-Dalton in her article.  




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[[Category:Browse Index]]
[[Category:Browse Index]]
[[Category:Clubs and Organizations]]
[[Category:Clubs and Organizations]]
==See Also==
*[http://articles.boston.com/2012-01-18/yourtown/30639909_1_prophecy-waters-literary-ladies History Time: A Salem club for thinking and working] Maggi Smith-Dalton, Boston.com

Latest revision as of 11:48, 13 September 2019

Kate Tannatt Woods (1836-1910) founded the Salem Thought and Work Club in 1891.

Grace A. Oliver (1844-1899) was the founding vice-president of the club.

The club flourished in a time when women of means, like Grace Oliver, were in and had "a time of abounding confidence in their own version of a

'regenerated world' when American women's achievements would inevitably lead to the vast outlook and the marvelous promise of the twentieth

century." Oliver and the club brought a "sense of beauty, elegant practicality, and dedication to building a vibrant

intellectual life to Salem, the region and Massachusetts" according to Maggie Smith-Dalton in her article.