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  1. Elizabeth Avery Meriwether (January 19, 1824 – November 4, 1916) was an American writer and an activist in the suffrage movement . Early life. Elizabeth Avery was born in Bolivar, Tennessee, on January 19, 1824. She had two siblings: Nathan Avery and Rebecca Rivers Avery. Her parents moved to Memphis when she was nine years old.

    • Elizabeth Avery, October 19, 1824, Bolivar, Tennessee, US
    • Writer
    • November 4, 1916 (aged 92)
    • .mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin2px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-2px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-line-margin3px{line-height:0;margin-bottom:-3px}.mw-parser-output .marriage-display-ws{display:inline;white-space:nowrap}, Minor Meriwether ​(m. 1852)​
  2. Oct 8, 2017 · 2 minutes to read. Tennessee suffragist, temperance activist, publisher, and author Elizabeth Avery Meriwether was born in Bolivar on January 19, 1824. Her father Nathan Avery was a physician and farmer, while her mother Rebecca Rivers Avery was the daughter of a Virginia planter.

  3. Elizabeth Avery Meriwether was a Tennessee author, publisher and prominent early activist in the women's suffrage movement. Always out-spoken, she became involved with this movement in Memphis, after the Civil War.

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  5. Confederate memory was Elizabeth Avery Meriwether of Memphis and St. Louis. Reflecting upon postwar Southern attitudes toward Northerners in her 1916 memoir, Meriwether, as a Confederate wife and Lost Cause proponent, writes, I fear in those dark days just after the close of the war, hate was a feeling that

  6. Aug 26, 2006 · Elizabeth Avery Meriwether (1824-1916), Tennessee suffragist, temperance activist, publisher and author, was born in Bolivar on January 19, 1824. Her father, Nathan Avery was a physician and...

  7. Elizabeth Avery Meriwether, "An Advocate for Her Sex": Feminism and Conservativism in the Post-Civil War South By Kathleen Christine Berkeley This article explores the life of an unknown but exemplary Southern woman who lived through the Civil War/Reconstruction era with a keen awareness of the historic significance of "her own

  8. The bronze sculpture depicts three women who were leading campaigners for women's suffrage: Elizabeth Avery Meriwether of Memphis, Lizzie Crozier French of Knoxville, and Anne Dallas Dudley of Nashville.

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