Ernestine Rose

Ernestine Louise Rose (January 13, 1810-August 4, 1892) was a Polish-born Individualist Feminist, Abolitionist, Freethinker, atheist, and spoke out freely against bigotry and prejudice. Ernestine L. Rose, one of the major intellectual forces behind then women's rights movement in nineteenth-century America was the target of much scorn. A minister in Charleston, South Carolina, forbade his congregation to listen to "this female devil." The editor of a small newspaper in Maine wrote "It would be shameful to listen to this woman, a thousand times below a prostitute." Rose chafed at her parents' Jewish religion at an early age. She left home at age seventeen, she first traveled to Berlin.
It is an interesting and demonstrable fact, that all children are atheists and were religion not inculcated into their minds, they would remain so.

References

  • "Great Minds Ernestine L. Rose: Freethinking Rebel", Carol Kolmerten, Summer, 2002, (Volume 22, No. 3), p53-55, Free Inquiry
  • The American Life of Ernestine L. Rose, Carol Kolmerten, Syracuse University Press, 1998, ISBN 0815605285

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
englesqueville la perce
paney
pinay sur odon
modplug tracker
pron
quemauville
eraines
ernes
escoville
quadratic sieve
espins
esquay notre dame
esquay sur seulles
esson
british rail class 09
estres la campagne
clarendon
estry
terville
charter oak
huacho
shirley (novel)
international sailing federation
russell, ontario (community)
korean chess
mark pincus
nine to five
seadra
beam splitter
morten linberg
el hadji diouf
irminsul
granville district
switch (rod)
chuhei nambu
shiant isles
advance wars
luhn algorithm
yvonne printemps
age of aquarius
del tha funkee homosapien
khwarezmid empire
sacha guitry
flannan isles