Engraving depicts European Americans in wagon train on hilly trail. Covered wagons are drawn by oxen, while loose cattle and a dog wander between them. One couple is walking past rocks at left, a mounted man in foreground leads the way while another man holding long whip stands alongside front wagon. In background, snowy mountain peaks
Description:
BEIN BrSide4o Zc10 869ha: On sheet 22.3 x 29.4 cm. Hand colored., Title from caption below image., and Printed below image: Entered according to act of Congress, A.D. 1869, by D. Appleton & Co. in the clerk's office of the district court for the southern district of N.Y.
Historical collections of the Great West: containing narratives of the most important and
Image Count:
1
Abstract:
"At sunset, their day's journey finished, they halt, perhaps, in the forest by the roadside, to prepare for supper and to pass the night. The horses are unharnessed, watered and secured, with their heads to the trough, or else hoppled out to grass."
Description:
P. 35 [279].
Subject (Geographic):
America --Discovery and exploration, Mississippi River Valley --History, and West (U.S.) --History
Subject (Topic):
Frontier and pioneer life --West (U.S.) and Indians of North America
Letters to the Irish nationalist leader John Dillon, including several sent during his imprisonment in Galway Gaol in 1891. Venturi offers support, political advice, and explanations of her own political and social convictions. Venturi disagreed strongly with Dillon's repudiation of Parnell during the Kitty O'Shea affair, and her letters express distress at this "desertion" on his part. Venturi also writes of her anticlericalism and antisectarianism, her belief in a "purer" or "higher" Christianity, and her disapproval of Dillon's theory that it is his "duty to feign belief." A lengthy letter of 1892 Apr 21 discusses Venturi's work for repeal of the Contagious Diseases Act and frames her support for women's rights in terms of a direct parallel between women as a subjected group and the Irish as a subjected race. and Other topics include reminiscences of Mazzini and of her father, the Radical and feminist William Henry Ashurst; books lent to Dillon and Venturi's opinions of authors including Byron, a particular favorite, Tolstoy, Edward Fitzgerald and Bret Harte; her admiration for Whistler's painting and her ownership of his "Chelsea in Ice."
Description:
Emilie Venturi (1820?-1893) was the intimate friend, political disciple, and literary executrix of Giuseppe Mazzini. Her first marriage ended in divorce; her second, to the Risorgimento volunteer Carlo Venturi, with his death in 1866. She was prominment in Josephine Butler's campaign for the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts, edited The Shield from 1871 to 1886, and supported the unification of Italy and nationalist causes in general throughout her life., Purchased from James Fenning on the Hazel M. Osborn Fund, 1991., and Several postal cards in French and Italian.
Subject (Geographic):
Ireland--History--1837-1901 and Italy--History--1849-1870
Subject (Name):
Ashurst, W. H. (William Henry), 1792-1855, Balfour, Arthur James, 1848-1930, Byron, George Gordon Byron, Baron, 1788-1824--Influence, Dillon, John, 1851-1927, Mazzini, Giuseppe, 1805-1872, Parnell, Charles Stewart, 1846-1891, Venturi, Emilie Ashurst, -1893, and Whistler, James McNeill, 1834-1903
Subject (Topic):
Anti-clericalism--England, Anti-clericalism--Italy, Home rule--Ireland, Irish question, Nationalism--Ireland, Nationalism--Italy, Nationalities, Principle of, Women social reformers--Great Britain--19th century, and Women's rights--Great Britain--19th century