Caroline Wells Healey Dall
Caroline Wells Healey Dall was a nineteenth-century American feminist writer, reformer, and transcendentalist associated with the early women's rights movement.
- Lived
- 1822–1912
- Nationality
- American
- Era
- Transcendentalist
Caroline Wells Healey Dall (1822–1912) was an influential nineteenth-century American feminist writer, reformer, and transcendentalist. She became a key participant in the intellectual and social reform movements of her era, dedicating her life to advocating for women's rights, educational opportunities, and social justice.
Dall was deeply integrated into the major reform organizations of her time. She was actively affiliated with the National Women's Rights Convention, the New England Women's Club, and the American Social Science Association. Through these platforms, she worked to advance the social standing of women and address pressing societal issues, combining her intellectual pursuits with practical activism.
Her intellectual development was shaped by her close associations with prominent figures of the Transcendentalist movement in Boston. Dall counted influential thinkers and writers such as Elizabeth Peabody and Margaret Fuller among her associates. These relationships helped foster her commitment to reform and informed her extensive contributions to the literature and discourse of early American feminism.
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