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Chronological listing of Books by Women Authors: 1830-1835

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Chronological listing of Books by Women Authors:  1830-1835

1830

Bullard, Anne Tuttle Jones. The Stanwood Family; or, The History of the American Tract Society.
Farrar, Eliza Ware Rotch. The Children's Robinson Crusoe.
Gould, Hannah Flagg. Mary Dow, and the Little Beggar Girl.
Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell. Conversations on the Burman Mission.
_____. Poems for our children: designed for families, Sabbath schools, and infant schools. Part I.
Hinckley, Mary. The Seymour Family; or, Domestic Scenes.
_____. Sequel to the Seymour Family; or, Domestic Scenes.
Larned, Mrs L. The Sanfords; or, Home Scenes.
_____. Grace Seymour.
Robbins, Eliza. Elements of mythology.
Royall, Anne Newport. Letters from Alabama, 1817-1822.
_____. Mrs Royall's Southern Tour; or, Second Series of The Black Book. 3 vols.
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria. Clarence; or, A tale of our own times.
Sedgwick, Elizabeth Buckminster Dwight. A Spanish Conquest of America. Designed for the use of children. Boston: Leonard C.Bowles, 1830.
Sedgwick, Susan Ann Livingston Ridley. The children's week.
_____. The young emigrants: A tale designed for young persons.
Talbot, Mary Elizabeth. Rurality: Original Desultory Tales.
Wells, Anna Maria Foster. Poems and juvenile sketches.
Willard, Emma Hart. A series of maps to Willard's History of the United States, or Republic of America.
Williams, Catherine Read Arnold. Tales: National and Revolutionary.
_____. Original Poems on Various Subjects.

1831

Bacon, Delia Salter. Tales of the Puritans. The regicides. The fair pilgrim. Castine.
Beecher, Catharine Esther. The elements of moral and mental philosophy, founded on experience, reason and the Bible.
Bullard, Anne Tuttle Jones.
Louisa Ralston; or what can I do for the heathen?
Child, Lydia Maria. The mother's book.
_____. The coronal; a collection of miscellaneous pieces, written at various times.
Embury, Emma Catherine Manley. (1806-1863) An address on female education, read at the anniversary of the Brooklyn Collegiate Institute for Young Ladies, by Fanning c. Tucker. Written for the occasion by Mrs. Emma C. Embury.
Farrar, Eliza Ware Rotch. The story of the Life of Lafayette, as told by a father to his children.
Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot. Hymns, songs and fables for children.
Griffith, Mary. Our Neighborhood; or, Letters on Horticultural and Natural Phenomena, Interspersed with Opinions on Domestic and Moral Economy.
Larned, Mrs. L. The Fairy Tale.
_____. Sarah and her cousins.
Leslie, Eliza. American Girl's book; or, Occupation for play hours.
Livermore, Harriet. A wreath from jessamine lawn; or, Free grace the flower that never fades.
_____. Millenial tidings no. 1.
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln.
_____, ed. Vauquelin, Louis Nicolas. Dictionary of chemistry.
Robbins, Eliza. Introduction to Popular lessons, for the use of small children in schools.
Willard, Emma Hart. Abridgement of the History of the United States; or, Republic of America.

1832

Adams, Hannah. A Memoir of Miss Hannah Adams, written by herself. With Additional Notices by a Friend [ Hannah Farnham Sawyer Lee].
Beecher, Catharine Esther. Arithmetic simplified: prepared for the use of primary schools, female seminaries, and high schools: in three parts.
Bullard, Anne Tuttle Jones. The Reformation; a True Tale of the Sixteenth Century.
Child, Lydia Maria. The biographies of Lady Russell and Madame Guyon.
_____. The biographies of Madame de Stael and Madame Roland.
Cushing, Caroline Elizabeth Wilde. Letters descriptive of public monuments, scenery and manners in France and Spain. 2 vols.
Dix, Dorothea Lynde. American moral tales for young persons.
Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot. Sequel to the well-spent hour, or The Birthday.
Gould, Hannah Flagg. Poems.
Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell. Flora's Interpreter; or, The American Book of Flowers and Sentiments.
Leslie, Eliza. Wonderful travels; being the narratives of Munchhausen, Gulliver,and Sinbad abridged from the original works with numerous alterations and original designs.
_____, ed. and trans. Domestic French cookery, chiefly translated from Sulpice Barue.
Packard, Hannah James (1815-1831) The choice: a tragedy; with miscellaneous poems.
Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer. First Steps to the study of history: Being part first of a key to history
_____, trans. Self-education; or, The means and art of moral progress.
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln, ed. The child's geology by Samuel Griswold Goodrich.
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria. Pleasant Sundays.
Stewart, Maria W. Miller. Meditations from the pen of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart. Presented to the First African Baptist Church and Society, in the city of Boston.
_____. "Why sit ye here and die." Lecture delivered at Franklin Hall, Boston, reprinted in The Liberator, 21 September 1832.
Willard, Emma Hart. Ancient atlas: to accompany the universal geography by William C. Woodbridge and Willard.
Williams, Catherine Read Arnold. Aristocracy; or, The Holbey Family.

1833

Beecher, Catharine Esther. Primary geography for children, on an improved plan.
Bullard, Anne Tuttle Jones. Little Aimee, the persecuted child: to which is added The frightful story.
Child, Lydia Maria. An appeal in favor of that class of Americans called Africans.
_____. Good wives.
_____. The girl's own book.
_____. Authentic anecdotes of American slavery. No. 1, 2. 1833-1835.
Farrar, Eliza Ware Rotch. John Howard.
Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot. Little Songs for little boys and girls.
Hall, Sarah Ewing Selections from the writings of Mrs. Sarah Hall, author of Conversations on the Bible, with a memoir of her life. Ed. By Harrison Hall.
Hentz, Caroline Lee Whiting. Lovell's Folly
Holley, Mary Austin. Texas; observations, geographical and descriptive.
Leslie, Eliza. Atlantic Tales; or, Pictures of youth.
_____. Pencil Sketches; or, Outlines of character and manners.
Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer. The Hebrews.
_____.The Greeks; part three of a key to history.
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln. Botany for beginners: an introduction to Mrs. Lincoln's Lectures on botany.
_____. Address on the subject of female education in Greece, and general extension of Christian intercourse among females.
_____. Caroline Westerley; or, The Young Traveller from Ohio.
Robbins, Eliza. Grecian History; Adapted to the Use of Schools and Young Persons.
_____. Classic Tales; designed for the instruction and amusement of young persons.
Savage, Sarah. Blind Miriam Restored to Sight.
Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley. Biography of pious persons; abridged for youth.
____. Letters to young ladies.
_____. How to be happy.
_____. The farmer and the soldier.
_____. Memoir of Phoebe P. Hammond, a pupil in the American asylum at Hartford.

1834

Child, Lydia Maria. The oasis.
Day, Martha. Literary remains of Martha Day, with the Rev. Dr. Fitch's address at her funeral, and sketches of her character.
Ellet, Elizabeth Fries Lummis. trans. Euphemio of Messina. By Silvio Pellico.
Farrar, Eliza Ware Rotch. The Youth's Letter Writer; or, The Epistolary Art Made Plain and Easy to Beginners, through the example of Henry Moreton.
Fox, Mary L. The ruined deacon: a true story.
Gilman, Caroline Howard. Recollections of a housekeeper [by Mrs. Clarissa Packard, pseud.]
Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell, ed. The school song book.
Leslie, Eliza. Laura Lovel; a sketch for ladies only.
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln. Chemistry for beginners.
Robbins, Eliza. English History; Adapted to the Use of Schools and Young Persons.
Scott, Julia H. Kinney. The Sacrifice: A Clergyman's Story.
Sedgwick, Susan Ann Livingston Ridley. Allen Prescott; or, The fortunes of a New England Boy.
Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley. Sketches.
_____. The children in the wood: to which is added: My mother's grave, a pathetic story.
_____. Poems.
_____. Lays from the West.
Taggert, Cynthia. Poems.
Wheatley, Phillis. Memoir and poems of Phillis Wheatley, a native African and a slave: Dedicated to the friends of the Africans.

1835

Beecher, Catharine Esther. An essay on the education of female teachers, American Lyceum and communicated at their annual meeting, New York, May 8th, 1835.
Bullard, Anne Tuttle Jones. The wife for a missionary.
Child, Lydia Maria. The history of the condition of women, in various ages and nations. 2 vols.
Ellet, Elizabeth Fries Lummis. Poems, translated and original, incl. Teresa Contarini.
Farrar, Eliza Ware Rotch. The adventures of Congo in search of his master:an American tale.
Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot. The Skeptic.
Fox, Mary Anna. George Allen, the Only Son.
Gould, Hannah Flagg. Esther: a scripture narrative; together with an original poem.
Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell. Traits of American Life.
Lee, Hannah Farnham Sawyer. The Backslider.
Leslie, Eliza, ed. The violet: a Christmas and New Year's gift, or birthday present for 1836.
Livermore, Harriet. The hero of Israel to meet the loud echo of the wilds of America.
Paul, Susan. Memoir of James Jackson, the attentive and obedient scholar, who died in Boston, October 31, 1833, aged six years and eleven months.
Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer. Record of a school; exemplifying the principles of spiritual culture.
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln and Emma Willard, trans. Madame Necker de Saussure. Progressive education, commencing with the infant.
Savage, Sarah. Trial and Self-Discipline.
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria. Tales and sketches.
_____. Home.
_____. The Linwoods; or, "Sixty years since" in America.
Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley. Tales and Essays for children.
_____. A book for boys; consisting of original articles in prose and poetry.
_____. Memoir of Margaret and Henrietta Flower.
_____. Margaret and Henrietta..
_____. Zinzedorff, and Other Poems.
Stewart, Maria W. Miller. Productions of Mrs. Maria W. Stewart, presented to the First African Baptist Church and Society, in the city of Boston.
Warfield, Susanna. Illorar de Courcy: An Auto-biographical novel. By Josiah Templeton, Esq. [Pseud.].
Willard, Emma Hart. A system of universal history, in perspective: accompanied by an atlas, exhibiting chronology in a picture of nations,and progressive geography in a series of maps.

1836

Beecher, Catharine Esther. Letters on the difficulty of religion.
Brown, Phoebe Hinsdale. The tree and its fruits; or, Narratives from Real Life.
___. The village school, to which is added Jenny; or The conversion of a child, a narrative.
Chandler, Elizabeth Margaret. Essays, philanthropic and moral, principally relating to the abolition of slavery in America.
_____. The poetical works of Elizabeth Margaret Chandler.
Chapman, Maria Weston. Songs of the free and hymns of Christian freedom.
Child, Lydia Maria. Anti-slavery catechism.
_____. The evils of slavery, and the cure of slavery.
_____. Philothea; a romance
Griffith, Mary. Camperdown; or, News from our Neighborhood.
_____. Three hundred years hence.
____. Discoveries in light and vision: with a short memoir containing Discoveries in the mental faculties.
Grimké, Angelina Emily Weld. Appeal to the Christian women of the South.
Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell. The Book of Flowers.
Hall, Louisa Jane Park. Alfred [and the Better part].
Larned, Mrs. L. The American Nun; or, The Effect of Romance.
Lee, Jarena The life and religious experience of Jarena Lee, a coloured lady, giving an account of her call to preach the gospel.
Morgan, Susan Rigby Dallam. The Swiss heiress; or, The bride of destiny. 2 vols.
Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer. (1778-1853) Holiness; or, The legend of St. George. A tale from Spencer's (!)Faerie Queen.
Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer. (1804-1894) Method of spiritual culture: being an explanatory preface to the second edition of record of a school.
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln. The female student; or, Lectures to young ladies on female education.
Ritchie, Anna Cora Ogden Mowatt. Pelayo; or, The Cavern of Covadonga.
Robbins, Eliza. Biography for schools.
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria. The poor rich man and the rich poor man.
Signourney, Lydia Howard Huntley. Poems for children.
_____. History of Marcus Aurelius, Emperor of Rome.
_____. Olive Buds.
_____. Stories for youth; founded on fact.
Stephens, Ann Sophia Winterbotham, ed. The Portland Sketch Book.
Willard, Emma Hart. Atlas, to accompany a system of universal history.

1837

Beecher, Catharine Esther. An Essay on Slavery and Abolitionism, with Reference to the Duty of American Females.
Child, Lydia Maria. The family nurse; or, Companion of the frugal housewife.
Downer, Sarah A. The contrast; or, Which is the Christian?
_____. The triumph of truth. A Tale.
Farrar, Eliza Ware Rotch. The Young Lady's Friend.
Gilman, Caroline Howard. The lady's annual register, and housewife's memorandum book for 1838.
Grimké, Angelina Emily Weld. An appeal to the women of the nominally free states.
Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell, ed. The Ladies' Wreath; a selection from the female poetic writers from England and America.
Hall, Louisa Jane Park. Miriam; a dramatic poem.
Lee, Hannah Farnham Sawyer. Three Experiments of Living: living within the means; living up to the means; living beyond the means.
_____. Fourth experiment of living: living without means.
_____. Living on other people's means; or, The history of Simon Silver.
_____. The Contrast; or, Modes of Education.
_____. The Harcourts: Illustrating the Benifit of Retrenchment and Reform.
_____. Rich Enough. A Tale of the Times.
_____. Elinor Fulton; sequel to Three experiments of living.
Leslie, Eliza. Directions for cookery; being a system of the art, in its various branches.
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln. Familiar lectures on natural philosophy, for the use of schools.
Ritchie, Anna Cora Ogden Mowatt. Reviewers reviewed: A Satire.
Sedgwick, Catharine. Live and let live; or, Domestic Service Illustrated
_____. A love token for children.
Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley. A book for girls, in prose and poetry.
Williams, Catherine Read Arnold. Fall River. An Authentic Narrative.

1838

Barnes, Charlotte Mary Sanford. The Night of the Coronation. Written on reading the account of the coronation of Victoria I.
Embury, Emma Catherine Manley. Constance Latimer, or, The Blind Girl; with other tales.
Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot. Sketches of a married life.
Gilman, Caroline Howard. The lady's annual register, and housewife's memorandum book for 1839.
_____. Recollections of a Southern Matron.
_____. The poetry of travelling in the United States.
Grimké, Angelina Emily Weld. Letters to Catherine E. Beecher, in reply to an essay on slavery and abolitionism, addressed to A.E. Grimké.
Grimké, Sarah Moore.Letters on the equality of the sexes,and the condition of woman.
Hall, Fanny W. Rambles in Europe; or, a Tour through France, Italy, Switzerland, Great Britain, and Ireland, in 1836.
Hall, Louisa Jane Park. Joanna of Naples.
Lee, Eliza Buckminster. Sketches of a New England Village in the Last Century.
Lee, Hannah Farnham Sawyer. Worth a Million.
Leslie, Eliza. Althea Vernon; or, The Embroidered Handkerchief. To which is added Henrietta Harrison, or The Blue Cotton Umbrella.
_____. The tell-tale; and, the week of idleness.
Livermore, Harriet. A letter to John Ross: the principal chief of the Cherokee nation.
Mayo, Sarah Carter Edgarton. Ellen Clifford; or, The genius of reform.
_____. The Palfreys: A Tale.
Osgood, Frances Sargeant Locke. A wreath of wild flowers from New England.
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln. Familiar lectures on chemistry; for schools, families, and private students.
Robbins, Eliza. The first book; or, Primary lessons for public and private schools.
Sigourney, Lydia Howard Huntley. Letters to mothers.
Smith, Elizabeth Oakes Prince. Riches without wings; or, The Cleveland Family.

1839

Allen, Hannah Bowen. Farmer Housten and the Speculator: A New England Tale.
Bacon, Delia Salter. The Bride of Fort Edward, founded on an incident of the revolution.
Cunningham, Virginia. Maid of Florence; or, A woman's vengeance, a psuedo-historical tragedy in five acts.
Davis, Mary Elizabeth Morague. The British Partizan: A Tale of the Times of Old.
Ellet, Elizabeth Fries Lummis. The characters of Schiller.
Embury, Emma Catherine Manley. Pictures of early life; or, Sketches of youth.
Follen, Eliza Lee Cabot. Nursery Songs.
_____. Poems.
_____. Sacred Songs for Sunday Schools, original and selected.
Fuller, Margaret, trans. Conversation with Goethe in the last years of his life.
Gilman, Caroline Howard Tales and Ballads.
_____, ed. Letters of Eliza Wilkinson, during the invasion and possession of Charlestown, S.C., by the British in the Revolutionary War.
_____. Verses of a life Time. Boston and Cambridge: James Munroe and Co., [AAS date 1839] [OCLC date 1849].
Hale, Sarah Josepha Buell. The good housekeeper or the way to live well and to be well while we live containing directions for choosing and preparing food in regard to health, economy, and taste.
Hall, Louisa Jane Park. Hannah, the mother of Samuel the prophet and judge of Israel. A sacred drama.
_____. The New Year's Day.
Kirkland, Caroline. A new home - who'll follow? Or, Glimpses of Western Life.
Lee, Hannah Farnham Sawyer. Rosanna; or, Scenes in Boston..
_____. The life and times of Martin Luther.
Osgood, Frances Sargeant Locke. The casket of fate
Phelps, Almira Hart Lincoln. Essay on female education, and prospectus of the Rahway Institute
Robbins, Eliza. The school friend, or Lessons in prose and verse.
Sedgwick, Catharine Maria. Means and ends, or Self-training.
Sherburne, George Ann Humphreys. Imogine; or, The Pirate's Treasure. The Demon's Cave.
Stephens, Ann Sophia Winterbotham. The queen of a week.
Stowe, Harriet Beecher. The gift, a Christmas and New Year's present for 1840.
Williams, Catherine Read Arnold. Biography of revolutionary heroes, containing the life of Brigadier Gen. William Barton & Captain Stephen Olney.

Bibliography compiled for Dr. Judith Fetterley by Lois Dellert Raskin. 

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