like lists with images, audio notes with reminders or just see shared notes. Joan shares her Safe-Place Image of her grandmother's attic. Capture notes, share them with others, and access them from your computer. We're hoping to keep as much of it together as possible. You will also be able to post self-reflections there and hopefully view those of others. 'Ultimately, we're going to have a public exhibition of it leading up to an auction. Anthony House University of Rochester,' he said.
We're working with local history museums, the Women's History Museum, the Susan B. 'We're making copies of as much as we can to donate. The area, he said, was a major hub of women's rights movement, with several suffragettes living and meeting there. In Whitcomb's attic, most of the people in the photos have not yet been identified, but he believes he's also found portraits of suffragist leaders Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Elizabeth Smith Miller. His photos of suffragist leaders were showcased at the 1907 convention for the New York State Woman Suffrage Association, which was held in Geneva. The trail of photos left behind by Hale show his connection to the women's rights movement.
Hale - a photographer who moved to the town in 1892 and worked there until 1920. Inscribed on the portrait, along with several other items in the studio, was the name J. He hopes to donate copies to museums and historical organizations, as well as set up an auction. Whitcomb is still working to identify the other photos.