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  1. Learn about the life and achievements of Antoinette Brown Blackwell, the first woman ordained as a mainstream Protestant minister in the US. She was also a prominent speaker and writer on abolition, temperance, and women's rights.

  2. Antoinette Brown Blackwell (born May 20, 1825, Henrietta, N.Y., U.S.—died Nov. 5, 1921, Elizabeth, N.J.) was the first woman to be ordained a minister of a recognized denomination in the United States.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Learn about the life and achievements of Antoinette Brown Blackwell, the first woman ordained as a minister in the US and a leader in women's rights and suffrage. Explore her early years, education, ministry, writings, and legacy.

  4. Antoinette Brown Blackwell. Antoinette Brown came of New England stock, sturdy and long-lived pioneers in Connecticut. Her grandfather, Joseph Brown of Thompson, Connecticut, served in the army all through the Revolutionary War and her father, another Joseph Brown, was in the War of 1812.

    • Emily Mace
    • Antoinette Brown Blackwell Biography
    • Oberlin College
    • Ministry and Marriage
    • Family, Background
    • Education
    • Marriage, Children
    • Books About Antoinette Brown Blackwell
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    Born on a farm in frontier New York, Antoinette Brown Blackwell was the seventh of ten children. She was active from the age of nine in her local Congregational church, and decided to become a minister.

    After teaching for a few years, she enrolled in one of the few colleges open to women, Oberlin College, taking the women's curriculum and then the theological course. However, she and another woman student were not permitted to graduate from that course, because of their gender. At Oberlin College, a fellow student, Lucy Stone, became a close frien...

    It was not long, however, before Antoinette Brown realized that her religious views and ideas about women's equality were more liberal than those of the Congregationalists. An experience in 1853 also may have added to her unhappiness: she atttended the World's Temperance Convention but, though a delegate, was refused the right to speak. She asked t...

    Mother: Abby Morse Brown
    Father: Joseph Brown
    Oberlin College 1847: "Ladies Literary Course," a 2 year literary curriculum
    Oberlin, Theology degree: 1847-1850. No degree, because she was a woman. Degree granted later, in 1878.
    Oberlin, honorary Doctor of Divinity Degree, 1908.
    Husband: Samuel Charles Blackwell, a businessman and brother to Elizabeth Blackwell and Emily Blackwell(married January 24, 1856; died 1901)
    Children: seven
    Elizabeth Cazden. Antoinette Brown Blackwell: A Biography. 1983.
    Carol Lassner and Marlene Deahl Merrill, editors. Friends and Sisters: Letters Between Lucy Stone and Antoinette Brown Blackwell, 1846-93.1987.
    Carol Lassner and Marlene Deahl Merrill, editors. Soul Mates: The Oberlin Correspondence of Lucy Stone and Antoinette Brown, 1846 - 1850.1983.
    Elizabeth Munson and Greg Dickinson. "Hearing Women Speak: Antoinette Brown Blackwell and the Dilemma of Authority." Journal of Women's History,Spring 1998, p. 108.

    Learn about the life and achievements of Antoinette Brown Blackwell, the first woman ordained by a major Christian denomination in the United States. She was also a reformer, suffragist, lecturer, writer, and mother of seven daughters.

    • Jone Johnson Lewis
  5. May 21, 2018 · Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell (1825-1921) made history when she became the first woman in the United States to be ordained by a recognized congregation. In addition to her career as a preacher, Blackwell spent many years delivering speeches on behalf of the temperance movement, the abolition of slavery, and the right of women to vote.

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  7. Antoinette Brown Blackwell was the first woman to be ordained as a Christian minister in the United States. Following her separation from the ministry, she focused increasingly on women's rights issues.