Josephine Cables Aldrich
Josephine Cables Aldrich (June 12, 1843 - August 12, 1917) was an American spiritualist, Theosophist, editor, and publisher. Married to the politician, William F. Aldrich, she was the editor of The Occult World and the publisher of Matilda Joslyn Gage's The Liberal Thinker.[1]
Biography
Josephine Cables was born in Litchfield, Connecticut. Her mother died when she was young, leaving her in the care of two Puritan grandmothers. They believed that a free use of the rod was necessary to save the child's soul from destruction. This severe treatment taught her that the Golden Rule was by far the best maxim for morality and happiness, and no sooner was she in control of a home of her own in Rochester, New York, than she began to teach the same, turning her home into a sort of Mecca for advance thinkers, not only in the US, but pilgrims came from Europe, Asia and Africa to confer with her. In 1882, in Rochester, she began publishing "The Occult World", a paper devoted to advanced thought and reform work. Her editorials focused on liberality, justice and mercy.
She was at one time secretary of the Theosophical Society of the United States, and president of the Rochester Brotherhood. She lived an affluent lifestyle in Aldrich, Alabama, a mining town named for her husband, William Aldrich, whom she married April 16, 1889.[2] He sustained his wife in all her work, and she in turn assisted him to carry out a plan of his, whereby persons accused of crime were defended before the court, at the public expense. She served as vice-president of the Woman's National Industrial League, vice-president of the Woman's National Liberal Union, and was one of the founders of the Woman's National University and School of Useful and Ornamental Arts.[3] She died in 1917 in Birmingham, Alabama.
References
- ↑ Gordon 2009, p. 225.
- ↑ DuBose 1904, p. 437.
- ↑ Willard 1893, p. 16.
Bibliography
- DuBose, Joel Campbell (1904). Notable Men of Alabama: Personal and Genealogical (Public domain ed.). Southern Historical Association.
- Gordon, Ann D. (10 June 2009). The Selected Papers of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony: Their Place Inside the Body-Politic, 1887 to 1895. Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-6440-1.
- Willard, Frances Elizabeth (1893). A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life (Public domain ed.). Moulton.
Attribution
- This article incorporates text from a work in the public domain: F. E. Willard's A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life (1893)