| Martin Daunton - 2005 - 444 頁
...instrumental in setting up Somerville College, Oxford); and Anne Jemima Clough, Josephine Butler, and the North of England Council for Promoting the Higher Education of Women. The University of London had admitted women for degrees in 1878; Owens opened classes to women from... | |
| Marilyn Lake, Henry Reynolds - 2008 - 345 頁
...Reform. He then accepted an offer from feminist friends, including Anne Clough, to provide lectures for the North of England Council for Promoting the Higher Education of Women, and to write a pioneering essay in women's history: 'Historical Aspects of Family Life', for JE Butler's... | |
| 540 頁
...consequence of Miss Clough's advocacy, a federated body came into existence in November, 1867, calling itself the North of England Council for promoting the Higher Education of Women, Miss Clough being its first honorary secretary. Its object was "to deliberate on questions affecting... | |
| John William Adamson - 1930 - 392 頁
...short courses to women teachers and senior school-girls. The suggestion led in 1867 to the formation of the North of England Council for Promoting the Higher Education of Women, of which Mrs Josephine Butler and Miss Clough were respectively president and secretary. James Stuart,... | |
| Kent Hollingsworth - 1985 - 344 頁
...advanced instruction for women through lectures by university dons. The union of the latter in 1867 into the North of England Council for Promoting the Higher Education of Women marked the beginning of the influential university extension movement. The sizeable audiences the council's... | |
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