Indexes and Bibliographic Notes

From Woman Lawyer: The Trials of Clara Foltz -- Online Notes For The Book

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Some notes embed chunks of text. For instance, the Note on Nineteenth Century Newspaper Publishing has a description of the content of the San Diego Bee over a ten day period during Foltz’s editorship. With a few exceptions, the notes follow the order of the book chapters and assume familiarity with the text itself. The Index cites the on-line material by subject.  
Some notes embed chunks of text. For instance, the Note on Nineteenth Century Newspaper Publishing has a description of the content of the San Diego Bee over a ten day period during Foltz’s editorship. With a few exceptions, the notes follow the order of the book chapters and assume familiarity with the text itself. The Index cites the on-line material by subject.  
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<Big>List of On-Line Bibliographic Sources<Big>
 
#Notes on Archival Sources
#Notes on Archival Sources

Revision as of 00:37, 9 June 2010

These notes and essays supplement the endnotes in Woman Lawyer: The Trials of Clara Foltz, providing additional source material for the facts and interpretations. Some are traditional bibliographic notes, mainly listings of essential references with a few words of critical explanation. But since these are on-line and unconstrained by space limitations, I have also included first person essays on my interpretations of materials, sources that contributed to my thinking generally, and descriptions of people and events that influenced Clara Foltz, but whose stories do not fit with hers, or would extend it unduly.

Some notes embed chunks of text. For instance, the Note on Nineteenth Century Newspaper Publishing has a description of the content of the San Diego Bee over a ten day period during Foltz’s editorship. With a few exceptions, the notes follow the order of the book chapters and assume familiarity with the text itself. The Index cites the on-line material by subject.


  1. Notes on Archival Sources
  2. Notes on Women’s Biography
  3. Notes on Women Lawyers History and Individual Biographies (in alphabetical order)
  4. Notes on Friends and Allies (in alphabetical order)
  5. Notes on Early Life
  6. Notes on Family
  7. Notes on the Workingmen’s Party of California (WPC)
  8. Notes on California Constitutional History
  9. Notes on The Women's Movement, Free Love and Spiritualism
  10. Notes on San Francisco Social Life and Clara Foltz's Circle
  11. Notes on Women and Divorce
  12. Notes on Women as Public Lecturers
  13. Notes on Women and Jury Service
  14. Notes on San Diego in the Real Estate Boom
  15. Notes on Nineteenth Century Newspaper Publishing
  16. Notes on Bellamy Nationalism
  17. Notes on the Woman's National Liberal Union Convention
  18. Notes on Late Nineteenth Century Politics
  19. Notes on the World's Fair
  20. Notes on Women at the World's Fair
    1. Notes on the Women's Congresses
    2. Notes on Participation in the Other Auxiliary Congresses
  21. Notes on Post-Fair Suffrage Campaigns
  22. Notes on the New Woman
  23. Notes on Trella Toland and her Autograph Book
  24. Notes on the New York Legal Scene
  25. Notes on Murder Defendants and Equal Justice
  26. Notes on the Oil Boom and Foltz’s Companies
  27. Notes on Progressivism, Suffrage, and Public Defense
  28. Notes on Victory in California -- 1911
  29. Notes on Foltz the Founder of Public Defense
  30. Notes on the Early History of Public Defense
  31. Notes on the Right to Counsel and the Appointed Counsel System
  32. Notes on Foltz's Arguments for Public Defense
  33. Notes on New York Politics and Foltz’s Public Defender Bill
  34. Notes on Comparison of Public Defender Statutes
  35. Notes on Comparison of Progressive Defender with Foltzian Model
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