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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jane_CobdenJane Cobden - Wikipedia

    Unwin's involvement in a range of world and humanitarian causes led Cobden—who adopted the surname "Cobden Unwin"—to extend her interests to international peace and justice, reform in the Congo, and more generally the rights of aboriginal peoples.

  2. Cobden's third daughter and fourth child, Emma Jane Catherine Cobden (later Unwin after she married publisher Thomas Fisher Unwin), carried on his work. Born in 1851, she was a liberal...

  3. 11 de ene. de 2013 · Jane Cobden Unwin was unusual in urging women to campaign for a peace settlement that would ‘secure due rights’ not only to ‘all white inhabitants’ but also to South Africa's ‘large coloured populations’.

  4. Jane Cobden-Unwin (1851-1947) and Alice Maud Mary Arncliffe Sennett (1862-1936). Both women collected a range of suffrage material, from pamphlets to newspaper clippings, letters, invitation cards, and material objects. Using these eclectic volumes, I argue that their scrapbooks are vital for illustrating the

  5. The archive consists of 7 boxes of correspondence, photographs, pamphlets and newspaper cuttings related to issues of interest to Jane Cobden Unwin.

  6. Jane Cobden-Unwin (1851-1947) was a leading suffragist and free trade publicist, while Annie Cobden Sanderson (1853-1926), was a leading socialist and one of the first militant suffragettes to be imprisoned in 1906.

  7. 4 de jun. de 2007 · The Hungry forties, life under the bread tax, descriptive letters and other testimonies from contemporary witnesses, with an introduction by Mrs. Cobden Unwin : Cobden Unwin, Mrs. (Jane) : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive.