Carry [sic] A. Nation And Home. (Printed verso reads: "Mrs. CARRY [sic] A. NATION was born in KENTUCKY as CARRY [sic] AMELIA MOORE. She came to Medicine Lodge Kansas as the wife of David Nation in the early nineties. Her first husband, Dr. Charles Gloyd, had died a drunkard, leaving her with a little girl and a heart of sorrow. She became very sympathetic with those who suffered as she, and began crusading against liquor in 1900. She later lectured in all 48 States, Canada, England and Scotland. She died June 9, 1911 at Leavenworth, Kansas and was buried in the family lot at Belton, Mo.")
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Unknown
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- Kentucky Digital Library
- Contributing Institution
- University of Kentucky
- Type
- image
- Format
- Images
- Language
- English
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- This digital resource may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Physical rights are retained by the owning repository. Copyright is retained in accordance with U. S. copyright laws. Please go to http://kdl.kyvl.org for more information.
- Chicago citation style
- Unknown. Carry [sic] A. Nation And Home. (Printed verso reads: "Mrs. CARRY [sic] A. NATION was born in KENTUCKY as CARRY [sic] AMELIA MOORE. She came to Medicine Lodge Kansas as the wife of David Nation in the early nineties. Her first husband, Dr. Charles Gloyd, had died a drunkard, leaving her with a little girl and a heart of sorrow. She became very sympathetic with those who suffered as she, and began crusading against liquor in 1900. She later lectured in all 48 States, Canada, England and Scotland. She died June 9, 1911 at Leavenworth, Kansas and was buried in the family lot at Belton, Mo."). Retrieved from the Digital Public Library of America, https://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7x696zwx82_1_2734. (Accessed January 22, 2025.)
- APA citation style
- Unknown, Carry [sic] A. Nation And Home. (Printed verso reads: "Mrs. CARRY [sic] A. NATION was born in KENTUCKY as CARRY [sic] AMELIA MOORE. She came to Medicine Lodge Kansas as the wife of David Nation in the early nineties. Her first husband, Dr. Charles Gloyd, had died a drunkard, leaving her with a little girl and a heart of sorrow. She became very sympathetic with those who suffered as she, and began crusading against liquor in 1900. She later lectured in all 48 States, Canada, England and Scotland. She died June 9, 1911 at Leavenworth, Kansas and was buried in the family lot at Belton, Mo."). Retrieved from the Digital Public Library of America, https://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7x696zwx82_1_2734
- MLA citation style
- Unknown. Retrieved from the Digital Public Library of America <https://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7x696zwx82_1_2734>.