- Four little girls
- Two girls watching a lot of birds
- Two girls attracting some birds
- Girl looking at birds in a tree
- Girl looking at the birds in a snowstorm
- Girl talking to a fairy
- Girl ready to do some garden work
- Little girl looking at the birds in the tree
- Two girls reading
- Baby gave the violet to her mother
- Two girls blowing dandelion seeds
- Girl sitting on a branch looking at birdsnest
- Two girls watching the seagulls
- Girl surrounded by birds
- Girl offering some birds some water
- Boy and girl walking hand in hand
- Children (and squirrels) reading
- Girl looking out window at some birds in a nest
- Girl toddler looking at a bird on a plant
- Girl arranging pussy willows
- Red headed girl in blue dress
Little red headed girl standing in blue dress in the garden. - Five girls reading
- Girl enticing a bird with food
- Boy and girl gettingready to fly a kite
- The End
- Girl frowning
Girl frowning - Two little girls blowing bubbles in the garden
Two little girls blowing bubbles in the garden - Girl with umbrella
Girl holding closed umbrella - Ellen H. Richards
- Grace Hoadley Dodge
The Girl Who Worked For Working Girls A group of prominent men and women were sitting in the drawing room of a beautiful home in New York City, talking earnestly. Close by them sat a young girl, the eldest daughter of the house. She shyly added only an occasional word to the conversation, but she gave very careful attention to everything that her elders said. One member of this group was Dwight L. Moody, the famous preacher. The girl listened to him with particular interest, and was deeply impressed by all he had to say. There were often such gatherings in this home. No matter with what subject the conversation started, sooner or later came the question of how to help men and women lead the best kind of lives. It was not strange, then, that one day this young girl went to her mother and said, “I have found out what there is for me to do. I am going to help people.” - Evangeline Booth
The Girl Who Lived The Meaning of Her Name Many a passerby on the crowded London street paused to glance at the earnest, thoughtful face of a slender, golden-haired flower girl and to buy a nosegay from her basket. When her stock was sold this girl, as fair and fragile as one of her own flowers, picked her way through the throng. She presently disappeared into one of the dirty alleyways, where only the poorest of Londoners lived. Children ran to meet her and rough men touched their caps as she passed. The sick woman whose wretched room she entered fell asleep peacefully after receiving a bowl of soup from her hands and a cheery word. For weeks this sweet-faced young girl, who sold flowers or worked at making matches, had been winning the hearts of the poor, discouraged people of this district. She tended their babies and prayed with the lonely old women. These people felt that they had found a friend who was sorry for them and who was always ready to give them aid. They called her the “White Angel.” - Harriet Beecher Stowe
- Frances E. Willard
- Girl playing a flutelike instrument while running through some leaves
- Little girl looking in the mirror
Little girl looking in a full length mirror - Baby and Tom in bed waiting for Santa
- Bot and girl on a snow sled
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton
- Children making a snowman
- Little girl on a swing
Little girl swinging on a swing attached to a tree - Kate Douglas Wiggin
- Eight children
Eight children - Ella Flagg Young
Boy hoeing between the cabbages as a girls reads a book - Girl with a cake
Girl with a cake - Girl studying contents of bathroom cupboard
Girl studying contents of bathroom cupboard - You are it
Seven little children are all pointing at one little girl - Little girl sitting and reading in the garden
Little girl sitting and reading in the garden - Mother cuddling her little girl
Mother sitting in chair cuddling her little girl - Girl feeding birds
Girl feeding birds - Little girl at the beach with many other children
Little girl standing in a puddle at the beach while lots of other children play in the background - Rose-Red's mamma gathered her up in her arms and comforted her
Mother and child embrace - Look at the snowman
Girl showing her little sister that the snowman doesn't bite - Maria Mitchell
The Girl Who Studied the Stars It was an eventful day in the Mitchell home. The parlor window had been taken out and the telescope mounted in front of it. Twelve-year-old Maria, at her father’s side, counted the seconds while he observed a total eclipse of the sun. Not every twelve-year-old girl could be trusted to use the chronometer, an instrument which measures the time even more accurately than a watch. Maria, however, had been helping her father in his study of the stars ever since she could count. Before many years this little girl beside the telescope became America’s best-known woman astronomer. - A Little Girl of Hainburg
A Little Girl of Hainburg - Harriet Goodhue Hosmer
Harriet went to school in Watertown, and later attended a private school at Lenox, Massachusetts. After three years at Lenox, Harriet returned home. She then began to study drawing and modeling in Boston. Often she walked both to and from her lessons, a distance of fourteen miles. By this time, Harriet Hosmer realized that nothing made her happier than to turn formless bits of clay into beautiful objects. She felt that she would like to go still further in her work; she wanted to see some of her ideas take shape in marble. - Girl sleeping
Girl sleeping - Amy Marcy Cheney Beach
At the age of four Amy was finally allowed to play on the piano. Often when her aunt was seated at the instrument, little Amy would stand on a hassock and play with her, making up an accompaniment as she went along. Just as other little girls plan how to arrange their playhouses or how to make new dresses for their dolls, this little girl used to think out tunes. Once, when she was visiting at a house where there was no piano, she composed a little piece of music. She remembered it and three months later was able to play it correctly on the piano at home. She had composed three other little pieces before she was seven years old. - American Queen
Another picture that rises simultaneously before the eyes of the masses as representing those queens in America, to whom more ready homage is paid than was ever accorded to a coronet or crown, is our Frances Cleveland. Ours, because the “Common People” claim her, as only an ordinary, sweet, lovely, modest American woman. - Boy and Girl looking out the window
Boy and Girl looking out the window - Mother breaking up fight among her four children
Mother breaking up fight among her four children