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・ Harriet F. Rees House
・ Harriet Farley
・ Harriet Fasenfest
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・ Harriet Findlay
・ Harriet Forten Purvis
・ Harriet Frank, Jr.
・ Harriet G. Walker
・ Harriet Gibbs Marshall
・ Harriet Gouldsmith
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Harriet Hanson Robinson
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・ Harriet Harman
・ Harriet Harwell Wilson High
・ Harriet Hayes
・ Harriet Hemenway
・ Harriet Hemings
・ Harriet Henrietta Beaufort
・ Harriet Hoctor
・ Harriet Hollister Spencer State Recreation Area
・ Harriet Holter
・ Harriet Hooton
・ Harriet Hosmer
・ Harriet House School
・ Harriet Howard


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Harriet Hanson Robinson : ウィキペディア英語版
Harriet Hanson Robinson

Harriet Jane Hanson Robinson (February 8, 1825 – December 22, 1911), who worked as a bobbin doffer in a Massachusetts cotton mill as a child, was involved in a worker's strike, became a poet and author and played an important role in the women's suffrage movement in the United States.
==Early childhood==

Harriet was the daughter of Harriet Browne Hanson and William Hanson, a carpenter.
Both parents were descended from early English settlers, but without distinguished ancestors.
Her elder brother was John Wesley Hanson (1823–1901), and she had two surviving younger brothers, Benjamin and William.
Harriet's father died when she was six, leaving his widow to support four young children.
Harriet's mother was determined to keep her family together, despite the difficulty in doing so. Harriet later recalled, in her autobiography ''Loom and Spindle'' , her mother's response when a neighbour offered to adopt Harriet so that her mother had one less mouth to feed: "No; while I have one meal of victuals a day, I will not part with my children." She later wrote that her mother's words on that occasion stuck with her "because of the word 'victuals whose meaning she wondered about for a long time thereafter.
Initially, Mrs. Hanson ran a small store in Boston, Massachusetts, which sold food, candy, and firewood. The family lived in the back room of the shop, all sharing one bed "two at the foot and three at the head" as Harriet was later to recall.
At the invitation of Harriet's maternal aunt, Angeline Cudworth, also a widow, the family moved to Lowell, Massachusetts, a center of the textile industry.
Lowell was a planned factory town. Under the Lowell System, the company recruited young farm girls to work in the mills, building dormitories where they could live at low rents, and hiring matrons to monitor the social conduct of the girls. The company arranged for cultural events, bible studies and other educational opportunities.
However, working conditions were often poor and unsafe and wages low, leading to a strike in 1834.
Mrs. Hanson obtained a job running a boarding house for a textile mill company in Lowell.

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