Elizabeth Sandwith Drinker historical marker at 147 N. 2nd St., Philadelphia PA
Occupation
Diarist
Nationality
American
Elizabeth Sandwith Drinker (c. 1735 – 1807) was a Quaker woman of late 18th century North America who kept a diary from 1758 to 1807.[1] This 2,100 page diary was first published in 1889 and sheds light on daily life in Philadelphia, the Society of Friends, family and gender roles, political issues and the American Revolution, and innovations in medical practices.[2]
^Dine, Sarah Blank (2001-10-01). "Diaries and Doctors: Elizabeth Drinker and Philadelphia Medical Practice,1760-1810". Pennsylvania History. 68 (4): 413–434. ISSN 2153-2109. JSTOR 27774359.
^Drinker, Elizabeth Sandwith (2010). Crane, Elaine Forman (ed.). The diary of Elizabeth Drinker : the life cycle of an eighteenth-century woman (Abridged ed.). Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 9780812206821. OCLC 794700724.
and 8 Related for: Elizabeth Sandwith Drinker information
ElizabethSandwithDrinker (c. 1735 – 1807) was a Quaker woman of late 18th century North America who kept a diary from 1758 to 1807. This 2,100 page diary...
American white indentured servant in the household of ElizabethSandwithDrinker and Henry Drinker in Philadelphia. She gave birth out of wedlock to a child...
expatriate Philadelphia Quaker merchant Sandwith B. Drinker (1808–1858) and Susannah Budd Shober (1813–1860). Sandwith made his first trading voyage to China...
graduation in 1906, Drinker was accepted to Bryn Mawr College, but she decided against attending. In 1911, Drinker married Henry SandwithDrinker, a lawyer and...
brother Robert was born in 1845, Henry was born in 1850, and Elizabeth in 1853. SandwithDrinker lived in Hong Kong by 1845: 118 and the rest of the family...
Campbell Soup Company Cecil Kent Drinker (1887–1956) physician, founder of Harvard School of Public Health Henry SandwithDrinker (1880–1965) lawyer and amateur...
media related to Ashbridge Estate. Drinker, ElizabethSandwith (2010). Elaine Crane (ed.). The Diary of ElizabethDrinker: The Life Cycle of an Eighteenth-Century...