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Julia Louisa Lovjoy and her husband, a itinerant Methodist episcopal preacher, moved from New Hampshire to Kansas territory in 1855. She ran a propaganda campaign that exagerated the bloodiness of the conflict between the pro and anti-slavery sides.
After the Kansas-Nebraska Act was passed Sara Robertson and her husband joined the New England immigrant aid society.
She wrote the book Kansas It's Interior and Exterior Life. Which was second only to Uncle Toms cabin in contribution to the abolitionist movement.
Clarina Nichols moved to Kansas once non-Indian settlers where allowed to. In 1854she joined the New England immigrant aid society.
In the spring of 1857 she moved her family to Wyandotte county where she was the associate editor of the quindaro chindowan anti- slavery newspaper.
Kansas-Nebraska Act and Women