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・ Frances Walsingham
・ Frances Ward
・ Frances Ward (priest)
・ Frances Watts
・ Frances Wayne
・ Frances Weston
・ Frances Wetherall
・ Frances White
・ Frances White (disambiguation)
・ Frances Whitmore
・ Frances Wick
・ Frances Willard
・ Frances Willard (magician)
・ Frances Willard (suffragist)
・ Frances Willard House
Frances Willard House (Evanston, Illinois)
・ Frances Willard Schoolhouse
・ Frances Williams
・ Frances Wilson
・ Frances Wilson (writer)
・ Frances Wilson Grayson
・ Frances Winfield
・ Frances Winwar
・ Frances Wisebart Jacobs
・ Frances Wood
・ Frances Wood (disambiguation)
・ Frances Wright
・ Frances Wright (disambiguation)
・ Frances Wynne
・ Frances Xavier Cabrini


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Frances Willard House (Evanston, Illinois) : ウィキペディア英語版
Frances Willard House (Evanston, Illinois)

Frances Willard House was the home of Frances Willard and her family and was the longtime headquarters of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). Willard called the house Rest Cottage because it became a place for her to rest in between her tours and WCTU activities.
==History==
Frances Willard was born in 1839 in Churchville, New York. When she was two, her family moved to Oberlin, Ohio, a town recently founded by ministers who wanted to build a community with strong Christian morals. When she was 18, Willard moved with her family to Evanston, Illinois to attend the Northwestern Female College. She spent the next sixteen years of her life as an educator at a variety of institutions across the county. In 1865, her father Josiah, who stayed in Evanston, built a house, which remains as the southern portion of the current structure. Frances Willard returned to Evanston and moved in with her father in 1871 when she accepted a position as Dean of the Women's College at Northwestern. Unhappy with the role of women at the university, and frequently at odds with University President Charles Henry Fowler, Willard resigned three years later.〔http://pdfhost.focus.nps.gov/docs/NHLS/Text/66000318.pdf〕
Willard's resignation prompted a change in her life. She resumed her position as a travelling educator, but began to focus on the study of temperance. In the summer of 1874, Willard travelled around the East Coast to meet with other temperance advocates. She also became a noted public speaker on the virtue. Returning to Evanston, she helped to found the Woman's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) and was elected its first corresponding secretary and first president of the Chicago chapter.〔
Her brother Oliver died in 1878, and Frances decided to expand her Evanston home that April to accommodate his widow and four children. The next year, she was elected President of the WCTU. After her brother's family moved to Germany, Willard began to rent out the northern section of her house to friends and fellow WCTU members. This section soon became used as an informal headquarters for the WCTU under Willard. Willard died in 1898 and left the entire house to the WCTU in her will. Two years later, the WCTU made the house in Evanston its national headquarters.〔 The WCTU also made the house into a museum dedicated to Willard in that year.〔http://www.franceswillardhouse.org/〕 In 1910, the organization built the Literature Building in the rear of the property.
On June 23, 1965, the house was declared a National Historic Landmark by the National Park Service. When the National Register of Historic Places was founded a year later, it was automatically listed.〔 It was surveyed by the Historic American Buildings Survey in 1967.〔 Museum tours are now offered to the public on the first and third Sundays of every month.〔

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