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Mary B. Thistlethwaite Birdsall (1828–1894), was born in Pennsylvania to English immigrants. She grew up on a farm near Richmond, Indiana, where she married Thomas Birdsall in 1848. They had three sons together. She was a journalist, a suffragist, and a temperance worker. She began her journalism career as the woman's editor at the Indiana Farmer newspaper. For about five years she owned The Lily, a newspaper for women, which she purchased from suffragist Amelia Bloomer in 1854. She helped organize the second women's rights convention in Indiana. At that Indiana Convention in 1852, she was elected to be secretary for the newly formed Indiana Woman's Suffrage Association (IWSA), eventually becoming president of the organization. Mary was a vice-president at the fourth National Women's Rights Convention in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1853. She was among the first three women to address the Indiana legislature to present the 1859 Women's Rights Petition, speaking for a half-hour in support of women's suffrage. Her Richmond home is a model of progressive architecture as espoused by Catherine Beecher, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Mary Birdsall died in Philadelphia in 1894 and was interred at Earlham Cemetery in Richmond.

Childhood and family background
Mary B. Thistlethwaite was born in 1828 in Chester, Delaware County, Pennsylvania. She was the sixth of eight children, two girls and six boys. Her father, William Thistlethwaite, a farmer, was born in Aysgarth, Wensleydale, Yorkshire. He married Elizabeth Wetherald about 1814 and they lived in Boynton Parish. William and Elizabeth emigrated to America in 1817 with their first two children. The family lived a short time in Delaware, then settled in Chester. They stayed briefly in Cincinnati after Mary's birth where William worked as a butcher. The family finally moved to Richmond, Indiana, in 1829, settling on a farm just west of town in 1830. William bought and sold several large farms and ran them successfully. Mary's older sister, Eleanor, never married nor had children. Her brother, Timothy, owned various mills in Wayne County. Her brother, William, Jr., purchased the Democratic Herald, a Richmond newspaper, in 1871. Some of Mary's ancestors were active in the Society of Friends, and her father was a member of the North A Street Meeting in Richmond.

Marriage and children
On October 26, 1848, at age 19, Mary married a farmer and fellow Quaker, Thomas Birdsall, at the Whitewater Monthly Meeting in Richmond. The year after their marriage, Mary and Thomas moved briefly to Chester, Clinton County, Ohio, where Thomas's family lived. Their first son, Alvin T. Birdsall, was born there in 1849 and died at age 25 in Brooklyn, New York, where he was working as a dry-goods salesman. His body was returned to Richmond for burial. He left a widow, Mathilda "Mattie" (Hampton) Birdsall. Mattie, who returned to Indiana, remained close to her mother-in-law, even making extended visits to Mary in Philadelphia in the 1880s.

William Wilfred Birdsall (b. 1854) was an educator, author/editor, and for a time, president of Swarthmore College. He married Viola McDill in 1881 and they had three sons, likely Mary's only grandchildren. Hubert H. Birdsall (b. 1856), like his older brothers, attended Earlham College in Richmond and was later a journalist in Philadelphia. He married Ella J. Vandyke in Delaware in 1884. Ella, a Catholic, died of fever in 1898. What happened to Hubert after her death is unknown. William and Hubert were born in Indiana.

About 1859, Thomas Birdsall went to work for his brother-in-law, Timothy Thistlethwaite, in his flour mill for about four years. Thomas also partnered with the Thistlethwaite family in constructing a three-story commercial building in downtown Richmond at the corner of Main and Front Streets.

The Indiana Farmer
D. P. Holloway and W. T. Dennis established the Indiana Farmer newspaper in Richmond in 1851. According to their masthead, they devoted the paper to "agriculture, horticulture, mechanics, and the useful arts." In October 1852, the editors established a "Ladies' Department" and Mrs. Mary B. Birdsall was hired to edit the section. She lost no time in promoting a feminist agenda. The section also concerned home economics and agricultural items, such as reporting on the State Fair. Birdsall encouraged her female readers to support women-owned newspapers, such as The Genius of Liberty, published by Elizabeth A. Aldrich in Cincinnati. Mary editorialized and published stories urging women to improve their minds and find challenging professions, which she believed would contribute to the betterment of their families, rather than detracting from their roles as wives and mothers. Her tenure at the newspaper, while being well-received, was brief, ending in March 1853. The Indiana Farmer 's tenure in Richmond was also brief. It was sold and moved to Indianapolis.

The Lily
About 1848, the newly-formed women's temperance society in Seneca Falls, New York, decided they wish to promote their cause with a local newspaper of their own devise. They formed a committee to name and construct the paper, but soon lost heart in the enterprise. Amelia Bloomer, however, was determined to carry it through and took over the paper, editorially and financially. The paper was probably the first one focused on women and entirely published and edited by women. The temperance committee chair had chosen the name, The Lily, to represent its purity motive. Bloomer never cared for it, but didn't feel right about changing it, so the name remained. At first, the paper's focus was strictly temperance, but Mrs. Bloomer soon began promoting women's rights. Circulation expanded greatly after her proposals on dress reform - the introduction of the Turkish pantaloons and short skirt that became widely known as "bloomers" - made national news. When Amelia Bloomer and her husband moved from Seneca Falls to Ohio, the paper went with them. However, when they decided to move to Council Bluffs, Iowa, far from any means of distribution, Amelia decided to sell the paper.

Amelia Bloomer attended the National Women's Rights Convention in 1853, in which Mary Birdsall also participated. Mrs. Bloomer visited Richmond, Indiana, on an extension of that trip, giving her ample opportunity to meet Birdsall. Bloomer sold the paper to Birdsall in late 1854 and Birdsall first appeared as editor and proprietor in January 1855. Birdsall was assisted by Mary F. Thomas, another Richmond resident and suffragist who later became city physician. Thomas edited the paper in Birdsall's place throughout 1857. The pair continued to publish feminist and suffragist articles until at least 1859. In 1976, a copy of the second February 1859 edition came to light when it was sold to the Richmond Palladium-Item by Arthur Whalen's estate. Mary Birdsall was still listed as the editor in that issue.

During the time Mary Birdsall was associated with them, both the Indiana Farmer and The Lily were published semi-monthly and had circulations of about 3,000.

Indiana Women's Rights Convention
Like many Quakers, the Birdsalls were active in a number of social reform movements including temperance, suffrage, and abolition. At an anti-slavery meeting held at Greensboro in Henry County, Indiana, Amanda M. Way proposed a resolution to hold the first Indiana Women's Rights Convention which the assembly adopted, appointing Ms. Way to chair the committee. The first convention took place on October 14-15, 1851 at the old United Brethren Church in Dublin, Indiana. Mary Birdsall served as secretary and both Mary and her husband signed the organizational papers and constitution for the convention. The second convention was held the following October in Richmond, which Mary helped to organize. At that gathering, the Indiana Woman's Suffrage Association was formed with Birdsall elected secretary, a position she held for several more years.

The attendees at the second convention discussed and passed more than a dozen resolutions pertaining to "elevating" women to equal status with men. They argued that citizenship was a moral and mental condition and that women were, in that sense, the same as men. They wanted women to receive the same education as men, in the same institutions. They encouraged all women to pursue an occupation to support themselves, rather than relying on men, for which they should receive equal pay for equal work. Mary wrote and submitted the convention minutes to several newspapers for publication.

Mary served as a vice president (there was a group of them) at the fourth National Women's Rights Convention that was held in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1853. The 1854 Indiana Woman's Rights Convention moved from Richmond to the capital city, Indianapolis, Indiana, and was held in Masonic Hall, where the local press regarded it with disdain. Despite this, the convention met in Indianapolis the following year and attracted national members of the suffrage movement. James and Lucretia Mott attended and spoke at the convention at Washington Hall in Indianapolis in 1855, as did Ernestine L Rose. In 1858, the convention returned to Richmond largely due to Mary's efforts; it was during this meeting that members of the IWSA composed a petition to the Indiana State Legislature advocating women's rights. At the ninth convention in 1859, Mary Birdsall was elected President of the association. The advent of the Civil War pushed suffrage and women's rights out of view and the next convention was not held in Indiana until 1869.

Indiana State Legislature
On January 19, 1859 the House and the Senate were convened together during a rare joint session of the Indiana State Legislature. Dr. Mary F. Thomas, Mary Birdsall, and Agnes Cook presented the petition for women's rights. They were the first three women to address the Indiana State Legislature. The petition was signed by over one thousand residents of Wayne County with signatures from both women and legal male voters. Dr. Mary F. Thomas was the first to speak. Noting the large, boisterous crowd, she first urged the assembly to take the forthcoming presentation seriously. Then she read the petition. The petition was brief and requested simply that women be granted equal property rights and suffrage.

Birdsall went next, talking for about a half hour. Her speech was described as "a clear and logical plea in behalf of the right of suffrage in woman." Only Thomas's address was published despite the legislative resolution that the addresses of both women would be printed. No copy of Birdsall's address exists today, but detailed information about the presentation was published in the February 1859 issue of The Lily. Birdsall avowed that no permanent improvement in women's condition could ever occur without equal rights, pointing out that "if from time to time there appears a woman rising above traditional prejudice and accumulated obstacles, she must be looked upon as an example of what might oftener have been done under justice." She pointed out that any "inferior" female characteristics were actually caused by lack of opportunity for women in education and employment, not the reason for it, and the only way to ensure self-protection was through the right to vote.

Agnes Cook then spoke on how enfranchised women would be more effective in the cause of temperance. The three women had been given seats at the Speaker's table and there were many women in the audience as well, their voluminous skirts taking up so much room that many legislators had to stand and even the president had difficulty moving through the crowded room to begin the meeting. After Agnes finished her presentation, the joint session resolved into a committee of the whole to put the petition on the legislative agenda, after which the meeting was adjourned and the senate retired to their own chamber. Though there had been some measure of decorum throughout the proceedings, once concluded the men began loudly ridiculing the entire notion of women's rights. The mockery continued in the press.

The following day, the the senate committee assigned to consider the petition concluded that it was inexpedient. The house agreed and that was the end of the matter. Although the legislature did not grant women their request for voting and property rights, the efforts by the three suffragists paved the way for other Hoosier women to fight for the vote by addressing the legislature. To women who were instrumental in the 1859 effort, Amanda Way and Emma Swank, addressed the legislature again in 1871.

Mary Birdsall House
Construction of the Mary Birdsall House, as it came to be known, began in 1859 and was completed in 1860. Mary and Thomas called the home "Brightbank." The Italianate house is located on a large lot at the northwest corner of West Fifth Street and Richmond Avenue in Richmond, Indiana. The builders used bricks from the Thistlethwaite brick yard on an adjacent property. The two-story, cruciform house is remarkably similar to a plan published in 1872 by Catherine Beecher and Harriett Beecher Stowe in their book, American Woman's Home.The book promoted a scientific approach to home design The Birdsall's son, William W., acquired the home in 1896. The house was sold to Charles and Laura Moore in 1899.

Trustees of the Whitewater Monthly Meeting, Religious Society of Friends, acquired the house in 1927 and named it Lauramoore for the previous owner. They used it as a retirement home for the elderly and as a temporary meeting place for worship after selling their meeting place on North A Street. The society extended the building by adding bedrooms, a kitchen, and back stairs. The Lauramoore Home was privately incorporated in 1951 as a non-sectarian retirement home. Earlham College assumed ownership of Lauramoore in December 2010 as a gift from the retirement home company. The house is now known as the Lauramoore Guest House and Retreat Center and it also hosts visitors to the college. In 1999 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 2012, a plaque honoring Mary B. Birdsall was placed on the Lauramoore property in a ceremony that included John Thistlethwaite, one of Mary's relatives.

Later life
Mary continued her community service activities on a committee of women who formed the Union Relief Association. This organization was founded to aid the destitute by finding them employment, and they established a home for orphans and other needy children. Thomas Birdsall was also active in the community. He met with other temperance-minded male citizens of Richmond in August 1867 to form The Richmond Temperance Society. He was elected President of the Society.

Though she had a long association with the Society of Friends, Mary stopped attending meetings around 1869. When the Whitewater Monthly Meeting inquired about her absence in the summer of 1872, she reported that she no longer felt connected with the religion. When they proposed to disown her, she consented and the break was formalized in August. She had the right to appeal, but never did so. Thomas and their son, William, retained their membership and formally requested a transfer to a meeting in Philadelphia in 1886.

Thomas and Mary were living in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, at the time of the 1880 census. They advertised Brightbank for rent in October 1883. In Philadelphia, Thomas ran an agricultural supply business, partnering with his sons, Hubert and William, though they had other business pursuits. Thomas retained property in Richmond and traveled back and forth between Philadelphia and his home town, based on reports in the Richmond newspapers.

Mary died suddenly in Philadelphia on February 1, 1894 and her body was returned for burial in Richmond. Her funeral was originally scheduled to be held in her home but at the last minute was moved to her brother Timothy's home. She was buried in Earlham Cemetery in Richmond. Thomas Birdsall spent his later years in a Society of Friends old-age home in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. He died August 10, 1901 and was buried beside Mary.