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The woman who is today most commonly known as Harriet Taylor or Harriet Taylor Mill (hereafter “Harriet”) was born Harriet Hardy in London in October 1807.[1] She married the pharmaceuticals wholesaler John Taylor on 14 March 1826;
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plato.stanford.edu/entries/harriet-mill/
plato.stanford.edu/entries/harriet-mill/
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Harriet Taylor Upton - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Harriet Taylor Upton (December 17 1853 – November 2 1945) was a suffragette, author, and the first woman to be vice chairman of the Republican National Committee. Upton was born in Ravenna, Ohio, but...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harriet_Taylor_Upton
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www.harriet-taylor-mill.de/
www.harriet-taylor-mill.de/
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Download unter Publikationen: www.harriet-taylor-mill.de; ISSN 1865-9608; ... She is the director of the Harriet Taylor Mill-; Institute on Economics and Gender, which is Germanys only university based Institute on these topics.
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www.harriet-taylor-mill.de/pdfs/discuss/Discussion%20Pa...
www.harriet-taylor-mill.de/pdfs/discuss/Discussion%20Paper%2001%202007.pdf
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Harriet Taylor, the daughter of Thomas Hardy, a London surgeon, and his wife Harriet Hurst, was born on 8th October, 1807. At the age of eighteen she married John Taylor, a wealthy businessman from Islington. In the next few years Harriet had three children.
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www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Wtaylor.htm
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Wtaylor.htm
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Harriet separates from John Taylor at his request, lives with daughter Helen. JSM and HTM always insisted their relationship was not sexual, but their travels and time spent together caused somewhat of a scandal nonetheless. ... Harriet Taylor Mill dies of tuberculosis. ... Quotes about Harriet Taylor Mill;
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www.macalester.edu/~warren/courses/Mill/bio.html
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Harriet Hardy Taylor Mill (1807-1858) is known as the wife, muse, and possible writing collaborator of the Utilitarian philosopher John Stuart Mill. Scholars have argued more recently that she ought to be viewed as a philosopher in her own right.
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www.macalester.edu/~warren/courses/Mill/harriettaylormi...
www.macalester.edu/~warren/courses/Mill/harriettaylormill.html
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Both John Mill and Harriet Taylor suffered from tuberculosis in the 1830s and 1840s. Harriet took frequent trips to southern France and Italy in search of a warm climate, but because of his job Mill could only take short visits to see her.
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www.pinn.net/~sunshine/whm2003/ht_mill4.html
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