Rachel Foster was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to Julia Manuel Foster and J. Heron Foster, the editor of the Pittsburgh Dispatch.[3] Her parents were progressive thinkers; her father taking the stance that women and men should receive equal pay for the same work, and her mother becoming an activist for women's right to vote, learning from women's rights leader Elizabeth Cady Stanton.[4]
Stanton held suffrage meetings at the Foster home, and Rachel's mother became vice president of the local suffrage society.[2][5] After J. Heron Foster's death in 1868, Rachel, her sister Julia, and her mother moved to Philadelphia, where they joined the Citizens' Suffrage Association.[2]
Career
Foster began writing for newspapers at about age 17, sending letters from California and Europe to the Pittsburgh Leader.[2][5] During this period, she studied at the University of Zurich.[2]
When but 19 years of age, Avery and her elder sister, Julia Foster, were appointed vice-presidents for Pennsylvania of the National Woman Suffrage Association. Two years later, Avery was elected as national corresponding secretary of that body, an office which she has held thereafter, with the exception of two years.[4]
At age 21, she attended the 11th convention of the National Woman Suffrage Association[3] and became actively involved in its work, planning and organizing more than a dozen of the association's meetings across the country in 1880 and 1881.[2][5]
In 1882, she led the Nebraska campaign for an amendment to permit women to vote.[2][3] Later, she disseminated throughout the state of Pennsylvania some 20,000 copies of a lecture by Governor John Hoyt of Wyoming, entitled "The Good Results of Thirteen Years' Experience of Women's Voting in Wyoming".[2]
In 1883, Foster traveled through Europe with "Aunt Susan", as she called Susan B. Anthony.[2] They traveled through France, Italy, Germany, and Switzerland.[2][5]
In February 1888, Foster organized the International Council of Women[3] in Washington, D. C., held under the auspices of the National Woman Suffrage Association. A major undertaking, the council draw in delegates from more than 50 different organizations from seven countries.[2]
In the same year, a few months after the great International Council of Women, of which Avery was the secretary, she married Cyrus Miller Avery, son of Rosa Miller Avery, a prominent advocate for equal suffrage. The couple were equally strong in their advocacy of equal suffrage for men and women, and their idea of equal duties and equal rights was carried out in their home life.[4]
Foster later held the office of corresponding secretary of the National Woman Suffrage Association, of the National Council of Women, and of the International Council of Women.[3][5]
Personal life
In 1887, she adopted a baby girl, whom she named Miriam Alice Foster.[2] On November 8, 1888, Foster married Cyrus Miller Avery (1854–1919), whom she had met when he was a delegate to the International Council of Women meeting earlier the same year.[2] Their marriage was jointly performed by a male pastor, Charles G. Ames of the Unitarian Church, and a female pastor, Anna Howard Shaw, one of the first women to be ordained a Methodist minister in the United States.[2] In addition to Miriam, the couple had two more children, Rose Foster Avery and Julia Foster Avery.[2]