Tweedy was quoted by the editor in the October 1896 volume of Popular Science Monthly for disclaiming the idea that "women's suffrage is proposed as a panacea for social evils, or that it will usher in a millennial condition.
With her mother's encouragement, Belcher returned to St. Louis to continue her education, applying for Washington University in 1870.
[2] Belcher began her career writing for the St. Louis Democrat to receive a wage while attending university.
[3] From 1889 to 1896, Tweedy wrote for the New York Evening Post and contributed to Popular Science Monthly, or PopSci.
Tweedy was quoted by the editor in the October 1896 volume of Popular Science Monthly for disclaiming the idea that "women's suffrage is proposed as a panacea for social evils, or that it will usher in a millennial condition.
Belcher met her husband, James Fisher Tweedy, while studying at the University of Michigan.