Emma Winner Rogers

(1891),[2] The social failure of the city (1898), The Journal of a Country Woman (1912), and Why not complete the enfranchisement of women (1912).

Isaac Winner, D. D., were clergymen of the Methodist Episcopal Church and natives of New Jersey.

[4][1] For six years, she was the corresponding secretary of the Woman's Home Missionary Society of Detroit Conference, and later, the honorary president of the Rock River Conference Woman's Home Missionary Society.

[4][1] Rogers was specially interested in literary work in the line of social science and political economy, and was a contributor on those subjects to various papers and periodicals.

[4] In 1876,[5] she married Henry Wade Rogers, of Buffalo, New York, dean of the University of Michigan Law School, then the president of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois,[4] and afterwards dean of Yale Law School.

The Journal of a Country Woman , 1912