Maria Bolin
Maria Bolin | |
|---|---|
![]() Bolin (1917) | |
| Born | Maria Elisabet Åkerblom 8 May 1847 Falun, Kopparberg County, Sweden |
| Died | 28 March 1919 (aged 71) |
| Occupations | Horticulturalist, social reformer, utility company founder |
| Movement | Women's suffrage, dress reform, health; peace; animal welfare |
| Spouse | Edvard Ludvig Bolin (1841–1885) |
| Parent(s) | Johan Frans Åkerblom and Maria Catharina Norström |
Maria Bolin (born Maria Elisabet Åkerblom; 8 May 1847 – 28 March 1919) was a Swedish social and political activist, horticulturalist, and folk musician whose public life spanned women's suffrage, dress reform, career education, peace advocacy, and animal welfare. Widowed in 1885, she settled in Rönninge, Stockholm County, where she ran a small farm and became a prominent organizer. From the 1890s she served on two committees of the Fredrika Bremer Association, campaigning against restrictive women's clothing and for women's access to horticultural education. She was the first signatory of the 1905 petition to King Oscar II calling for women's suffrage on equal terms with men, chaired the Rönninge–Tumba branch of the national suffrage association, and during the First World War she served on the national central board of the Swedish Peace and Arbitration Society.
Early life
Maria Elisabet Åkerblom was born on 8 May 1847 in Falun, Kopparberg County, to Johan Frans Åkerblom (1806–1886), a clergyman and educator, and Maria Catharina Norström (1815–1874).[1][2]
The family moved twice during her childhood as her father took up appointments as rector of parishes in Västmanland and Dalarna, where he later also served as the county's first state school inspector. He is remembered for encouraging the early literary development of Erik Axel Karlfeldt, later a Nobel laureate.[3]
Her siblings included Carolina (1836–1881), a professional singing teacher; Fredrik Åkerblom (1839–1901), who earned a doctorate, founded a newspaper, and served in the Riksdag; Henrik (1841–1903), a teacher, school inspector, and rector of the Falun teachers' school; Knut Alrik (1849–1924), an engineer and chemist; and Helena Emilia (1856–1935), author of a family memoir. Three other siblings died in infancy.[4][5]
Marriage and children
Maria Åkerblom married Edvard Ludvig Bolin (1841–1885) in 1869; he served first as county notary (länsnotarie) and later as county secretary (landssekreterare) of Kopparberg County.[1][6] Their home was known for its warm hospitality and music. They had four children, all born in Falun: Elisabeth (1870–1877), who died in childhood; Karin Katarina (1873–1926), who later lived in Norway before returning to Sweden; Clas (1875–1912), an engineer and mining school teacher; and Henrik (1880–1947), who left the Göta livgarde (a Swedish army regiment) in 1907 for a career as a singer and actor.[4][7][8]
Edvard Bolin died on 18 November 1885 in Stockholm, after several years of illness, at the age of 44.[9] After his death, Maria Bolin moved with her surviving children to Rönninge in Salem parish, where she would live for the rest of her life.[1][10]
In 1913 she compiled and published Familjen Bolins krönika (The Bolin Family Chronicle), a detailed genealogical record of the Bolin family tracing the line from an eighteenth-century officer of the Swedish East India Company through six generations and across several countries, including branches in Falun, Stockholm, Gothenburg, Moscow, and Malaga.[8][3][a]
Dalarna Animal Protection Society
In 1884, Bolin co-founded the Dalarnes djurskyddsförening (Dalarna Animal Protection Society). At a preparatory meeting in June 1884, she was appointed to the committee charged with drafting the society's bylaws, which emphasized humane treatment of animals, public education, and the reporting of cruelty to authorities. The bylaws established a governing board of eight members and four deputies and required that everyone, regardless of gender, had an equal right to join and serve on the board.[11][12]
The society was formally constituted in December 1884; both Maria and her husband Edvard were elected deputies on its first board.[12] The organization continues today as Djurskyddet Dalarna (Animal Welfare Dalarna), a local branch of Djurskyddet Sverige (Animal Welfare Sweden), one of Sweden's largest animal-welfare associations.
The Fredrika Bremer Association
The Fredrika-Bremer-förbundet (FBF, Fredrika Bremer Association), founded on 3 December 1884 by Sophie Adlersparre and named after the Swedish novelist and women's rights advocate Fredrika Bremer, was Sweden's largest women's organization of the era. With over 2,500 members by 1907, it worked across a broad range of concerns including education, professional training, social reform, and women's suffrage.[13] Bolin was active in two of its specialist committees — the Dräktreformföreningen (Dress Reform Association) and the Trädgårdskommittén (Garden Committee) — from the 1890s onwards.
Dress Reform Association
The FBF's Dress Reform Association had been founded independently in March 1885 before merging into the FBF in May 1890 as a self-governing section.[14] It campaigned against the tightly laced corset (snörlivet), excessively long skirts, impractical outer garments, and unhygienic underclothing, and promoted practical school uniforms for girls. The movement argued that women's clothing was a barrier to physical freedom, employment, and independence.
Bolin joined the association's board (styrelsen) from at least 1892, two years after the merger, and served as its treasurer (kassaförvaltare) from at least 1896.[15][16][17] On 20 April 1894 she delivered the lecture "Den moderna kvinnodräkten — ett hinder för självständighet" (The Modern Woman's Dress — a Hindrance to Independence) at a committee meeting held at the FBF's offices, to great acclaim. It was subsequently published in Idun in two installments, on 27 April and 4 May 1894.[14][18]
The association won a silver medal at the 1896 Stockholm general arts and industry exhibition for its hygienic underclothing designs, an event Bolin attended separately displaying her own handicrafts.[19][20]
In January 1897, Bolin spoke at a large public meeting in Stockholm on the length of women's skirts, co-organised by the association and several prominent female physicians, including Karolina Widerström. The meeting drew a capacity crowd. Speakers argued that long skirts trailing on the ground were a public health hazard, collecting dirt and spreading disease into the home. Bolin went further, claiming that long skirts prevented young women's legs from developing their natural strength and stride. Widerström called on mothers not to wait for fashion to change, but to take the matter into their own hands.[21][22]
The same concerns about women's health and bodily autonomy also informed her 1913 membership in the Svenska föreningen för moderskydd och sexualreform (SFMS, Swedish Association for Maternal Protection and Sexual Reform), founded by Frida Stéenhoff to campaign for the legal rights of unmarried mothers and their children, equal sexual morality applying to men and women alike, and sex education in schools.[23][24]
Garden Committee
Bolin was a founding member of the FBF's Garden Committee, established in autumn 1890 to work for women's access to horticultural education and employment, and remained active in its work through at least 1900.[25][26]
The committee's first initiative was to arrange for women to be admitted to a gardening school run by horticulturalist Rudolf Abelin at Norrvikens trädgårdar[b] in Östergötland. Bolin later described how the committee, "after considerable deliberation back and forth," succeeded in persuading Abelin to accept female students at his newly established school. The first course for women began in spring 1891.[25] Abelin was satisfied with the women's enthusiasm and energy, but the school's finances eventually failed and he was unable to continue accepting female students. The committee then spent several years trying to find placements for women at other estates.[28]
In November 1898 Bolin addressed the committee on the topic "Trädgårdsskötsel såsom yrke för kvinnor" (Gardening as a Profession for Women). In her lecture — subsequently published in Idun (1899, no. 30) — she rebutted several objections that had been raised against women entering the horticultural profession. To those who argued that women would take men's jobs, she gave a sharp reply:
You men are generally quite helpless without us — if you have spent centuries practicing the gardening trade in such a way that it has nearly starved many who made it their livelihood, then it is truly time that we came to your assistance.[28]
She pointed to the greater opportunities available to women in horticulture abroad, noting that institutions such as Swanley Horticultural College in England and the Women's London Gardening Association provided professional employment for large numbers of women, and that similar schools existed in Germany and Finland.[29]
In 1900 she published a further article, "Trädgårdsskolor för kvinnor" (Gardening Schools for Women), in the FBF's journal Dagny, surveying the women's gardening schools that had recently been established and calling for schools to offer full professional qualifications equivalent to those available to men.[26]
Women's Political Suffrage

In Sweden, women who owned property or paid sufficient taxes had been entitled to vote in municipal elections since 1862, but they had no vote in national parliamentary elections and could not stand for parliament.[30] By the early twentieth century, the demand for national suffrage had become a central goal of the women’s movement.
To pursue this goal, the Swedish women’s suffrage movement developed a three‑tier organizational structure. At the local level, women formed branches of the Föreningen för kvinnans politiska rösträtt (FKPR). These branches were coordinated through county federations, which in turn were linked to the national organization, the Landsföreningen för kvinnans politiska rösträtt (LKPR).[c]
Early national involvement
1905 petition to the King
Bolin emerged early as a national figure in the Swedish suffrage movement. She was the first signatory of the 1905 petition to King Oscar II calling for women’s suffrage on equal terms with men.

On 23 November 1905 she co‑organized a large public meeting on women’s political suffrage at the Peoples House in Stockholm. The opening lecture, “Varför skola kvinnorna vänta?” (“Why Should Women Wait?”), was delivered by Frida Stéenhoff, and the meeting drew more than 700 attendees.[31][32]
The meeting adopted a resolution addressed to King Oscar II, urging the government and political parties to act:
The meeting considers the time now ripe for Sweden's women to demand political suffrage simultaneously with the forthcoming extension of the franchise for men, and on equal terms with men.[32]
On 4 December 1905, Bolin and Anna Pettersson formally delivered the petition to the Ministry of Justice (justitiedepartementet). Their names appeared first on the list of signatories, identified by occupation rather than marital title—Bolin as trädgårdsodlare (market gardener) and Pettersson as kappsömmerska (coat seamstress). Twelve additional women added their signatures, all likewise identified by profession.[32][33][d]
The petition argued that women’s suffrage already enjoyed substantial support in both chambers of the Riksdag, and that excluding women from any forthcoming reform would grant citizenship rights to only half the population. It further warned that Sweden risked falling behind Russia and Finland, where broader enfranchisement was advancing. The petition also rejected the idea that a husband’s legal guardianship (målsmanskap) over his wife should bar married women from voting, calling for the abolition of male guardianship alongside suffrage reform.[32][33]

The petition campaign attracted wide press attention. In December 1905, Svenska Dagbladet published a two‑page satirical pro‑suffrage feature by Gurli Linder, imagining a future all‑female government and listing Maria Bolin as Jordbruksminister (Minister of Agriculture) among the mock cabinet—an indication of her rising public profile.[34]
1906 headquarters and mass petition
In January 1906 Bolin played a significant role in the national suffrage campaign by providing the first premises of the Women’s Suffrage Office (Rösträttsbyrån), the LKPR’s operations headquarters. When the office opened on 26 January 1906 at Kommendörsgatan 3 in Stockholm, the rooms had been “kindly given to the association … by Mrs. Maria Bolin,” according to contemporary notes preserved in the Stockholm City Archives. During its brief period at the Bolin address, the office functioned as the administrative and logistical hub for the 1906 mass petition: coordinating volunteers, dispatching petition lists nationwide, receiving completed lists, processing signatures, registering new members, and handling contributions.[35]
Local involvement
Bolin was elected chair of the Rönninge-Tumba FKPR branch at its founding meeting on 24 November 1912 at Mimer's Hall in Tumba where a lecture by Ella Billing on women and social questions drew about sixty attendees.[36][1] Bolin had earlier served on the Rönninge Community Association that had acquired the meeting hall.[6]
In January 1915 she organized a public meeting through the Rönninge-Tumba branch on temperance legislation, arguing for women's right to participate in legislative work.[37] The branch's Birgittadagen (St. Bridget’s Day) rallies under her chairmanship drew large audiences at Mimer's Hall — about 150 attendees in 1916, when Anna Ljungberg gave the main address on St. Birgitta,[38] and over a hundred in 1917, when the economist Knut Wicksell delivered the main address on the need for women's suffrage.[39] At the branch's semi-annual meeting on 5 May 1917 in Rönninge — three days before her seventieth birthday — she spoke on women's citizenship.[40]
During the First World War, Bolin also coordinated fundraising through the local branch for the Hjälpkommittén för krigsfångar (Prisoner-of-War Relief Committee), operating under the patronage of Crown Princess Margareta, mobilizing her suffrage network directly for humanitarian ends.[41]
County involvement
At the county level, Bolin served as secretary of the Stockholm County LKPR federation and was named to its working committee (arbetsutskott) at the annual meetings in 1911 and 1913.[42][6][43] She lectured at branch meetings across the county — at Södertälje in October 1911 alongside Anna Lindhagen,[42] at Sigtuna on consecutive days in May 1913,[44] at the federation's annual meeting at Norrtälje in September 1913,[45] and at Västerhaninge in December 1913 alongside Hilda Sachs — arguing that women's suffrage was a means to broader social reform rather than an end in itself. [46]
Later national roles
Bolin was elected branch delegate in 1912 to the LKPR's national central board (centralstyrelsen).[36] She served as a minutes attester (protokollsjusterare) at the central board's tenth meeting in 1913, closing the proceedings by thanking the executive committee on behalf of the federation delegates,[47][48][49] and held the same role alongside Anna Wicksell at the eleventh meeting in 1914.[50] She again closed the sixteenth central board meeting in 1919 on behalf of the provincial delegates — one of her last public acts before the enactment of women's suffrage later that year.[51]
Swedish Peace and Arbitration Society
Bolin was an active member of the Svenska freds- och skiljedomsföreningen (SFSF, Swedish Peace and Arbitration Society), the country's largest peace organization. Her involvement in the peace movement ran in parallel with her suffrage work and was closely connected to it.
Her principal collaborator was Carl Sundblad, elementary school teacher, peace lecturer, and long-serving officer of the society, who lived in the same district of Rönninge. The two shared platforms on numerous occasions, combining peace advocacy with arguments for women's suffrage. At a midsummer peace meeting in Rönninge in June 1911 she delivered an acclaimed lecture on women's political rights alongside Sundblad.[52]

At the SFSF's annual meeting at Charlottenberg in August 1914 — weeks after the outbreak of the First World War, and held the day before the inauguration of the peace monument on the Swedish-Norwegian border — Bolin was re-elected to the central board and spoke at an outdoor evening peace gathering alongside member of parliament Nils Andersson Berg and other board members. At the meeting they voted unanimously to telegraph Prime Minister Hammarskjöld in support of Sweden's neutrality policy and the wish that Denmark would join the agreement. Carl Sundblad was among the featured speakers at the monument's dedication the following day.[53][54]
At the General Swedish Peace Congress (Allmänna svenska fredskongressen), held over three days in Varberg in June 1915, Bolin objected when male speakers opened their addresses with Mina herrar! ("Gentlemen!") rather than Mina damer och herrar! ("Ladies and gentlemen!"), asking pointedly: Ha vi inte några damer i kongressen? ("Don't we have any ladies in the congress?") She went on to describe how women could assert themselves in peace, temperance, and other associations, and urged the Nordic peoples to use the autumn 1915 peace congress in Copenhagen to decide on collective action. The intervention was applauded.[55]
Bolin was re-elected to the SFSF's central board again in 1916, when membership had risen to 11,500.[56] The society's 33rd annual meeting was held in Uppsala in June 1917, by which time membership had grown to roughly 21,000. At the welcome reception on the eve of the meeting, held in the great hall of Norrlands nation, Bolin spoke of childhood memories of the popular enthusiasm for student military training (studentbeväringen), arguing that combating the romantic allure of war required more than congresses and associations — it demanded genuine faith in the attainability of peace. At the meeting itself, Bolin served as one of the meeting's two secretaries.[57]
In October 1917 she served as a lecturer for a ten-day peace-speaking course in Stockholm alongside Carl Sundblad, Stockholm's chief magistrate Carl Lindhagen, and economist Knut Wicksell.[58]
She was also a member of the Swedish section of the International Committee of Women for Permanent Peace (Internationella kvinnokommittén för varaktig fred), the wartime women's peace association founded at the 1915 Hague Congress of Women.[59]
Rönninge municipal council
In August 1915, Bolin was elected one of seven founding members of the newly established Rönninge municipalnämnd (municipal council) — the only woman among them. While she was listed simply as Fru Maria Bolin in Dagens Nyheter, without any professional designation, the six men were each identified by their occupations or education: a university graduate, a master gardener, an engineer, a farmer, a lay assessor (nämndeman), and a factory owner (fabrikör). To stagger the elections in future years, Bolin and the lay assessor Leonard Andersson served two-year terms, with the remaining five members elected for four years. Among the deputy members was Anna Lindblom, a midwife and Red Cross nurse.[60][61] Bolin was re-elected to the council in 1917.[62] A contemporary tribute described her as lively and forceful in municipal affairs, but always attentive to reasoned argument and respected accordingly.[6]
Business ventures: farming and electricity

After her husband's death, Bolin acquired Sandbäck, a historic farm in Rönninge, Salem parish, named after the brook Sandbäcken that runs through it into Lake Uttran. She worked the farm, which included a small orangery, and later built a separate house, Höganloft, on the estate for her son Henrik and his family.[1][10][6][63][64] Her broader engagement with agricultural affairs is reflected in her membership in the Stockholms läns Hushållningssällskap (Stockholm County Agricultural Society), a body that promoted agricultural improvement and rural development across the county.[1]
On 11 June 1914, Bolin co-signed in Tumba the founding document (stiftelseurkund) of a joint-stock company seated in Grödinge parish, Stockholm County, formed for electricity distribution in the district. She was the only woman among the six founders, alongside J. W. Engwall, Knut Lundström, Richard Isberg, August Andersson, and Alfred Hedlund.[65][66] Three years later, Rönninge Elektriska Aktiebolag was constituted in the neighbouring community of Rönninge, with Bolin serving as deputy auditor.[67] These ventures were part of the early wave of small local distribution companies that drove Swedish rural electrification: between 1915 and 1920 the proportion of arable land belonging to farms with electricity rose from 5 to nearly 40 per cent, and by 1938 about 65 per cent of rural households had been electrified.[68]
Music
Music was central to several generations of Bolin's family. Her father played the violin and served as song teacher at the boys' school in Falun;[4] her sister Carolina became a professional singing teacher; and her son Henrik left the military to train as a singer under Eugen Robert Weiss in Wiesbaden, later performing operetta, cabaret, and Bellman songs alongside his second wife Ellen Maria Hansen.[7][69] Between 1903 and 1909 Maria Bolin served on the board of the Stockholm Music Society.[1]

Bolin herself was a skilled folk musician who played the Swedish lute and several other instruments. Her principal musical venue was with Sällskapet Nya Idun (the New Idun Society), an influential Stockholm society for women in the arts and professions, to whose programs she contributed regularly: closing the annual gathering with lute songs in January 1898, performing alongside her daughter Karin;[70] appearing at the autumn meeting in October 1905;[71] and by 1910 she was named in Svenska Dagbladet as one of the society's leading musical contributors, leading the Idun Quartet, in which her deep alto and droll renditions of Bellman's Joakim uti Babylon were long remembered.[72][73]
She consistently brought music into her public and civic work across more than two decades of festivals, meetings, and political gatherings. In August 1905 she lectured at a Rönninge youth festival on the origins of Nordic folk song, dressed in traditional peasant costume;[74] in November 1906 she sang Runeberg's Bön för fosterlandet (Prayer for the Fatherland) at the Rönninge school inauguration;[75] and in January 1907 she presented Litet småprat om våra folkvisor (A Little Chat about Our Folk Songs) at a Stockholm public gathering, performing on a variety of instruments, and played the lute at a soirée at Folkets Hus alongside a lecture by Frida Stéenhoff.[76][77] She also performed regularly at suffrage and peace association meetings,[43][45][46] on one occasion alongside her son Henrik.[38]
Death and legacy
A tribute written by Maria Dehn and published in Rösträtt för kvinnor on Bolin's 70th birthday in 1917 described her as follows:
Plainly dressed, one might say, with a straightforward and unpretentious manner, striking for the robustness of her figure, her fine profile, and her short-cropped white hair.[6][e]
The tribute went on to describe how she traveled from place to place by trilla, a light, open, single-horse carriage:
...sometimes in sun, sometimes in rain and sleet — with a pile of pamphlets in the box of her one-horse carriage — to arouse interest in her cherished causes: justice for women, peace, temperance.[6][f]
Bolin died on 28 March 1919 in Rönninge at the age of 71 — weeks before the Swedish parliament cast its first vote in favor of women's suffrage on 2 May 1919.[30] She was survived by two of her four children, Henrik and Karin, and two siblings, Knut and Helena Emilia.[78][79]
Her will requested a simple send-off:
My funeral shall take place simply, without flowers, eulogy, or other ostentation. My mortal remains shall, after autopsy, be cremated — a witnessed instruction to this effect is among my papers, and the cost of cremation has been paid in advance. My ashes shall be placed in the family grave in Falun.[63][g]
Bolin held positions in the Swedish women's suffrage movement at local, regional, and national levels, serving as chair of the Rönninge-Tumba FKPR, secretary of the Stockholm County LKPR federation, and provincial spokeswoman at national LKPR central board meetings. She was the first signatory of the 1905 petition to the government calling for women's suffrage. In the peace movement she served as secretary of the national central board of the Swedish Peace and Arbitration Society. She was a founding member of the Dalarna Animal Protection Society in 1884, the Fredrika Bremer Association's Garden Committee in 1890, and the Rönninge municipal board in 1915 — the only woman among its seven founding members. In 1914 she was the only woman among the six founders of an early rural electrification company.
See also
Notes
- ^ The book has since been digitized by the National Library of Sweden and is freely available online at weburn.kb.se.
- ^ The Norrvikens trädgårdar referred to here is not to be confused with the well-known Norrviken Gardens near Båstad, which was established by Rudolf Abelin in 1906–1920, after the horticultural school described here had already closed. The school attended by the Fredrika Bremer Association garden committee's students was located at Björnsnäs estate, Qvillinge parish, Östergötland, and is documented in contemporary sources from the early 1890s.[27][25]
- ^ The FKPR was founded in Stockholm on 4 June 1902. As local sections multiplied across Sweden, the national LKPR was formed on 31 December 1903. Local branches continued to operate under the FKPR name throughout the organization’s existence.
- ^ The twelve additional signatories were: Ellen Dahlbäck, gymnastics director; Hilda Sachs, writer; Ayda Östlund; Ruth Pettersson, coat seamstress; Anna Eriksson, primary school teacher; Anna Clara Romanus, medical candidate; Elin Jansson, shop assistant; Anna Johansson, insurance inspector; Alma Sundqvist, practising doctor; Gertrud Kuno, rosette seamstress; Valborg Ulrich, life insurance inspector; and Anna Lindhagen, child welfare inspector.
- ^ Original Swedish: Puritanskt klädd, skulle man kunna säga, med enkelt framträdande utan förkonstling, intresserande dels genom det kärnfriska i gestalten med den vackra profilen och det vita kortklippta håret.
- ^ Original Swedish: …ömsom i sol ömsom i regn och rusk, för att — med en massa skrifter i baklådan å enspännaren — å olika orter söka väcka intresse för sina älsklingsidéer: rättvisa åt kvinnorna, fred, nykterhet.
- ^ Original Swedish: Min jordafärd skall ske enkelt, utan blommor, liktal eller annat prål. Min kroppshydda skall, efter företagen obduktion, brännas, därom bevittnad bestämmelse finnes bland mina papper; förbränningskostnaden är på förhand betald. Min aska sättes i familjegraven i Falun. The grave (plot no. 0117) is recorded in the Rötter gravestone registry as Familjen Bolin, a sandgrav (sand grave) at Stora Kopparbergs kyrkogård dating from the 1900s, with no surviving burial register.[80][81]
References
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- ^ a b c Nordström 2024.
- ^ Fredrik Åkerblom 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g Rösträtt för kvinnor 1917.
- ^ a b Erlandsson 1922.
- ^ a b Bolin 1913.
- ^ Dagens Nyheter 1885.
- ^ a b Riksarkivet Census 1910.
- ^ Tidning för Falu Län och Stad 1884a.
- ^ a b Tidning för Falu Län och Stad 1885.
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- ^ a b Dagny 1895.
- ^ Dagny 1893.
- ^ Dagny 1897.
- ^ Dagny 1898.
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- ^ Svenska Dagbladet 1896.
- ^ Nordens Expositionstidning 1896.
- ^ Västgöta Korrespondenten 1897.
- ^ Nerikes Allehanda 1897.
- ^ Stéenhoff 1912.
- ^ Svenska föreningen för moderskydd och sexualreform 1913.
- ^ a b c Nordgren 2023.
- ^ a b Bolin 1900.
- ^ Vårt Land 1888.
- ^ a b Bolin 1899.
- ^ Jordbrukarens Tidning 1898.
- ^ a b Hofverberg 2021.
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- ^ Post- och Inrikes Tidningar 1905.
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- ^ Svenska Dagbladet 1910.
- ^ Södertälje Tidning 1905.
- ^ Stockholmsbladet 1906.
- ^ Socialdemokraten 1907.
- ^ Socialdemokraten 1907b.
- ^ Dagens Nyheter 1919a.
- ^ Svenska Dagbladet 1919b.
- ^ Rötter 2017.
- ^ Ärnbäck 2018.
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{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - "Fredrik Åkerblom". Wikipedia (Swedish).
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- Hofverberg, Elin (4 June 2021). "100 Years of Women's Suffrage in Sweden". In Custodia Legis. Library of Congress.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - Jansson Myhr, Karin (17 November 2020). "How electricity conquered the countryside". The history and heritage of Vattenfall. Vattenfall / The Centre for Business History.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - "Qvinliga trädgårdsodlare". Jordbrukarens Tidning. 3 December 1898.
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{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - Landsföreningen för kvinnans politiska rösträtt (1917). Årsberättelser för Landsföreningen och Lokalföreningarna för kvinnans politiska rösträtt 1916. Stockholm: Oskar Eklunds Boktryckeri.
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{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - Nordström, Jonas. "Antavla Britt Bolin". subbe.se.
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{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - "Förlofning: Karl Boyesen och Karin Bolin". Stockholms Dagblad. 15 June 1897.
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{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link) - Stockholmskällan (1907). "Anteckningar om Rösträttsbyråns verksamhet". Stockholmskällan. Stockholm City Archives. Retrieved 26 May 2026.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
External links
- Hus i gamla Rönninge — kulturhistorisk inventering — 1972 cultural heritage inventory of Rönninge properties, compiled by Valter Isander and Salems Hembygdsförening; includes full descriptions and photographs of Sandbäck (object O197) and Höganloft (object O192) (in Swedish)
- Maria Bolin 70 år — tribute by Maria Dehn published in Rösträtt för kvinnor, 1917 (in Swedish)
- Familjen Bolins krönika — Maria Bolin's 1913 genealogy book, digitized by the National Library of Sweden (in Swedish)
- Djurskyddet Dalarna — present-day successor to the Dalarnes djurskyddsförening (Dalarna Animal Protection Society), which Bolin co-founded in 1884 (in Swedish)
- Fredrika Bremer-förbundet — the women's organization, founded 1884, on whose Dress Reform Association and Garden Committee Bolin served from the 1890s (in Swedish)
- Svenska Freds- och Skiljedomsföreningen (Swedish Peace and Arbitration Society) — Sweden's largest peace organization, on whose national central board Bolin served during the First World War; English version available
- Internationella Kvinnoförbundet för Fred och Frihet (IKFF) — the Swedish section of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (in Swedish)
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