Lozier was devoted to improving the lives of others, going beyond just treating patients. She hosted Anti-Slavery Society meetings monthly at her own home, and she provided refuge for African Americans during the July Riots of 1862. Once a month Lozier would host Anti Slavery meetings. During times of riots and violence, she would open her home to colored people as well as collect food and medicine for children of the
Colored Orphan Asylum after it had burned down. Her son claimed "her house was a Mecca for all reformers, and bristled like a fortress from garret to cellar with ammunitions of war--documents and pamphlets upon woman's disabilities under the law, arguments and petitions in behalf of suffrage, anti-slavery and temperance, sanitary reform, international arbitration, amelioration of the condition of the Indians, moral education, reform of prisons and insane asylums, etc." She helped found the Female Guardian Society with Margaret Pryor, which visited prisons and poor areas of New York to help mistreated women and children. For 7 years Lozier and Pryor would visit the poor and abandoned in connection with the Moral Reform Society, and often prescribed for them in sickness. She was a well-known
suffragist and was good friends with
Elizabeth Cady Stanton. She fought for the rights of her female students to attend classes with men at the
Bellevue Hospital College by swaying public opinion during public meetings. She further fought for women's rights in the courtroom and successfully advocated for the release of
Hester Vaughan, who had been wrongfully convicted and sentenced to death for infanticide. Additionally, she fought for women's right to vote. When
Susan B. Anthony was sentenced for voting, she called a public meeting to criticize Chief Justice Hunt who sentenced her. She served as the president of many prominent organizations including the Woman's American Temperance League, the Moral Education Society of New York, the
National Woman's Suffrage Association for five years, and the New York Woman's Suffrage Society from 1873 to 1886.
Organizations • Homeopathic County Society •
WCTU •
National Woman Suffrage Association • New York Suffrage League • City Ladies' Suffrage Committee •
Universal Peace Union • New York Abolitionists' Reunion •
American Female Guardian Society • Moral Education Society == Legacy ==