She became a teacher’s assistant at Nine Partners, where she completed her course work and while being a teacher’s assistant, she witnessed the unfairness of pay between male and female instructors. While working at Nine Partners, she met her husband, James Mott. They married in 1811 and had six children together, but unfortunately, only five of them survived adulthood.
During the 18th century, a well-known voice for the abolitionist and feminist movements was Lucretia Mott. The Quaker ministry accepted Lucretia Mott as a member in 1818. Supporting antislavery and avoiding all products of slave labor was Mott’s main goal in life. She was one of the founders and became the president of the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society. In 1850, she published her Discourse on Women where she conveyed her argument for equal economic freedom and voting rights for women.
Come 1864, Mott helped establish Swarthmore College and also became lead of the American Equal Rights Association. Mott was elected head of the American Equal Rights Association in 1866, until divided into the National Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage Association. Lucretia Mott died November 11,