1a. In the videos “Ain't I a Woman” and The United States of America v. Susan B Anthony, both women expressed their disdain that all people weren’t looked at as equal. Both Susan B Anthony and Sojourner Truth felt like if we are citizens of the USA we should be allowed the same rights as men. 1b. Sojourner Truth’s poem spoke to how an African American women (during slavery) wanted the same rights as the white women that they worked for.…
After forming the organization Anthony gave many speeches to convince the country that women should get the right to vote. In the same manner, Anthony and other women would hold peaceful protest and they also went on a hunger strike. Anthony even went to go vote illegally where she was arrested and fined. These actions all payed off for Susan B. Anthony and for women. Susan B. Anthony met with President Theodore Roosevelt to discuss an amendment that would give women the right to vote.…
In addition, to campaigning for women's rights Susan was also giving speeches around the US trying to convince more women and men to support the right for women to vote. During the year 1869, Anthony and Elizabeth came up with the 14th and 15th amendmentsand showed them to the US constitution, they were intended to give voting rights to black men, but would not extend towards women. In 1872, she was arrested for trying to vote illegally for the presidential election. Anthony then tried to fight the charges but ended up with only a 100 dollar fine. She went on to never pay the fine.…
Today I am gonna talk about two people with many amazing accomplishments. Who did more? Who made life better? Who was selfless? Susan Brownell Anthony was born on February 15, 1820, in Adams, Massachusetts.…
After all of her work, Susan B. Anthony was successful in getting women the right to vote. Just a month before she died, Anthony was still an active worker,still fighting for women’s suffrage and attending suffrage conventions. In her last public speech before her death, she closed her speech with, “Failure is impossible” (go.galegroup.com). She believed that a law would pass one day after all she did. In the end, after all of her hard work and dedication,…
Susan B. Anthony was born February 15, 1890 in Adams, Massachusetts. Susan died on March 13, 1906 Rochester, New York. Susan was the second out of seven 7 children in her family. , Hher parents were Daniel and Lucy Anthony. Anthony lived in a very proactive family they were abolitionist, temperance workers, and she was also a part of fighting for women’s rights.…
America was built under a living document that needs to be updated continually. To become a contributing member of society; the law must give us the responsibility to deal with matters occurring in our own communities. The ability to exercise our voting rights is one of our greatest responsibilities and no one can be considered an equal citizen without it. Women’s suffrage is a right that derives from equal citizenship.…
Marquette Jones Susan B. Anthony Trial Paper In November of 1872 Susan B. Anthony was arrested on account of illegal voting. At this point in time women were not allowed to vote, and Anthony found this to be injustice. She argued that the Fourteenth Amendment gave citizens more privileges which women should be entitled to. She worked hard to fight for what she believed in, and had also written many letters prior to her court date.…
Susan B. Anthony was a suffragist and a pioneer for women’s rights. She was a founder of Daughters of Temperance, Women’s Loyal League and The National Women’s Suffrage Association. Anthony delivers a Stump Speech on voting rights in all 29 postal districts of Monroe County, New York in 1872, after being convicted of voting illegally in the 1872 presidential election. During her speech, she focuses on the equal voting rights for women at the ballot just as men have. The purpose of the speech was to gain more suffragist to her cause, in hopes of getting a law passed for women’s right to vote legally within the United States.…
Without the help of women pioneers such as, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, and Ida B. Wells, the 19th amendment would not have been ratified. Susan B. Anthony, saw that it was wrong for women to not have the same rights as men. When Anthony was thirty two years old, she went to her first woman's rights convention in Syracuse. Once Susan left she declared "that the right which woman needed above every other, the one indeed which would secure to her all the others, was the right of suffrage.” After that she spent the rest of her life fighting for the right to vote.…
She believed that the rights and freedoms written in the constitution should apply to women. But it didn’t immediately change the role of women in society. But Abigail Adams believes that women should unite one day…
She told her friend, Anna Shaw, “ To think I have more than 60 years of hard struggle for a little liberty, and to die without it seems so cruel.” In 1905, she met with President Theodore Roosevelt to importune for a right for women to vote. She spoke the now famous words before she died, “ Failure is impossible.” On March 13th, 1906, Susan Brownell Anthony died. It wasn’t until 1920 that women could vote.…
19th Century advocate for the cause of women’s suffrage, Susan B. Anthony, delivered a speech in 1873 following her conviction for the crime of voting. Anthony’s purpose is to argue that the treatment of women during the 19th Century was unjust and unconstitutional. She adopts a respectful and candid tone in order to address the sexism and prejudicial views of society. Anthony uses rhetorical devices in her speech in order to appeal to her audience’s sense of unity and human compassion.…
Susan B. Anthony devoted her life to end women’s suffrage, and fought to prove that women had the right to vote. In the late 1800s voting was not permitted for women, and if they did they might get arrested. Anthony wrote and delivered stub speeches but didn’t have much success doing so. Nonetheless many years after she died her dedication made an impact in women’s right to vote, and in 1920 the 19th amendment was passed. In her speech Anthony talks about ending women’s suffrage, and her story of how she got arrested for trying to vote.…
Martin Luther King Jr. once said “We should never forget that everything Adolf Hitler did in Germany was ‘legal’ and everything the Hungarian freedom fighters did in Hungary was ‘illegal.’” People must stand up for the issues of justice even if it is illegal because without them what will become of their society. Although opponents may say that taking a stand on issues of justice in society is not important, in actuality it is very important for a person to take a stand on issues of justice in society. The strength of the people taking a stand on issues of justice in society is vital in helping others take a stand, making a change, and helping the nation prosper.…