Elizabeth Cady Stanton

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    Sojourner Truth’s Ain’t I a Woman and Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s Declaration of Sentiments are feminist texts given and written, respectively, at Women’s Conventions around the country. Both texts demand equal rights for women. Ain’t I a Woman argues why women should be granted equal rights, while Declaration of Sentiments lists oppressions put on women by the patriarchal society. These are both some of the most influential feminist texts from the first wave feminist movement in the United States;…

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    worked as a teacher. The family became a part in the fight to end slavery. This movement is known as the abolitionist movement. Later, she became the captain of the girl’s department at Canajoharie Academy, which she held for two years. She met Elizabeth…

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    by their own reason and experience” (3). Women did not have the rights to be able to think for themselves. They did not have some of the same opportunities as men did. Feminism is something from the past and has come to the present. Author Elizabeth Cady Stanton wrote the “Declaration of sentiments’’. This was about how women were against being obligated to only being looked at as beneath men. In some societies eyes men were to be the one and only powerful creatures around, while women were…

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    The Women’s Rights Movement is said to have reached its peak when women were given the right to vote, but we know this is not true as women still fight for what they think is their right to abortion and equal pay. The Women’s Right Movement began at the end of the 18th Century to the beginning of the 19th century but didn’t gain moment until the 1830’s to 1840. In response to the Panic of 1837, in 1839, Mississippi was one of the first states to grant women the right to own property with one…

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    development of equality. In the early years of this fight for women’s suffrage small conventions were held such as the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848, where a leading reformer Elizabeth Cady Stanton spoke to an eager crowd of women and men following women 's rights. This movement led to a similar women and friend of Stanton, Susan B. Anthony to travel a’ nd speak as well, most famously her address on women 's Right to vote of 1873 describing her experience and beliefs. Both these women played…

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    Susan B Anthony Idealism

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    the idea that her idealism is rather honorable, as it demonstrates that she was a hardworking woman of integrity. Even after slavery was abolished, she continued to strive to uphold her strong and lifelong ideals. Anthony worked alongside Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Frederick Douglass, two other famous suffrage advocates in American history,…

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    In the speech given by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a leader of the women’s rights movement, (July 19th 1848) Stanton demands that women should be given the same rights, specifically the right to vote, that men have. The speaker emphasizes Aristotle's rhetorical appeals: pathos, ethos, and logos through the use of figurative language, allusions, appealing to religion and others. The speech was written in order to call the nation into actions that would result in equal rights for men and women.…

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    The Seneca Falls Women’s Rights Convention in 1848 was the start of the women’s fight for the right to vote. The convention was organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott, when they were both denied entry to the World’s Anti-Slavery Convention in London. Stanton had written the Declaration of Sentiments, this declaration pointed out ways that “history was a record of men’s injustices toward women,” (Nash, pg. 11.) After the convention in Seneca Falls, New York, more conventions…

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    The Seneca Falls Convention was organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and other influential women. The purpose of this convention was to increase the amount of support for the women’s suffrage movement. It was the starting point for women’s suffrage in the U.S., and it motivated women to learn the skills needed to organize a convention, and a movement. According to Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a “race of women worthy to assert the humanity of women”, was needed,…

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    president one day. The effects of women suffrage led to the start of the powerful feminist movement that changed the way women confronted social standards. Warrren K. Leffler points out, the beginning of women’s suffrage began in 1848 when Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott issued a meeting in Seneca Falls Convention in London to talk about “Social, civil, and religious rights of women” as well as to ratify the…

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