conditions and education should be fixed and not benefit only government officials. Women’s suffrage was a major part of the Progressive Era. They we’re fighting for the same rights that men have. Many people contributed to this movement such as Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth…
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…
The law was passed in 1860. Susan did a lot of other things to ensure women were treated just as equal. She served as a state agent for the American Antislavery Society and worked to secure equal pay for women teachers. She also started an organization to support the emancipation of…
and Mrs. Adams’s letters, written correspondence fosters close relationships that is protected from public scrutiny. Which is the case for Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, otherwise known as the women who lead the rise for women’s rights activism during the 19th century. Stanton held possessed social and civic intelligence that was influenced by her father’s profession as lawyer. When she was young, Stanton admired…
passed the 14th(idk what this is), and the fifteenth amendment stating that race was no longer an issue but they disregarded the gender issue. In 1869 Stanton and Susan B. Anthony formed the National Woman’s Suffrage…
On the second day of the convention, the famous African American abolitionist Frederick Douglass and other men were invited to attend the event. The resolutions were all passed and signed after a drawn-out debate about the importance of female enfranchisement. With Frederick Douglass’s help, Stanton was able to get the votes needed to pass all 12 resolutions. The public ridiculed the subject of women having their right to vote so some withdrew their support in fear of being mocked or dismissed.…
Anthony was one of the prominent suffragette figures in this era. After being arrested for voting illegally in an election, Anthony made a speech entitled “Woman’s Rights to Suffrage.” In this speech, she explains that she was exercising her “citizen’s rights,” the same ones that were promised to her and “all United States citizens,” “beyond the power of any state to deny” (Anthony). Anthony’s words roused women into action as she said, “Being…
to let them. Susan Brownell Anthony is one of the most influential women in the world. She lived and breathed the fight for women's rights. At one point she even got arrested for fighting for women’s rights. She orchestrated the Women’s Suffrage movement with the help form Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Through her role of women's suffrage movement, Susan B Anthony has impacted the women's civil rights in America. Susan Brownell Anthony was born on February 15, 1820 in Massachusetts. Susan grew up in…
leader. The leader’s name was Susan Brownell Anthony, who was an American women’s rights activist. Although Susan B. Anthony’s decision to illegally vote in the 1872 presidential election was bold and perilous, her actions inspired the long journey ahead in the fight for women’s suffrage. To begin, Susan Brownell Anthony was born on February 15, 1820 in Adams, Massachusetts. Her parents, Daniel Anthony and Lucy Read, were both Quakers. Ira Peck, author of “Susan B. Anthony Dares to Vote!”…
Women's Rights in the 1920’s and the history of the tremendous fight for equality The roaring twenties was a loud time for probation, gangs, jazz, but the the women’s rights movement roared louder. While researching the women’s rights I learned about the influential women who fought for equality and defined what it meant to be a woman in a free world. In this paper I have organized my topic in 5 categories. The first being the history of Women’s suffrage and then the rights and restrictions…