Susan Anthony’s impact on life was really big and helped a lot of people.She gave me a big impact in life and because of her,I realized that I can do whatever I want to do.Because of her I noticed that women have the right to stuff they want to do,and stuff they wanna work on.If she was able to fight for women’s rights and help end slavery,every person is able to fight for stuff they want or stuff they want to end.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton changed lives for many women. She changed the very course of history and government. She changed it through her origins of course. She kept going from middle to end to give women the rights they really deserve.
She exposed the horrible things that were done to the mentally ill at insane asylums. She was a hero to the mentally impaired. 3. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a woman’s rights activist. She led the first organized woman’s suffrage in America.
The abolitionist movement, and the women's rights movement; two movements in the United States political and social history that have shaped the country that we as Americans live in today. But without one woman, which was the backbone of the women's rights movement and a major contributor to the abolitionist movement, the country that we know today may not have become reality. Because of her upbringing as a quaker, Susan B. Anthony believed that all humans are created equal. This belief is what pushed her to become an abolitionist and to become the backbone for the women's rights movement. Today her lasting effect on society can still be seen today in the Nineteenth Amendment of the constitution.
Susan B. Anthony was born into a Quaker family, with the hope that everyone would one day be treated equal. She denied a chance to speak at a temperance convention because she was a woman(Susan B. Anthony). From this point on, she knew that she needed to make a change. Susan B. Anthony, because of her intense work involving women 's’ rights, highly influenced all of the societies and beliefs that were yet to come. She employed a huge role in our history because of the fact that she advocated for women’s rights, for the integration of women in the workforce, and for the abolition of slavery.
Susan B. Anthony led the women’s suffrage movement, a movement that impacted the lives of American women forever. Although Susan B. Anthony participated in other movements, such as the temperance movement and the abolitionist movement, but she mainly focused on women’s rights. As a member of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, she was determined to bring American women their rights. To accomplish her goal of gaining full citizenship for women, she attempted to vote on Election Day, and then suffered the consequence of being arrested. However, this incident did not stop Anthony from achieving her goal.
Being involved in the Women’s rights campaigning encouraged her to take a step further and in result running to be the first ever woman in congress. Being elected into congress meant that she had a voice. She would be able to talk about topics she felt strongly about and would be able to fight for causes she felt were necessary to fight for even if everyone was against
Jane Addams made a very significant impact on America because of her hard work and will to change what she felt was wrong in america. Jane managed to change the lives of many impoverished people in america and also help solve many other issues in America like women's rights and corrupted politics. Jane was devoted to helping people and giving things to those who needed it most which was why she was able to help america in the way she did. Not only did Jane care for poor people herself but she changed many people's opinions about improving life for the poor which helped make more improvements throughout America. Because of Jane strong ambition to make a difference,she made a huge impact on life in America.
She became a community activist and humanitarian after this. Her long-term impacts were more large-scale. She made people aware of slavery in a negative way. She helped slaves reclaim their freedom. She also helped the women’s suffrage movement which fought for women’s rights, especially the right to vote.
In 1874, Susan B. Anthony was jailed for trying to exercise the right that all men were granted but every woman was denied, the right to vote (Document 1). Twenty six years earlier, the first women’s right movement convention was held to discuss the stark disparity between the genders. A fight that would last for seventy years, the fight for the vote, was a pivotal era in the fight for viewing women as equals. This was a fight against society that has little progress for a long time and the reasoning why is clear. The struggle of women is not a unique story, and the denial of suffrage and equality was led by men because of man's fear of losing power and control in society.
Speeches can influence us exponentially and can do so in many ways such as using ethos, pathos, and logos. Susan B. Anthony's speech on women's rights and Chief Joseph surrender speech actually have some very compelling similarities as well as differences. Although they are speeches on very different topics and problems the share the same goal; persuade the audience. Similarly, Susan B. Anthony's Speech uses logos to persuade the audience while Chief Joseph's uses pathos, but the both do so to prove their ideas to the audience.
“It shall be my work this evening to prove to you that in thus voting, I not only committed no crime, but, instead, simply exercised my rights, guaranteed to me and all United States citizens by the National Constitution, beyond the power of any state to deny. ”(Anthony, 1) is a quote from Susan B. Anthony’s famous “Women’s Rights to the Suffrage” speech that inspired change in our great country. This speech was the most compelling of texts because she used solid evidence to support her claim and she uses many different types of figurative language. The third, fourth, and fifth paragraphs were the most important in her speech. This emphasis on ‘We the people’ and not ‘We the white male citizens’ in her third paragraph leads me to my first point.
Rosa Parks has been an inspiration too many people. When she was going through tough times with family she was having wars with other people and trying to protect herself. She was one of those people who wanted to change the world and herself. Rosa Parks is an inspiration to most people because she changed an economy, and she changed history. “I’m tried of being treated like a second-class citizen.”
As can be seen“Education is a fundamentally right for all children” not just for boys, not just for specific social class or a specific gender, everyone has the right to be educated and children should be able to receive that right, they should be able to go to school peacefully with getting shot, wear their uniform without living in fear and to not be afraid to be a girl because women are also people. Meanwhile Susan B. Anthony defended the women's right to vote, to them the government has no just powers derived from a consent of the government, to them this government it's just not a democracy. the hate and oppression of gender differences, where mothers and sisters, the wives and the daughters of every household which are the domain of
Susan B. Anthony FCS 2831 Biography of a Woman Allyson Pierce March 1, 2016 The Life of a Woman Imagine what the lives of women would be like if our world never evolved. Women would be staying home, not being able to seek what a professional job is, not being able to own property and much more. This would be truly discouraging, wouldn’t it? If this were the case for our society today, there would be a lot of uproar.
She gave African Americans more freedom to have more of a choice on what to do in life. She showed us that it took bravery to go somewhere in life and to not be a follower, but a leader. She showed us that an education is worth going to school everyday no matter the hardships faced in order to get an education. She made a huge impact in our society then and is still surprising us today. Melba Pattillo Beals made this world a better place by making bi-racial schooling a thing.