Lucretia Coffin Mott, was a woman who shaped the beginning of the women’s rights movement and was a part of the abolitionist movement in America. Lucretia Coffin was born 1793, in Nantucket, Massachusetts (Today in History, January 3). She grew up on the island Nantucket, which is historically neutral (it remained neutral during the revolutionary war) due to the large number of Quakers. She began schooling at the Nine Partners, where she studied English grammar, literature (no works of fiction), geography and twice a week they would attend a Quaker meeting. Lucretia Mott learn of the horrors of slavery during her years at Nine partners, through a man named Elias Hicks, who presented his views of lobbying against slavery to the ears of Nine …show more content…
She drew from her faith to reinforce the need to speech out against slavery and social injustices. She travelled spreading her messages through sermons and advocated for a boycott against slave-made products. She supported the colonization society for a time, but she insisted in immediate emancipation (Bacon, 54). She also created the Philadelphia female anti-slavery society, she wrote in their constitution that they, “we deem it our duty, as professing Christians, to manifest our abhorrence of the flagrant injustice and deep sin of slavery by united and vigorous exertions” (Bacon, 59). Lucretia Mott was able to gather women around her to bring up social issues. She was one of the five ladies at the Seneca fall convention, where the women’s rights movement was born. Lucretia Mott was said to answer issues that men raised about women abandoning their roles, “in a speech of great sarcasm and eloquence” (Gurko, 106). Throughout her life she gained respect of others as she spread her message she was even sent as the delegate to the world anti-slavery convention in London. Lucretia Mott was an advocate for pacifism and social justices, like women’s rights and abolitionism. Lucretia Mott was one of the first women who shaped the women’s rights movement in America. Lucretia Mott is one of the most influential women in American