During the early 19th century, a religious revival movement, which was the Second Great Awakening, served as a spark to set many reform campaigns in motion because it added an underlying importance of fighting for rights of all people. By the cause of spiritual teachings, human beings felt that they must improve their society by getting rid of everything that they deemed not acceptable. These reforms not only attracted men, but women, such as Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, as well. Women felt the need to take matters into their hands when it came to procuring their rights. In 1848, women did so by holding the Seneca Falls Convention, where they composed the Declaration of Sentiments. This event helped to pave the way for future women’s rights movements as seen through their protests for women’s suffrage, gender equality, and pay equity.
During the Seneca Falls Convention, women gathered to write the Declaration of Sentiment. In the document the first demand states, “He has never permitted her to exercise her inalienable right to the elective franchise” (History of Woman Suffrage). To succeed in this convention, women took a break. During the Civil War, they took over their husbands’ jobs and temporarily stopped fighting for suffrage to help legitimate the suffrage movement and provide better momentum. They began helping the black slaves achieve freedom. After the civil war, two new
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The authors had the same rationale, to make their objective for equality of both genders and regulate their demands. During Stanton’s speech, she encouraged women to stand up for the rights that they were denied to them and get to a place where they actually want to be, without feeling as if they are