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The Role Of Elizabeth Cady Stanton In The Women's Rights Movement

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Throughout American history, women have requested and demanded to achieve recognition for having the same legitimacy as men. Naturally born rights, such as access to equal education, and the right to speak out in public were denied to females. Perhaps, the most powerful right they were denied was the right to vote. Though women were considered inferior and given limited roles in society, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Carry Nation played a crucial role in the movement for women’s rights. Women did not achieve this right immediately, but that did not stop them from fighting.
Susan B. Anthony, an influential writer and lecturer, gave women all around the world a chance to play an important role in the development of our country. …show more content…

She organized the Seneca Falls Convention, the very first women’s rights convention, where she created a declaration that proposed that women deserve the equal right to vote. Stanton was not only drawn to helping women, but she was inspired to help African Americans gain rights as well. Through the abolitionist movement, Stanton formed a partnership with Susan B. Anthony. The two formed the National Women’s Loyal League in support of the abolition of slavery, which resulted in the 13th Amendment of the Constitution. After the slaves were freed, Stanton and Anthony worked tirelessly to ensure women would get the same freedoms. In 1869, the National Women Suffrage Association was founded, the organization that eventually acquired the Nineteenth Amendment giving the women’s right to …show more content…

During this time, it was not easy for women to be a part of society in our country. Women were thought to be the slaves of men, “Queens of the Home”, and had very little civil rights. Powerful women like Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Carry Nation achieved incredible accomplishments for women all over the world to have the right to vote. Elizabeth Cady Stanton said, “The prolonged slavery of women is the darkest page in human history” (Stanton). Perhaps, Stanton was right. Today, society often takes our rights for granted so much that it is easy to forget that if it had not been for average women taking a stand for what they believe in, we would not be where we are today. There was a great amount of pain and suffering behind the push to end Women’s

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