What Is Susan B. Anthony's Role In Civil Disobedience?

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Civil disobedience is when a person or group protests a law that they find morally wrong. The person is usually peaceful and will accept whatever consequences arise due to breaking the law (Suber). People use civil disobedience to draw attention to the laws they find morally wrong and to get the laws changed (Starr). Susan B.Anthony was a women’s rights activist. She was a strong woman who dedicated her whole life to gaining rights for women. Susan B. Anthony once said “Men, their rights, and nothing more; women, their rights, and nothing less.” She did not give up on her act, she believed in it and did not give up. She originally began with helping start the American Equal Rights Association. She then started the National Woman Suffrage Association. …show more content…

Anthony’s role in civil disobedience, one must first have knowledge of her personal life. Susan was born on February 15, 1820, in Adams, Massachusetts, Susan B. Anthony grew up in a Quaker family. Anthony was the second oldest of eight children to a local cotton mill owner and his wife however, only six of the Anthony children lived to be adults (History). When Susan and Guelma were in elementary school in Battenville New York, their male teacher refused to teach them long division because of their gender. This angered Daniel so much that he set up a home school in his home, giving up some of his private residence for the school (The). She was denied education because she was a woman so her father started a school in their home …show more content…

Anthony did achieve success using civil disobedience. In 1869, Stanton and Anthony founded the National Women Suffrage Association (History). In 1887 there was another suffrage organization group who wanted rights for women but wanted rights for african-americans first. They came together with Stanton and Anthony forming one organization making Stanton and Anthony president. They began fighting the suffrage at state and federal level; they became successful in 1920, fourteen years after Susan’s death (Susan B.). This success of the ninetieth amendment would never have been made possible without Susan B.