...Susan Brownell Anthony One of the things that makes America to the country it is today is democracy. Without Susan Brownell Anthony though, democracy would not be possible. Susan B. Anthony spent her whole life to the women’s suffrage movement, the movement that fought for the women’s right to vote. Without her women would probably not have the right to vote until way later and if women do not have the right to vote, it would not be a democracy. Early Life Susan Brownell Anthony was born on February 15, 1820 in Adams Massachusetts (Susan B. Anthony Biography.). Her fathers name is Daniel Anthony and her mother’s name is Lucy Read and out of eight children she was the second oldest (McPherson). Her family was part of a religious group called...
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...speech “Women's Rights to the Suffrage” Susan B. Anthony persuades the citizens to let African Americans have the right to vote it is also illegal to not let women or everyone have the right to vote. This speech is the most impactful to me because Susan B Anthony was the only African American in her time to fight for her rights and the right to vote. Susan B Anthony says that women should have equal rights as white men did. “ It was we, the people; not we the white male” the reason why I choose that is because susan says “ we the people’ and she is talking about we the black women. The reason why she is fighting for their right to vote is because the only citizens allowed to vote were the white male citizens if the black woman were caught voting they would be brought into the streets and beaten half to death and it was illegal to not let women vote. This provides evidence to support...
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...Susan B. Anthony "I think the girl who is able to earn her own living and pay her own way should be as happy as anybody on earth." -Susan B. Anthony We have rights too! Susan B. Anthony is hero to woman, She has done so many things to become a hero. She is a strong, confident woman who has a great heart. She is the reason I have rights to do things like make a living not having my husband telling me what I have to do. But she did way more then give women rights. From the time Susan B. Anthony was young she could understand that men and women were not equal. By the time Susan was six she could fix a dinner pail by the time she was ten she could fix a whole dinner. Susan B. Anthony's Dad was very into education and wanted his daughters to have a good education. Susan began attending the district school. Susan was an avid reader and an excellent student. Susan went to New Rochelle, New York to teach at a boarding school and her next job in Center Fall she had a chance to show how much she knew....
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...Susan B. Anthony is well known for not giving her seat up on a bus. However, many people do not recall the other extraordinary events that took place thanks to her. Anthony was an African American woman, and during the 1800’s African Americans were not treated equally and neither were women of any color. Women had no rights to do anything. Many thought that women’s sole purpose was to slave in a kitchen and teach young kids. Thus, Anthony became a teacher. Where she fed young minds her brilliance that was about to come forth in the following years. Susan B. Anthony was born on February 15,1820. She was the second oldest out of eight children, but unfortunately two of her siblings died. One died during birth and the other died at a very young...
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...Suffrage: the right to vote in political elections. Up until 1920 this definition only applied to men, and Susan B. Anthony was the woman who helped changed that. Susan B. Anthony was a women’s rights activist and political activist figure all through the 1800’s and many of her ideas are ones that we still adhere to today. She fought against slavery and for women’s property rights, but what she is most well known for is her work with the women’s suffrage movement and her trial in 1873. What Susan B. Anthony fought for and achieved are reasons why she is unarguably one of the most influential women in women’s rights history. Susan B. anthony was a reformist, believing in gradual change rather than a...
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...of Married Women in the Late 1800’s Married women in the late 1800’s during Kate Chopin’s time did not have rights and were considered to be the property of their husbands. Kate Chopin is a well-renowned author known for her writing about women’s lives and her support for the suffrage movement. Married women during the late 1800’s in Kate Chopin’s time were oppressed because they did not have rights to their property, did not have the right to vote, and were not considered to be equal to men. Women in the late 1800’s did not have rights to their own property as everything was considered to be their husbands. Women fought a long battle to just gain the rights to land that was already theirs. The “Declaration of Sentiments” created...
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...without Babe Ruth, comedy without Jim Carrey, and women’s right to vote without Susan B. Anthony. They would not be the same. Everyone at one point in time has an obstacle that stands in his or her way. Those obstacles can be simple like not wanting to get out of bed in the morning because one is extremely tired. It may be a huge obstacle like one losing their job and still having to put food on the table. According to an unknown source, “You can either allow the obstacles in your life to be the excuse for your failure or make them the reason behind your success.” Though obstacles may stand in someone’s way of achieving their dreams, if one possesses determination, courage and confidence, nothing can stand in their way. Many people use determination to help them achieve their dreams. Jim Carrey is one example. Jim was an odd child, while he was sitting in his high chair, he would make faces at his parents or whoever was feeding him instead of eating (“Jim,” par 3). As a child he was very shy at school. When his family moved to Toronto he was determined to use his talents of clowning around to help him make some friends (“Jim,” par 4). “Jim told Shane Peacock in Saturday Night that “for some reason I did something where I realized I could get a reaction. That was when I broke out of my shell at school, because I really did not have any friends or anything like that and I just kind of was going along, and then finally I did this zany thing and all of a sudden I had tons of friends...
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... Where did Elizabeth Cady Stanton grow up? Elizabeth Cady was born in Johnstown, New York on November 12, 1815. She had 10 brothers and sisters, however, many of them died during childhood. Only Elizabeth and four of her sisters lived well into adulthood. Her last brother, Eleazar, died when he was 20 years old leaving her mother depressed and her father wishing that Elizabeth was a boy. Elizabeth (sitting) with Susan B. Anthony Not Fair for Women Growing up Elizabeth was exposed to the law through her father Daniel. He was a lawyer who also served as a judge and a U.S. Congressman. She learned that the law was not the same for men and women. She learned that only men could vote and that women had few rights under the law. She didn't think this was fair. She thought she was as good as any boy and should be given the same opportunities. Going to School When Elizabeth reached school age she wanted to go to school to learn. Not many women went to school in those days, but her father agreed to send her to school. At school Elizabeth was an excellent student. She won awards and proved that she could do as well or better than most of the boys. After high school, Elizabeth wanted to go to college. She quickly learned that girls were not allowed into the major universities. She ended up going to a college for girls where she was able to continue her studies. Abolitionist and Human Rights Elizabeth began to believe strongly in the rights of all individuals...
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...unhealthy meat packing industries. Susan Anthony and her fight for women's rights . Body Paragraphs (2-3 paragraphs depending on question) (incorporate details/examples from graphic organizer): During the time of 1890 an percentage of 18.1% children were working due to their harsh living conditions but as the years go on the percentages decreases now during the year of 1920 it was 11.3%. Conditions at the factories were very difficult for the children they had to step on the machines just so they can do the work and sometimes even get stuck in it. An example why children are getting...
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...There are many figures in that helped shape American society, but Susan B. Anthony is one figure that deserves praise for all her accomplishments, influence on politics, and influence on time period. Without her contributions, modern society wouldn’t be close to what it is now. Susan B. Anthony was born on February 15, 1820 from Daniel and Lucy Anthony. Both of Anthony’s parents encouraged her to push toward her cause. Daniel Anthony was a Quaker, believing in the idea that everybody should think independently and speak their mind. Lucy Anthony enlightened her daughter by becoming an icon for the burdens of marriage, igniting a reason to accomplish all that Anthony did ( Batten ). Starting out, Susan B, Anthony became a teacher and a headmistress...
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...Sexism: Got equality? Have you ever had a shot? How about used a car heater? Maybe even a dishwasher? These items that get used almost everyday were created by no other than women. Women have struggled with sexism in the workplace since before they were even given the chance to try to work. They were told they were here to have children, to cook, and to clean, but what men did not know was the fact that women were capable of so much more(Jewell, Hannah). Although sexism has been a key problem in the working industry, as evidenced by putting women in lower paying jobs, women today are putting an end by joining the women's movement pushing this issue into the mainstream. Although there we no movements specifically for women's working rights there...
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...attended an anti-slavery address given by William Lloyd Garrison. This is where she met Susan B. Anthony for the first time. The two women soon became personal and political partners. Eighteen years later, when the Women’s Rights Movement split apart, the two women created the NWSA (National Woman Suffrage Association). Both women seemed to have different lives. While Anthony was much more independent and strong willed, Stanton had married and bared seven children. Even though both women had different lifestyles, they shared the same political goals (Burns 1999). While the NWSA was up and running, the women covered many equality issues, with the right to vote being the most...
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...unaware or uninterested of the implications these movies have. In some cases, one can find violations of women’s basic rights as human beings. These rights are outlined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and John Locke’s Of Civil Government. For example, Disney Princesses almost never have the right to their own property, much less ownership of their own bodies. They are also portrayed as obedient wives with offensive flaws that are later corrected by their husbands. Disney delineates a helpless, subservient role for women in society that undermines the work of feminists such as Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and all those involved with the Seneca Falls Convention; this portrayal encourages young women to put up with violations against their basic rights as human beings. In Disney Princess movies, women hardly ever have the right to their own property and in some cases, have no right to their own bodies. According to John Locke, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, “One Woman, One Vote”, and the Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, these conditions violate their basic right to their property as human beings. In the film Aladdin, all of Jasmine’s suitors were after her power and wealth. Then when she married, her kingdom and assets were given to her husband, Aladdin, who knew only of the glamorous details of royalty and not how to run a kingdom. The ideals represented in these movies are severely outdated. For example in the 19th century it was...
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...WEEK 10: The Second Great Awakening: religious life in Antebellum America/The Seneca Falls Convention and Origins of the Women’s Rights Movement READINGS: Mary Kupiec Cayton, “The Expanding World of Jacob Norton: Reading, Revivalism, and the Construction of a ‘Second Great Awakening’ in New England, 1787-1804,” Journal of the Early Republic 26, No. 2 (Summer 2006): 221-48; Alison M. Parker, “The Seneca Falls Convention of 1848: A Pivotal Moment in Nineteenth-Century America” (Review of Sally G. McMillen’s Seneca Falls and the Origins of the Woman’s Rights Movement), Reviews in American History 36, No. 3 (September 2008): 341-48. ASSIGNMENT: short commentary 1) Watch Episode 2, “A New Eden,” of the PBS Series God in America and answer the...
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...ones who read their story. Susan B. Anthony, an activist for women's rights, and Chief Joseph, the commander of his tribe, are examples of minorities in the American society. Both individuals are victims to the government's prejudiced ways. The authors of both speeches use rhetorical devices to efficiently express their perspective. When people of separate minority groups speak out against their struggles in society, their motivation is often the same. Susan's purpose for her speech was to speak out against the act of injustice in which the government was practicing and that was taking away women's right to vote in America. It was paragraph five Anthony declared,...
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