...ENG 2004 Elizabeth Hart September 2, 2010 Reading Response #1 Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments 1. Title: The title relates to the section, because it resembles the three part structure of the Declaration of Independence. The section was written in Seneca Falls at a women’s rights convention. The title also declares that the piece will be a set of sentiments, thoughts prompted by feelings. 2. Author’s Life: The women, Mott, Wright, McClintrock, and Stanton, who wrote the Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiment were born in a time when women had no rights and were simply their husbands belongs. Mott and Stanton lived this discrimination first hand when they were forced to sit behind a curtain at the World Anti-Slavery Convention. From their experiences, they decided to make a change for future generations and declare that men and women are equal. 3. Response/Questions: I found it interesting that Mott, Wright, McClintrock, and Stanton chose to adamantly express that God/the Creator intended men and women to be equal. Also, the women used “he” repeatedly, showing that men were the cause of the women’s grievances and inequality. 4. Protest/Solution: The Seneca Falls Convention protested the inequality between men and women. They protested for the same inalienable rights that men were given to by the Declaration of Independence. Henry David Thoreau from Resistance to Civil Government 1. Title: As indicated by the title, Thoreau writes against the civil...
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...The Seneca Falls Convention was the first women’s rights convention held in the United States. It was organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and a number of women active in the abolition and temperance movements, and was held July 19–20, 1848, in Seneca Falls, New York. The purpose of the convention was to bring about publically the unfair treatment of women, and was attended by about three-hundred people, forty of these people being men. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a prominent nineteenth century suffragist and civil rights activist, handled the responsibility of writing the declaration that would be debated and signed by those in attendance. Stanton based the Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions on the Declaration of Independence, listing eighteen grievances and eleven resolutions all concluding the demand to grant equal rights based off gender. The ninth mentioned resolution arguing for the creation of"elective franchise", or the privilege to vote in elections for public officers, which proved to be the most radical even to Stanton. Stanton being the...
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...The Seneca Falls Convention was the first women's rights convention. It advertised itself as "a convention to discuss the social, civil, and religious condition and rights of woman.” Held in Seneca Falls, New York, it spanned two days over July 19–20, 1848. (npg.si.edu) The first motion in the Seneca Falls debate discussed the Natural Rights doctrine. The women wanted Americans to re examine the rights given to both genders. The doctrine guaranteed equal rights assigns equal responsibilities to human beings of both sexes. Men used the Bible and God’s nature as an excuse to show that women are inferior to men. Women no longer wanted that used against them while fighting for their equal rights. Speaker 1.1 was a forty year old women who used to get beat by her husband when he was drunk. She didn't have any rights over her children or money because she was a “woman.” Speaker 2.1 was a farmer for thirty five years and he argued that God intended for women to stay at...
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...of Seneca Falls, is an inspiring book that shows how the beginning of the women’s movements came about in America. Tetrault is a historian in writing this book and is able to share the history of the Seneca Falls convention and also how some of the most well-known activists made it possible for a right known in America as women’s suffrage. As Tetrault writes this book she begins with a prologue in the beginning that explains some history background to the women’s movement. This showing the flow of the entirety of the book and helps when reading the selection. The author mentions the historians that made this legend and explains them well with background of each...
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...Have you heard about Seneca Falls Convention? I’ll tell you who invented it and why. Also I'm going to introduced who they are and their names and why they invented it. Here it goes hope you like it. So there was a thing called Seneca Falls Convention. It's for women's. It's all about getting rights and being equal. There's 2 women who invented “Seneca Falls Convention”. Their names (Elizabeth Cady Stanton) and (Lucretia Mott). Lucretia Mott was a Quaker and a mother of 5 kids. She also used her organization skills to set up a petition drive across North. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was the daughter of a New York judge. She was an active girl and an excellent student in school. Stanton and Mott joined a group called “World Antislavery Convention”....
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...Before the Seneca Falls Convention, many people kept quiet about the unfairness of the Constitution in regards to women. Women faced many daily challenges that deeply affected their lives and freedom. Women could not speak publicly, own property, divorce their husband, or vote. Those were tough times for all women. At the World’s Antislavery Convention in London 1840, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott met. This meeting of the two women led to a pivotal turning point in the women’s movement. Stanton and Mott were the crucial leaders of the early women’s movement. Together, Stanton and Mott, along with Martha Coffin Wright and Mary Ann McClintock, set the date for the Seneca Falls Convention. They also wrote the Declaration of Sentiments,...
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...Elizabeth Cady Stanton delivered this speech at the Seneca Falls Convention, in 1848, New York. Elizabeth was the eight of 11 children, born in Johnstown, New York. Father of Elizabeth was Daniel Cady, and Mother of Elizabeth was Margaret Livingston Cady. Her Father was a prominent federalist attorney who served one term in the United Sates Congress and later become both a circuit court judge, and in 1847, a New York Supreme Court Justice. Slavery did not end in New York until July 4th, 1827, so like many men, her dad was a slave owner and the slave owner is the one who took care of her and her sister Margaret. Stanton throughout the years lost a total of 6 siblings in their early age, and one brother, Eleazar, died at age 20. As...
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...of Seneca Falls was a book about the memory of the women’s suffrage campaign. This book revealed the founding mothers’ of the American feminism such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Lucretia Mott. It also informed us about other men and women who struggled for women’s rights as well. The story as we know it women was not given equal rights as men; they were treated unfairly because they were females. Throughout the book there were American women who rented a stand for themselves and other women in America. Women were finally ready to face the men and state their belief about how men and women should be created equal. The Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 was the first women’s rights convention in history. This convention lead and created by the founding mothers’ and their peers popularized this myth during the second half...
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...For nearly one hundred years, women had been denied the same rights as men. They were delegated to work in their husbands’ kitchens until the summer of 1848 when the Seneca Falls Convention was held (Loria, 10). This convention was the beginning of the Women’s Rights Movement that resulted in equal rights for women. Before the Movement, females were not recognized as citizens and did not have the same privileges as males. Women were roles were solely in the home and family and therefore, at social and church gatherings they were also considered lesser. Although many women were discontent with their lack of rights, only a couple were actually courageous enough to make a change. Among the few were Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott, two of the organizers of the Seneca Falls Convention. With only five days between their decision to hold the convention and the convention itself, they drew up the Declaration of Sentiments; a declaration that would be...
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...that soulful and realistic person. Often time's women tend to loose themselves in the shuffle of life and they forget about the importance of being a woman. Sure we were placed here to be the nurtures to our families, friends and spouse but aside from all of that we have to nurture [us] first (which can sometimes be complicated when you become use to pleasing others). I plan to show in this essay why it is important that every woman understands her position as a woman and how it is important for us to be as empowered as possible. In 1833; Oblerin College was founded. It was the nations first university to accept women and black students. The next important event was the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848. This convention added fuel to the flame of education and suffrage. The Seneca Falls Declaration has been called “the single most important document of the nineteenth-century American woman’s movement”. At the convention a declaration concerning women’s rights was adopted modeling the Declaration of Independence. Appearing in addition to issues of suffrage were issues of education and employment. The Declaration of Sentiments states: He has monopolized nearly all the profitable employments, and from those she is permitted to follow, she receives but a scanty remuneration. He closes against her all the avenues to wealth and distinction, which he considers most honorable to himself. As a teacher of theology,...
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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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...The Fight for Women's Rights The Women’s Rights Movement started in 1848 to 1920, a long range of time for a long range of protests and rebellions. It was officially started in Seneca Falls, New York, by the first women’s right convention. After two days of discussion and debate, 68 women and 32 men signed a Declaration of Sentiments, which outlined grievances and set the agenda for the women’s rights movement. The first National Women’s Rights Convention took place in the year 1850 in Worcester, Massachusetts, and attracted over 1,000 participants. Since then, conventions were held every year to 1860 with the exception of 1857, for no reason in particular. Susan B. Anthony was a women's rights activist and a social reformer who played a tremendously important role in the Women's Suffrage Movement. She was born on February 15, 1820, in Adams, Massachusetts. After her career in teaching, she became an active member in the temperance movement. Since she was a woman, however, she was not allowed to express herself at temperance...
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...Directions: Complete the following outline in preparation for writing your research paper. Be sure to include proper MLA in-text citation for all your evidence (quotes & paraphrasing). I. Introduction paragraph A. Broad statement: Due to many industrial and social changes during the early 19th century, many women were involved in social advocacy efforts, which eventually led them to advocate for their own right to vote and take part in government agencies. B. Introduction to specific topic and text: The women’s movement of the 1920’s worked to grant women the right to vote nationally, thereby allowing women more political equality. C. Three sub-topic points for your topic 1. Women as public advocates 2. The beginning of the women’s movement 3. The passage of the 19th Amendment II. Sub-Topic 1 A. Topic sentence: Wanting to protect the ideals and morality of the “home”, many women were drawn to social advocacy in order to help correct the deficiencies in the changing 19th century. 1. Introduction to information: Women were very active helping disenfranchised groups who were severely negatively affected by the sweeping social changes in the early 19th century. 2. Evidence: (Quote/paraphrase): Women worked to “improve…the conditions of child workers, the mentally ill, those imprisoned, and the slaves…It was the result of women’s participation in the abolition movement…that women were compelled to address their own political inequality” (Bryant). i. Analysis...
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...large impact on our close-minded world. The Women’s suffrage Movement was one of the most important and successful movements of the 19th and 20th centuries. It all started in 1848 when a bunch of suffragists came together at the first women’s rights gathering in Seneca Falls, New York....
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...The first ever woman's rights convention was held I Seneca Falls in July of 1848. Elizabeth Cady Stanton made her first public statement for women's suffrage. Her call to her to action was codified in the groundbreaking piece of literature known as the declaration of sentiments. This moment in history marks the beginning of the woman's right's movement. The beginnings of the Seneca Falls Convention drawback to the anti-slavery movement, or more specifically the World's Anti-slavery Convention of 1840. The British abolitionist had denied female representation at the convention. Stanton and Mott, who were in attendance of this convention, decided to organize a protest convention back in the states. It would take several years for Stanton and...
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