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THE
SENECA FA
LLS
CONVENTION O
F 1848
This
con
ventio
n, org
aniz
ed b
y Lu
cret
ia M
ott a
nd
Eliz
abet
h Cad
y Sta
nton, w
as th
e firs
t at w
hich w
omen
form
ally
dem
anded
the
right t
o vo
te.
THE CO-FOUNDERS OF THE NATIONAL WOMAN’S SUFFRAGE ASSOCIATION
E L I Z A B E T H C . S T A N T O N S U S A N B . A N T H O N Y
“May it please your honor, I shall never pay a dollar of your unjust penalty. All the stock in trade I possess is a $10,000 debt, incurred by publishing my paper—The Revolution—four years ago, the sole object of which was to educate all women to do precisely as I have done, rebel against your man-made, unjust, unconstitutional forms of law, that tax, fine, imprison and hang women, while they deny them the right of representation in the government; and I shall work on with might and main to pay every dollar of that honest debt, but not a penny shall go to this unjust claim. And I shall earnestly and persistently continue to urge all women to the practical recognition of the old revolutionary maxim, that "Resistance to tyranny is obedience to God."
SUSAN B. ANTHONY ON HER $100 FINE
WOMEN COULD VOTE IN THE WESTERN STATES AND TERRITORIES BEFORE THE SUFFRAGE
AMENDMENT• Wyoming gave women the right to vote in 1869, when it was
a territory, and was the first state to insist that women keep the right to vote when it entered the union in 1890, claiming, “We may stay out of the Union for 100 years, but we will come in with our women.”
• Utah, founded by members of the Mormon faith, extended the right of suffrage to women in 1870.
• Colorado and Idaho eventually gave women the right to vote as well, in 1893 and 1896 respectively.
• While women had gained at least partial suffrage in many states across the United States prior to the passage of the suffrage amendment, states like Virginia continued to deny women the ballot until 1919.
CARRIE C
HAPMAN C
ATT
The
lead
er o
f the
wom
an’s
suffra
ge m
ovem
ent w
ho dev
ised
a s
tate
by
stat
e
stra
tegy
for w
innin
g vot
ing ri
ghts.
She w
as a
lso
an a
dvoca
te fo
r inte
rnat
ional
peace
, and w
orke
d to e
nd Wor
ld W
ar I
alon
g with
oth
er p
acifi
sts.
SUFFRAGISTS
• People who worked for women’s right to vote. Although many of the people involved with the woman’s suffrage movement were women, there were plenty of men who advocated for women gaining the right to vote.
• Many women who became involved with the woman’s suffrage movement during the early 1840s had played prominent roles in the abolitionist movement, the temperance crusade, or the second Great Awakening, a period during which many women found their voices as outspoken congregation members.
• Suffragists , although ostensibly devoted to equal rights for all, were not above making a few crude, intolerant, nativist, or racist comments – occasionally they appealed to voters by suggesting that if even a “ignorant Irishman” or an African-American could vote, they should be able to as well!
Florence Kelley was a friend of Jane Addams and an admirer of the settlement house movement. Kelley, however determined to make a difference for the immigrant families of America by supervising the conditions in sweatshops and factories across the nation. She eventually became the Chief Factory Inspector for the state of Illinois – an the number one advocate for the banning of child labor in the United States.
FLORENCE KELLEY – TO BAN CHILD LABOR
FRANCIS
WILL
ARD
The
Presi
dent o
f the
Wom
an’s
Chris
tian T
emper
ance
Union w
as F
rance
s W
illar
d. She
wor
ked to
ban
the
sale
of li
quor a
nd clo
se th
e sa
loon
s.
Much more intriguing than the more traditional members of the WCTU or the Anti-Saloon League was the six-foot tall, hatchet-wielding zealot who dressed as a nun and wrecked bars and saloons by breaking up liquor cabinets and busting open kegs of beer – Carry Nation! Nation once burst in on gathering of Mark Twain and his friends, smashing up the saloon and causing quite a ruckus!.
CARRY NATION