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Elizabeth Cady Stanton Research Paper

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During the period of 1787 and 1861 new voices emerge in the United States of America, such as, Alexander Hamilton, Abigail Adams, Andrew Jackson, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Harriet Hanson Robinson, Frederick Douglass, John Ross, Harriet Beecher Stowe and etc. In the period of 1787 – 1861, I feel that the most significant voices to emerge, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Joseph Smith and Andrew Jackson. How open was American Society in this period? Elizabeth Cady Stanton became conversant with the Women’s rights activists for the first time for the Anti-Slavery convention held in London (Keene, 297). “From a youthful age, Elizabeth was distinctly mindful of the sexual orientation based force lopsided characteristics that were set up in her days” (Dorothy). …show more content…

According to Dorothy, she stated that, “Women’s rights was a concern to her from young. Rather, her understanding as a housewife in Seneca Falls that prompted her to take action on behalf of women’s rights” (Dorothy). The planners …show more content…

He provided a good example due to the Market Revolution in the early 1800s. Joseph Smith, the founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter Day Saints, or Mormonism, created another model of a religious utopia (Keene, 301). Smith grew up in western New York, where the fires of the Great Awakening burned hot. In Smith’s Christian Religion environment, had a revelation on which Mormonism was based (Keene, 301). The Book of Mormon was published in Palmyra, New York, in 1830 and this town became the site of one of the earliest Mormon communities (Keene 301). Smith was influenced by the widespread belief that the millennium was at hand, bringing with it an end to debt and the return of Christ and a new era of peace, happiness, and prosperity. Smith’s revelations detail struck a resonant chord with small farmers and etc whose experience with the expanding market economy had been largely negative (Keene 301). The revelation attracted thousands of followers. Joseph Smith members were popularly known as Mormons. With the exception of the first generation of Mormon converts, American society does not seem to have been receptive to him; they were pushed from one location to another, and eventually after Smith’s assassination, they moved to Utah. Prior to their exodus the Mormons endured a long period of internal dissension and harassment by their non-Mormon

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