preview

Susan B Anthony Women's Suffrage Movement

Decent Essays

The Women's Suffrage Movement

The Women's Suffrage Movement may have taken place a long time ago, but the effects greatly impact our lives today. There were many protests and women involved, but only a few are well known.

Susan B. Anthony was probably the most well-known leader, and this is no surprise, since she was very outspoken and passionate. She was born in Adams, Massachusetts, into a Quaker family on February 15, 1820. Susan was a very progressive activist. She was involved in other movements, like the Temperance Movement, which was the attempt to get rid of alcohol. With the help of Elizabeth Cady Staton and Alice Paul, she founded the National American Women's Suffrage Association, also known as NAWSA. She was the second president of this organization. Susan B. Anthony gave speeches around the country, trying to convince others to support women's suffrage. This amazing, influential leader fought for the vote until she died on March 13, 1906. When she died, women still did not have the right to vote, but …show more content…

Staton was born November 12, 1815, to a prominent family upstate in New York. Elizabeth married Henry Brewster Staton in 1840. The couple went to London for an Anti-Slavery convention, and just like Mott, Staton was turned away because of her gender. In 1848, with the help of Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth organized the first women's rights convention. Sixty-eight women, and thirty-two men signed The Declaration of Sentiments- which stated that men and women were equal. Later, in 1895, she published the first volume of a more democratic women's Bible. On October 26, 1902, Elizabeth Cady Staton died. She was a very influential and helpful leader, in the world, of women's rights. Staton was a strong believer in men and women equality, and this is one way she lets us know (Women Who Fought). "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal"

Get Access