National Women's History Museum, Date accessed. Chicago- Michals, Debra. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Edited by Debra Michals, PhD Lesson Plan. Seneca Falls and Suffrage. Works Cited. How to Cite this page. Additional Resources. Books: Adiletta, Dawn C. Banner, Lois W. A rift soon developed within the suffrage movement. She published her autobiography, Eighty Years and More , in Stanton died on October 26, from heart failure.
Address to the Legislature of New York, National Park Service. Declaration of Sentiments. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Biography. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton Biography. But if you see something that doesn't look right, click here to contact us!
The war over, the women's movement created its first national organization, the American Equal Rights Association, to gain universal suffrage, the federal guarantee of the vote for all citizens.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton's signature headed the petition, followed by Anthony, Lucy Stone, and other leaders. But the political climate undermined their hopes.
The 15th Amendment eliminated restriction of the vote due to "race, color, or previous condition of servitude" but not gender. Campaigns to include universal suffrage in Kansas and New York state constitutions failed in Between and , Stanton and Anthony's National American Woman Suffrage Association worked at the national level to pursue the right of citizens to be protected by the U.
Despite their efforts, Congress was unresponsive. In , an amendment was introduced and Stanton testified. She was outraged by the rudeness of the Senators, who read newspapers or smoked while women spoke on behalf of the right to vote. Between and , a new suffrage bill was introduced in the Senate every year. Meanwhile, the American Woman Suffrage Association turned its attention to the states with little success until , when the territory of Wyoming entered the United States as a suffrage state.
By then, Anthony had engineered the union of the two organizations into the National American Woman Suffrage Association. Colorado, Utah and Idaho gained woman suffrage between and There is stayed until well after Stanton and Anthony's deaths. Nothing seemed to stop Stanton. In the s she traveled across the United States giving speeches. In "Our Girls" her most frequent speech, she urged girls to get an education that would develop them as persons and provide an income if needed; both her daughters completed college.
In she helped organize a protest at the nation's th birthday celebration in Philadelphia. In the s, she, Susan B. During the Civil War, Stanton concentrated her efforts on abolishing slavery, but afterward she became even more outspoken in promoting women suffrage. In , she worked with Anthony on the Revolution , a militant weekly paper.
At that time, the organization merged with another suffrage group to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association. Stanton served as the president of the new organization for two years. She called for an amendment to the U.
Constitution giving women the right to vote. Stanton also worked with Anthony on the first three volumes of the History of Woman Suffrage — Matilda Joslyn Gage also worked with the pair on parts of the project. Besides chronicling the history of the suffrage movement, Stanton took on the role religion played in the struggle for equal rights for women.
She had long argued that the Bible and organized religion played in denying women their full rights. With her daughter, Harriet Stanton Blatch, she published a critique, The Woman's Bible , which was published in two volumes.
0コメント