Summary of Primary Source Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s central claim in this primary source is about women’s rights in the United States. Stanton wrote the “Declaration of Sentiments” which was model after the Declaration of Independence. In this primary source, she stands against the government that has led women to suffer under it and declares that under the constitution it is their job to disregard that type of government and demand for a new administration that pursuits “safety and happiness”. Stanton goes on to explain how man has always towered over women and provides evidence to support her argument. She explains how women are not allowed to vote, have to follow the laws without being properly represented, and criticizes how suppressed …show more content…
Her family consisted of her mother, eleven siblings (who mostly didn’t make it), and her father, who was a lawyer that served in the legislature and judicial branch within the federal and state level. Since her father had a well-off job that meant that she lived in a middle/ high-income status indicating she never had to work thus explains how she had the opportunity to concentrate of women’s role in society. In addition to her father’s government jobs, it led to her to be exposed to the constitutional laws and its victims that suffered injustice from it, which influenced her to use the constitution when writing the “Declaration of Sentiments”. Also, it guided her when she spoke publicly to crowds of people. She studied at Johnstown Academy and Emma Willard’s Troy Female Seminary, where it led her to use her skills to organize America’s first woman’s rights convention. Like most women in the U.S., Stanton got married to Henry B. Stanton, who was an anti-slavery abolitionist. Also, she was one of the few women that had a husband that supported her to pursue her goal actively. Her husband’s role in the social reform movement was what motivated her to seek her role in society. She was a representation of what was a feminist because even though she was a married woman she did not take off her maiden name and that action itself shows how bold she was to stress the significance of a woman should be in the …show more content…
She had this proposal of what women should be in the United States, and she fought for it until there was change History reveals the struggles women underwent without notice and how it took decades, no centuries to get to where we are today. However, today women still fight for equality in wages, gender roles, and sexual harassment in the workplace. It may have started with women’s right, but now we have expanded to other topics which implies why Women’s March was created for, which is the purpose to “stand together for human rights, civil liberties, and social justice for all”. In addition, the past reflects how society has transformed and still thrives on a change to be fair, unbiased, and impartial. Not only have women learn from history on how to make a difference in today’s’ culture, but it has influenced other minority communities to stand up like LGBT, immigrants and the
Her role as a leader in women’s equality cannot be overstated; Hill raised her voice in a time and situation in which it would have been far safer and far simpler to say nothing at all. Becoming Anita Hill Anita Hill
She got no jail time and refused to pay the $100 fine. During this time, her work got the University of Rochester to accept women in 1900. Although she passed before there was a change, fourteen years after her passing, her work granted women the right to vote. Her work paved the road for women to fight for their rights and beginning the fight to be equal to men. “The older I get, the greater power I seem to have to help the world; I am like a snowball - the further I am rolled the more I gain.”
But “Stanton” put forward the “Declaration of Sentiments document in the American woman’s suffrage movement” to put forth unity between both sexes in allowing “women to
She was a very outspoken and opinionated woman whom political rivals called “Mrs. President”. Society did not view women as equal to men, but her ideas and words helped them eventually develop laws giving women rights, as she asked for numerous
Susan B. Anthony was born into a Quaker family, with the hope that everyone would one day be treated equal. She denied a chance to speak at a temperance convention because she was a woman(Susan B. Anthony). From this point on, she knew that she needed to make a change. Susan B. Anthony, because of her intense work involving women 's’ rights, highly influenced all of the societies and beliefs that were yet to come. She employed a huge role in our history because of the fact that she advocated for women’s rights, for the integration of women in the workforce, and for the abolition of slavery.
Stanton believed that a public protest of women’s right was the next step to get equality for women’s legal position. By this belief, Stanton tried to make a draft of “Declaration of Right and Sentiments”, which she modeled after the “Declaration of Independence”. In this declaration, Stanton demanded moral, economic and political equality for women. With her friends, Stanton was able to hold the first women’s right convention on 19-20 July 1848 at Stanton house in Seneca Falls, New York. That is why; the convention is called Seneca Falls Convention.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton was, no doubt, one of the most important activists for the women’s rights movement in the nineteenth century. Not only was she the leading advocate for women’s rights, she was also the “principal philosopher” of the movement . Some even considered her the nineteenth-century equivalent of Mary Wollstonecraft, who was the primary British feminist in the eighteenth century . Stanton won her reputation of being the chief philosopher and the “most consistent and daring liberal thinker” of the women’s right movement by expounding through pamphlets, speeches, essays, newspaper and letters her feminist theory . However, despite being an ardent abolitionist during the Civil War who fought for the emancipation of all slaves , her liberal feminist theory was tainted by a marked strain of racism and elitism that became more conspicuous as she started pressing for women’s suffrage .
Lucretia Mott was an official delegate that was supposed to speak at the world anti-slavery convention in London but she was revoked from these privileges because she was a woman. This upset Mott but, it lit a fire in her when she met Elizabeth Stanton because she was a modern feminist. The both of them decided to write “The Declaration of Sentiments” because they wanted gender equality. They saw how many of the women's unalienable rights were taken away due to men thinking they were more important. Stanton and Mott admits, “She had no voice”(2).
During Progressive Era, there were many reforms that occurred, such as Child Labor Reform or Pure Food and Drug Act. Women Suffrage Movement was the last remarkable reform. This movement was fighting about the right of women to vote, which was basically about women’s right movement. Many great leaders – Elizabeth Cad Stanton and Susan B. Anthony - formed the National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA). Although those influential leaders faced hardship during this movement, they never gave up and kept trying their best.
The first Paragraph is the most important, as it sets the tone for the rest of the speech; however, the tone shifts from the harsh and abrasive harping on men, to how society can move forward and bring about balance if women have more of a say in how things are run. Towards the end of the speech Stanton’s tone remarkably differs from the initial tearing down of men, to the pleading for equality, “There is a striking analogy between matter and mind, and the present disorganization of society warns us that in the dethronement of women we have let loose the elements of violence and ruin that she only has the power to curb.”. Here Stanton rests the current chaos of society on both genders shoulders when she says “we” rather than addressing just men. She concludes her speech eloquently and with professional composure, pleading with the government to aid the repair of society with women by man’s
Men should have absolute rule over society. This was the mindset back when women's rights activists were considered rare and unorthodox. In A Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Elizabeth Cady Stanton rejects the status quo and finds solutions to the overbearing problems she sees within society. A concept that has greatly been dreamt over throughout history has been challenged, by a woman. Elizabeth Cady Stanton exerts repetition, allusion, and pathos to express her opinions in favor of increasing women's rights.
Making the view of women-hood one of being civilly dead in the eyes of the law in that day and time. One major resolved issue “That the women of this country ought to be enlightened in regard to the law under which they live, that they may no longer publish their degradation by declaring themselves satisfied with their present position, nor their ignorance , by asserting that they have all the right they want. ”(275) . Stanton worte her rebuttal in a postive manner. Meeting with other like minded women to slove problemmatic issues surrounding there country and womens values
Equality Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a women’s rights activist who was the opening shot of the women’s rights movement with her keynote address at the Seneca Falls Women’s Rights Convention on July 19, 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York. In Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s keynote address she uses metaphors, and allusions to demonstrate that women deserve the rights men have so that women will no longer be seen as inferior towards men. Stanton started the third paragraph by adding the following metaphor “No we shall not molest you in your philosophical experiments with stocks, pants, high-heeled boots, and Russian belts. Yours be the glory to discover, by personal experience.” Stanton included this metaphor to speak in favor of granting women the right
“Maybe the first time that you know you really care about something is when you think about it not being there-you really know-that emptiness is as much as inside you as outside. “ (226) she helped him to find out what is it like to know you always have someone behind your back if you have fall, she taught him what the importance of family is. She was strong for both of them whenever Mr.Hoodhood was not being a great father to her and sometimes him. She also taught him that women shouldn't be treated the way she was, she believed she deserved better, she was a strong feminist, knowing that she can do whatever she wants, like go the college and get her education to become a powerful adult. In 1920 is when women got the right to vote, she was in the time era of 1960s, but you can still tell that woman were expected to listen to men, aka her
Men and women of the past have fought through numerous trials in order to gain freedom for those living today. However, women have continuously been looked over despite the fact that they are imaginative, creative, and possess unlimited potential. While many have donated their efforts to women’s freedom, famous women such as Angelina Grimke, Annie Smith Peck, Bobbie Rosenfeld, Marilyn Monroe, Marian Anderson, and Eleanor Roosevelt, have made significant contributions. While men were leading the industry and everything around it, women rose and fought prejudices during the 1930s and beyond. Women all around have inspired millions, the fight started centuries ago with slavery, women’s rights, and religion.