“We hold these truths to be self-evident; that all men and woman are created equal.” This quote was said by Elizabeth Cady Stanton. The quote is relating to women not being able to vote. In 1920, it was the first year that woman got the right to vote. Women were not being treated right. They realized when they were trying to end slavery. During one of the meetings, the were put to the back of the room behind a curtain. The reason for change to occur is that women weren’t treated well. They sometimes got beaten by a rod. Another reason is that they didn’t have the right to vote, at all, and all their rights got taken away when they were married. Men and women weren’t treated the same way. They couldn’t vote which made them feel very discriminated.
In the “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions” (1848) a speech given by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a leader in the “American women’s rights movement”, she states that “All men and women are created equal ” (98). She conveys this message by alluding to the Declaration of Independence, she says the rights of men, but yet again makes it so it’s men and women for the same rights, she also uses repetition of saying “he” just like Jefferson used “he”, but Stanton is referring to the American men’s abuses towards women, for example, “he has taken from her all right in property, … He has made her, morally, an irresponsible being” (99). She tells us this speech in order to open our eyes and see how the way they were living wasn’t
Anthony’s speech is historically significant and reached many people in America who eventually saw that women’s suffrage should be achieved. Throughout this essay, I will discuss how she was able to persuade her audiences, what types of arguments she used, and how powerful the speech proved to be in assisting in women’s suffrage. As I begin to explain these topics, I will examine how this led to an increased amount of attention on women’s rights and eventually led to the Nineteenth Amendment being created in 1920. Susan once said it was we, the people; not we, the white male citizens; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people, who formed the union. (Barnett 42).
In spite of this, while working on her movement for women’s rights, Stanton was quoted as speaking against the rights of black men. Stanton’s mindset was that it would be more fair for educated white women to gain the right to vote before black men. She stated that “simple black men who have been enslaved all their lives and have never been given an education should not have the right to walk up to the ballot boxes before us educated women”. It is suggested that the racist comments Stanton made might have merely been a debate strategy (CaucuttCaucus). She knew that her opposing side was largely anti-abolition, so she figured that if she made a remark saying how ridiculous it would be for black men gaining the right to vote before women, she would make a good point for her own argument.
Imagine, during the World Anti-Slavery convention in 1840, two women were stirring up heated controversy because they were not allowed to be delegates, and could not go on the stand to speak simply because they were women. Well, these two women , Lucretia Mott, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton started conversation on women 's rights throughout this convention to each other. It took roughly eight years for their ideas and plans to fall into action. On July 19, 1848, 300 women gathered at the Wesleyan Chapel in Seneca Falls, New York. The convention was a total of two days, the first was intended solemly for women, and the second was for the public, including men.
The passage of the fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution was viewed by some as a blessing and a curse. I would have sided with the National Woman Suffrage Association who did not support the passage of the Fifteenth Amendment. The Fifteenth Amendment is the constitutional amendment that was ratified in 1869 that forbade states to deny citizens the right to vote on grounds of race, color,or “previous condition of servitude.” I would have sided with the National Woman Suffrage Association because Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony believed that instead of supporting the Fifteenth Amendment as it was, women’s rights activists should fight for women to be included as well. The National Woman Suffrage Association was a suffrage group
But this revolutionary time started clearing the path for equality, something we are still fighting for today. “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal” (Thomas Jefferson, 1776) This statement was produced hundreds of years ago by Thomas Jefferson. At the time, a statement like this was new. Although it states that all men are created equal, it is not inclusive of men of colour, or women.
Women were not anywhere close to being equal to men like
President of the National Woman Suffrage Association and leader of the first women’s rights movement, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, in her speech the Seneca Falls Convention Keynote Address in Seneca Falls, New York, convinces the audience to take a stand for women’s rights. Stanton’s purpose is to gather enough people to stand up for women and their right to vote which is imbedded in the Constitution but is taken away from them based off of sex. She adopts a compassionate tone in order to justify to the women who attended the convention that their rights are theirs, but they have to fight to get them. Stanton’s use of logos within her speech helps get her purpose across because it appeals to the audience’s logical side.
"Over the past century, women in the United States and around the world have made great strides in the fight to gain economic, social and political equality. Since 1950, the percentage of women participating in the labor force has nearly doubled, from about 34 percent of women holding jobs outside the home. . . " Although men hated the fact that women wanted the right to vote and
In the “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions,” Elizabeth Cady Stanton talks about how women have been oppressed since the beginning of time and the resolutions that need to be made in the government, so that women receive the rights they are entitled to. As a women in the U.S., I am very thankful for this speech and the author. Without the creation of this speech maybe American women would have never received the right to vote or to reach their full potential. While I read this eloquent piece of literature, I find that I share a common point of view with it. For example, it states that,”All men and women are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights.”
Only men had positions in government. Voting and serving on juries, for example, was only for men. In the To Kill a Mockingbird Atticus explains to the kids that only men were on the jury by saying “ ‘I guess it’s to protect our frail ladies from
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a leader of the first women's rights movement in American history, wrote speech to address the problamatic differences between gender ineaqualities. Stanton uses a variety of the rhetorical devices throughout her speech to enhance the meaning of her purpose. Some devices that i will talk about during the essay will be the use of pathos, ethos, imagry, and apophasis. Stanton uses pathos when she states, "..gentlemen need feel no fear..." to clearify that men don't have to feel the same a women, women have to feel pain and fear and are constantly worried. Men don't have to worry about that.
It included the statement, “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal” (CUNY). CUNY writes that the women wanted themselves to be included in the fifteenth amendment, along with African-Americans, but alas, their request was denied. It took a long time, but eventually, women got the right to vote in the nineteenth amendment in 1920
Before the 1820’s women were viewed as objects rather than actual spouses. Women 's duties were to take care of children without complaining and from birth were expected to live up to the role of being a mother of many children and to serve their husbands as a domestic employee. Women were considered the weaker vessel, because they are inferior in structure and in physical strength. Many people of the time believed that women should not stray from the traditional paths and should continue to be delicate women working to cook, clean, and care for the children. Individuals such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton opposed traditional women’s gender roles and took apart of the Seneca Falls Convention that called for suffrage rights for women.
For decades only white men were allowed to vote, while slaves and women were deprived of this possibility (Field 114). However, abolitionist and women rights movements, which appeared as the answer to this discrimination, made society to rethink its priorities and create voting laws which took into account needs of all layers of society and guaranteed them the right to