Not for Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony was a slow paced documentary, but I found it to be interesting and full of information I did not know. What I like about Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony is that they were different from each other, while complementing each other at the same time. They were both bold and independent, but they lived different lives, which meant they each brought something unique to the table. Stanton grew up in a wealthy family and was discouraged from getting an education from her father. Anthony on the other hand was seen as equal to men and was encouraged to receive an education from her father. Stanton was married and had seven children, while Anthony never got married or had children. It was interesting to see that two different individuals could form a powerful bond in order to make a change. I loved when the documentary stated that Stanton was the words, while Anthony was the legs. I think it is a powerful statement …show more content…
I understand that slavery was a major problem and that it was important for him to free the slaves, but that does not justify belittling someone else’s fight. Frederick Douglass supported women’s rights, and he attended the first women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, NY. Stanton and Anthony fought against The Emancipation Proclamation because it did not help all slaves. Anthony also fed, sheltered, and helped Harriet Tubman get slaves into Canada because she felt it was the right thing to do. Stanton and Anthony tried to help slaves; therefore Douglass could have fought harder for women’s rights. Women did not receive the right to vote until seventy- two years (November 2, 1920) after the first women’s rights convention, and unfortunately Stanton and Anthony never had the chance to
The Roaring Twenties was a prime era for women. Because of the toils of many strong women, ideals were flipped on their head, to America’s benefit. In the late 1800’s, two women, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony, quickly realized that women would not be able to share their political views unless given the right to vote. Because of the fact that women had basically no other societal roles besides housework, they were not respected during this time period.
Both Making Sarah Cry and Susan B Anthony Dares To Vote share the theme of Courage. In Making Sarah Cry, when the boy is being bullied by his former friends because of a scar on his face, Sarah steps up to help him. Even though she knew that they might start bullying her again. In Susan B Anthony Dares To Vote, Susan decides to go and vote even though in her time period, women aren’t allowed to vote. When Susan goes to court, she makes a statement that all women should be allowed to vote because they are the same as men.
Black women didn’t neither did white women. The effort to win our right to vote took 52 years, until 1920 when the 19th amendment was passed. To win the vote women ran 56 referendum campaigns; 804 campaigns in the states; 19 campaigns in 19
Stanton was best known as a suffragist and civil rights activist. Stanton helped to create and organize the first women’s rights convention held in 1848, in Seneca Falls, New York. In addition, in 1863, Stanton worked with Susan B. Anthony, fellow suffragist, to create the National Women’s Loyal League, this group was created to help campaign for a constitutional amendment to end slavery. With persistent petitioning, the league significantly helped to abolish slavery and push for the thirteenth amendment. The dynamic duo, also teamed up to create the National Woman Suffrage Association.
During war times women were allowed to vote since their husbands were out at war and they needed able voters, even though it was limited, it was still progress. They
Anthony has more greatly impacted our nation with her works than Frederick Douglass. Susan created so many organizations, movements, and speeches to help so many areas that needed reforming. She took action in order to help the nation, such as being involved in abolition and women’s rights, and made risky moves in order to reform these things. Although Douglass was impactful as well, I feel that he did not make as many actions towards helping as Anthony did. He gave great speeches, and motivated many people to become involved, but so did Susan, as well as taking a lot of action
Women as Well as Men Susan B. Anthony once told the nation, “men their rights, and nothing more; women their rights, and nothing less.” Women such as herself and Sojourner Truth are the reason as to why women received the rights they have now; civil rights given to all U.S. citizens under the document that laid the foundation of the country, the Constitution. Women’s civil liberties of the past have been resolved thanks to activists like Anthony and Truth who gave females the right to vote, showed how valuable a woman can truly be, and left legacies forever imprinted into our history. With her words and resistance against what was socially unjust, Susan B. Anthony gave women the right to vote. In the year 1872, back when women were not
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.
She became interested in helping slaves be free and fair in a country that negatively viewed African-Americans. During her life as a abolitionist, she met other famous people that shared her same opinion on slavery. Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison are two of the many abolitionists that Elizabeth and her husband met. She and her husband worked with many of the famous abolitionists and shared ideas with them. Stanton used her experience as a abolitionist to be a successful women’s rights
Through here, Stanton was able to travel and do lecturing for 8 month until 1880 (Elizabeth Cady Stanton). One of her popular lecture was “Our Girl”, talk about education and socialization of girls. It was a way to spread the women’s right movement that Stanton fought before. After she stopped lecturing, Stanton spent most of her time to writing and traveling.
His role in the Women’s Suffrage Movement was significant and might not have been possible without have been oppressed as a slave. However, the weakness of this argument is the fact that the 15th Amendment failed to address the issue of women’s rights. In The Contributions of Frederick Douglass, pg. 2, Travis T. mentions, “Susan and Douglass had a disagreement over the passing of the Fifteenth Amendment. Douglass liked the fact that it gave African Americans more rights, but Susan disliked the fact that it left out women. Frederick Douglass believed that it was important to secure the rights of African Americans before working to pursue women rights.”
Althought this impact cannot be solely attributed to Stanton, there are things that can be. For example, In 1854 she was invited to address the New York Legislator and during this visit, her speech was so impactful that it resulted in married women gaining the right to wages and equal ownership of their children. Stanton was also the first ever female candidate for the US
For Elizabeth Cady Stanton it did not come easy, she went through many hard times to prove what she had believed in for years. This book give a very good understanding of Elizabeth Cady Stanton's life and the many struggles she had to overcome to get to where she was when she was finally satisfied with the work she had done. Stanton wrote, “It was often necessary to travel night and day, sometimes changing cars at midnight, and perhaps arriving at the destination half and hour or less before going on the platform, and starting again on the journey upon leaving it, in constant fever of anxiety (p. 121).” If it wasn’t for her and few other women who saw more potential in what women had to offer, i am not so sure that we wouldn’t be fighting the same fight they did all those years
Joe Weiler Dr. Ripley College Reading and Writing 03/21/17 The Call-Out of the White Man: Rhetorical Analysis of Susan B. Anthony’s Speech After Being Convicted of Voting Susan B. Anthony was one of the biggest leaders of the women’s rights movement because many men during the 19th century believed that women were not strong or smart enough to vote in government elections which is why women were not granted suffrage until August 18th, 1920. In Anthony’s speech that she gave in 1872, after being accused of voting in the presidential election, she argues that all of American citizens should have the right to vote and not just the white man. Anthony’s speech made several logical, ethical and emotional appeals which is what made her empowering and memorable speech set the tone for the women’s rights movement for decades to come.
Susan B. Anthony (Susan Brownell Anthony) Susan B. Anthony was a prominent feminist author who started the movement of women’s suffrage and she was also the president of the National American Women Suffrage Association. Anthony was in favor of abolitionism as she was a fierce activist in the anti-slavery movement before the civil war. Susan Anthony was born on February 15, 1820, in Adams, Massachusetts, and before becoming a famous feminist figure, she worked as a teacher. Anthony grew up in a Quaker family that made her spend her time working on social causes. And her father was an owner of a local cotton mill.