Elizabeth Cady Stanton: The Women's Rights Movement

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Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a writer, lecturer, reformer and preeminent philosopher of the women’s rights movement (National Women's History Museum). She formulated the agenda for women’s rights, which ultimately changed history (National Women's History Museum). Elizabeth’s life story is a theme of rebellion, she went against societal norms to stand up for what she believed in (Ulrich, 2007, p. 21). Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born November 11, 1815 in Johnstown, New York. She was the third of five daughters born to Daniel Cady, a country lawyer and Margaret Livingston, a descendant of New York’s Old Dutch aristocracy (Ulrich, 2007, p. 21). All but one of the male children in Elizabeth’s family died during infancy or early childhood (Ulrich, …show more content…

Anthony, a temperance reformer, and began working together. Together they founded the Women’s State Temperance Society with the goal of petitioning the state legislator to pass a law that limited the sale of liquor (Susan B. Anthony House). Although the petitioning was unsuccessful that did not stop both women because right after they began to campaign for the expansion of New York’s Women Property Law and after much research, organized campaigning, and a speech delivered by Elizabeth Cady Stanton (that described the woes of widowed women and how the unfair laws affected them) to New York’s state legislature the New York’s Women Property Law of 1860 passed and became a law that granted married women the right to own property, engage in business, manage their own wages, and become guardians of their children …show more content…

Anthony were at it again, they worked together to produce the first three volumes of the History of Women’s Suffrage, which was the story of the their triumphs and defeats (Harper). During these years Elizabeth also traveled to Europe and England to investigate the possibility of an international suffrage movement and came up with the International Conference of Women in 1888 (Harper). The International Council of Women proved to be the largest women’s convention of its time, it stimulated cooperation of the United States and foreign women reformers

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