Susan B. Anthony: Champion of Women's Suffrage and Abolitionism

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Susan B. Anthony is a Women’s right activist and wanted women’s right to vote. She was very important back in the days and still is till this day. She was standing up for her own gender because back then all the men would have more rights to do certain things. More than women at least. Some things that she was apart of were in the women’s suffrage movement, women’s right, and abolitionism.
Susan B. Anthony was a big suffragist in her time, she traveled everywhere to give speeches and put together and organize things for the women’s suffrage movement. They wanted the right to vote for women, not just men so they set up organizations to help this happen. She dedicated her life to set up and conduct the suffrage movement. Jeanette Patrick said,
Susan B. Anthony’s family moved and was in the anti slavery movement. She did everything she could. She got things thrown at her and came across harmful things while doing this. She encounters so many attacks during this time. Libby Garland says, “Women 's rights leaders who had been deeply involved in the abolition movement—such as Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton—saw the political upheavals of the postwar era as an opportunity to radically redefine American citizenship along gender as well as racial lines” (Garland, Libby. "Irrespective of Race, Color Or Sex:" Susan B. Anthony And The New York State Constitutional Convention Of 1867." OAH Magazine of History 19.2 (2005): 61. MasterFILE Premier. Web. 3 Oct. 2016.) So they encountered many problems doing this. They saw political upheavals which means, they went through very strong changes that were violent and disturbing. They got mean and racial words thrown at them and that is what they had to deal with. Another look on Susan B. Antony being an abolitionist is when Sara Ann McGill said, “She was publicly mocked and threatened because of her work, but she was not deterred. In 1861 she organized a speaking campaign against slavery that started in Buffalo and finished in Albany. When the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery, was presented to legislators in 1863, Anthony supported it wholeheartedly.” (McGill, Sara Ann. "Susan B. Anthony." Susan B. Anthony (2005): 1. MasterFILE Premier.

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