Elizabeth Caldiston and Susan B. Anthony Susan B. Anthony are the most famous names of women's rights of the 19th century. Most people not familiar with the history of this era knows Susan's reputation, and almost every generation in my generation has seen and has the silver dollar of Susan B. Anthony. For these reasons, I was surprised that Elizabeth Caddy Stanton was the former spokeswoman of the women's rights movement and Susan B. Anthony was her disciple. Elizabeth Caldistanton married the abolishmentist and born seven children.
Mr. Ken Burns and Jeffrey Ward wrote that "these two women should not change so much". "Not for myself: the story of Elizabeth Cadistanton and Susan B. Anthony" Stanton was born with wealth and comfort, and has become a mother of seven families for many years. She is witty and kind ... but she is also an uncompromising revolutionary aimed at improving the status of all women in every field. ... Anthony has unlimited, almost crazy energy and is willing to do logistics work - to borrow a house, to collect money, to petition and to speak in a place that can encourage people - this is Scare her. Most women of that era.
In terms of debate, Elizabeth Kadistan and Susan B. Anthony have refused to support black male elections if women do not have the right to vote. In 1867, when Cardiston and Anthony campaigned for women's suffrage in Kansas, they accepted the support of a supporting slave, George Train. In 1868, they accepted their own money and started the women's rights newspaper "revolution". In 1869, Cardiffon and Anthony established their own women's rights party, the National Association of Women's Rights (NWSA). The NWSA, which is regarded as an extreme organization, does not support the 15th amendment to allow black males to acquire voting rights, not white or black women. Initially, the NWSA did not encourage men to take a leadership position and was an organization of multiple issues discussing women's rights.
Elizabeth Cardi Stanton and Susan B. Anthony thought this was a betrayal, and opposed any amendment that denied women's voting rights. This led to the destruction of women's movement, Stanton and Anthony formed the National Women's Rights Association (NWSA), Lucy Stone, her husband Henry Blackwell and Julia Wardhau established the American Women Corruption Association. (AWSA), the association supports the 15 th revision. Many women of African-American also gained rights from women's rights in 1851 by Sojourner Truth who made a passionate "I am not a woman" speech. Other African-American women, such as Mary Anne Shadd Cary and Charlotte Forten Grimke (two abolitionists / feminists, Margaretta and Harriet Forten's niece), participated in the suffrage organization. Unfortunately, like in the case of society, African-American women are often not welcomed by white feminists and must participate in separate organizations.