Lucretia Coffin was born on January 3, 1793 on Nantucket island, Massachusetts. Lucretia is a women's rights activist against slavery. Lucretia has grown into women's rights activists, reformers, and abolitionists. She is strongly opposed to slavery and is committed to work as an abolitionist. As she grew older, she told the audience to persuade the audience to participate in her anti slavery boycott. However, some people oppose the idea of terminating slavery and will continue to challenge her beliefs.
Elizabeth Kaldy Stanton (1815-1902), the abolitionist and female rights activist, lived in Boston for a while. So she became friends with Lydia children. She and Lucretia Mott organized the Seneca Waterfall Convention on Women's Rights in 1848; she also drafted the "Emotional Declaration". Her "Declaration of Independence of Women" started with "equality between men and women" and included a resolution giving women the right to vote. Together with Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Kaddy Stanton earned the right to vote in the 1860s and 1870s, founded the National Alliance of Women's Loyalty to Slavery and the Female Sexuality Association, shared a weekly revolution I edited it. For 21 years, the president of the Female Voting Rights Association has led the fight of women's rights. She made public lectures in several states to support the education of seven children.
Lucretia Coffin was born on January 3, 1793 on Nantucket island, Massachusetts. Lucretia is a women's rights activist against slavery. Lucretia has grown into women's rights activists, reformers, and abolitionists. She is strongly opposed to slavery and is committed to work as an abolitionist. - The 18th century brought major changes and new interest in science and reason. For this reason, many great inventions, ideas, and innovative theorists have been born from this era. Among them is a positive essay named Mary Worth Craft Craft. In her book "Advocacy of Women's Rights", Wollstonecraft declared that she believed that women's oppression was mainly due to the lack of female education.
Women's voting rights are pursued through the abolition of slavery and abstinence, but sometimes even these exercises violate the rights of women. Lucretia Coffin Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were proponents of the abolishment movement and demanded voices at the London anti - slavery meeting in 1840, but they were rejected. This led to the creation of a campaign focusing only on women's rights by American feminists. In addition to Mott and Stanton, in the early days of exercise, the famous American feminists Susan Anthony, Lucy Stone, Abby Kelly Foster and Ernestin Rose were the same. American men who actively support female voting rights include clerics Henry Ward Beecher and Wendell Phillips, and essayist and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson. (Dubois 54 - 57)