Today, free thinking rarely goes into the hearts of American women. Currently, women can vote, retain their status, identify occupations (if necessary), even get to a presidential position. Women far exceed the limits of obedient housewives, abandon the limitations of family responsibilities, fight for greater goals, and have a common goal beyond their masculinity. In a world where the role of gender is becoming increasingly unclear, it is easy to ignore the past when men become "men" or play a role of "housewife".
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.
As a young lady, Elizabeth Kadi met Henry Brewster Stanton during her early involvement in the abstinence movement and abolition movement. Henry Stanton is a member of Elizabeth Kaddy, Guritosmith 's best friend, Gretit Smith, and "Secret Six" and is supporting John Brown to attack Harpers Ferry in West Virginia. Stanton is a journalist, anti-Semitic, after marrying Elizabeth Kaddy (a lawyer). Despite the reservation of Daniel Kaddy, the couple got married in 1840 and Elizabeth Kadi asked the pastor to remove the word "to obey the pledge" from the oath of the wedding. She later wrote: "I stubbornly refuse to obey people who think they are building equal relationships with them." The couple made six children between 1842 and 1856 . Their seventh child and the last child, Robert, was an unplanned baby born in 1859 when Elizabeth Cardiffon was 44 years old.