Since the birth of our country, every citizen who is trying to achieve the goal must take action to achieve the goal. Citizens of colonial times need to organize and fight for freedom through the revolution. A slave who wants equality must fight for freedom. Employees who are eager to obtain better contract terms must form a strike and labor union before the right is granted. The struggle for equal rights brought decades of struggle and mass publicity to leaders and their members to achieve their goals.
Judith Earnhardt - "Right to vote for women" Dr. Earnhardt reviewed the influence of women's movement and organization such as the American Women's Election Association and the Women's Election Society. In the presentation, lives were brought to early defenders of women's rights by Elizabeth Kaldy Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Lucy Stone and Julia Ward Howaw. ($ 500 plus fee) Tate McCauley - Kennedy year. Dr. Macquarie talks about the incident that touched the country during the John F. Kennedy administration. The speech included PigBay, the Cuban missile crisis, moon landing, civilian human rights, assassination of Kennedy. ($ 450 plus fee)
Alice Stone Blackwell (1857-1950) Self-declared socialist and leaders of suffrage, Lucy Stone and daughter of Henry Brown · Blackwell, Alice Stone · Blackwell They founded and edited I participated in the women's rights report. For the following 35 years she played a leading role in the creation and editing of journals. In 1890, Blackwell realized the reconciliation of the National Women's Sexual Rights Association and served as a secretary for the new Women's Voting Association for about 20 years. Her other positions include the President of New England and the Massachusetts State Women's Election Association and the honorary president of the Massachusetts State Women's Parliamentary Federation.
In 1870 a woman was given a voting right in Utah state. The first issue of Women's Daily was published with Lucy Stone and her husband, Henry Blackwell. A draft amendment to Article 15 of the US Constitution was passed. This amendment gives voting rights to ex-African-American male slaves, but does not give women the right to vote. Anthony and Stanton seriously opposed the proposed amendment. For the first time, we limited the voting rights to "men". Many of the former allies of the abolition movement, including Lucy Stone, supported this revision proposal.