Elizabeth Caldiston's political romanticism romanticism persuaded all sorts of literature. Romanticism in the American Renaissance has become a distinguishing aspect of writing. This is an era of change not only in the field of literature but also in the field of politics. Political turmoil of that time produced a new place for writers with utopian social view. These writers today are catalysts of change with their own ideals. Whether it is intentional or not, the use of this troubling language continues today.
Elizabeth Calistanton was the eighth child of the eleven children born in Johnstown, New York, born in Daniel Kaddy and Margaret Livingston Kaddy. Her five brothers and sisters died in early childhood or infancy. The sixth brother, her brother Eleazar, died before graduating from Union College in Schenectady, New York. Only Elizabeth Kadi and four sisters live in adulthood and old age. Elizabeth later cited her two daughters after her two sisters, Margaret and Halitt. Stanton's father, Daniel Kaddy, was a famous federal lawyer who served in the US Congress (1814-1817), later became a judge of the Circuit Court in 1847 and became the Supreme Court Judge in New York. Judge Cadi introduced laws to his daughter and planted early seeds with her brother - in - law, Edward Bayard. Since I was young, she likes to read his father's legal documents and discuss legal issues with legal assistants.
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.