group she was helped establish called the American Equal Rights Association, “became active in Kansas where Negro suffrage…[was] to be decided by popular vote” in 1868. Also, Anthony organized a group with another suffragette Elizabeth Stanton called the Women's Loyal League. From the Susan B. Anthony House, it is stated that the group went to “support and petition for the Thirteenth Amendment outlawing slavery”. Participating in these conducts publicized abolitionist ideas and supported the reform ideas that were needed to help fight off slavery during the late 1800s. Also, Susan B.
Anthony strongly endorsed labor rights for especially women. Her goal was to influence more people to stand up and fight for protective labor rights and equal wages. According to the Susan B. Anthony House, “As a delegate to the National Labor Congress in 1868 Anthony persuaded the committee on female labor to call for votes for women and equal pay for equal work” which proves her persuasion and dedication to the topic of women’s labor rights. Anthony participated in actions to try and influence others to see the women as deserving, “when printers in New York went on strike, she urged employers to hire women instead, believing this would show that they could do the job as well as men, and therefore prove that they deserved equal pay” (Susan B. Anthony House). Anthony would stop at nothing to prove that women deserved equal labor rights and were deserving of well paid jobs which would soon influence others to encourage
change. Lastly, and perhaps her most vital reform was her point of view on women’s voting rights. Susan B. Anthony spent most of her time fighting for this cause. She spent time starting petitions for women’s rights voting. Furthermore, to prove her plea for reform in this category she went on a tour where she spoke to people out West. In 1869 her group the American Woman Suffrage Association was “adopting a strategy of getting the vote for women on a state-by-state basis” (Susan B. Anthony House). This tactic ended up influencing political leaders allow Wyoming women to vote in 1869. To prove just how devoted Anthony was to this topic she ended up even getting arrested for trying to vote in Rochester in 1872. All in all, being arrested in 1872 was just another validation that she was a strong suffragette who wasn’t to break the rules to influence change in America. Unfortunately, she didn’t experience the right to vote during her lifetime, fourteen years after her death voting was allowed to women in all of America. Susan B. Anthony was a strong woman who’s mission and duty was to reform and influence change in the subjects of slavery, women’s labor rights, and women’s voting rights. She took part alongside other suffragettes to fight her way to proving to many that all people deserved to be treated the same and that men were no better or stronger than women. Throughout her life she took part in many societies and actions to spark recognition among many Americans in the form of people’s rights.