Susan B. Anthony Amendment, giving women the right to vote. Another important figure in the history of women’s rights was Elizabeth Cady Stanton. When she was younger, she encountered fugitive slaves at the residence of Gerrit Smith, her cousin. She was the driving force behind the 1848 convention and became a leader in the women’s rights movement. Stanton authored the Declaration of Rights of the Women of the United States with Matilda Joslyn Gage, which states that women should not be held back or judged because of their gender. Finally, Lucy Stone was an important part of the women’s rights movement, paving the way for generations to come. As a young women, Stone’s father ridiculed her ambition to attend college, but she became the first Massachusetts women to earn a college degree, graduating from Oberlin in 1847. Studying Greek and Hebrew, she found crucial passages in the bible that had been translated wrong, the passages about women being inferior. When Stone married, she kept her last name, creating the phrase “Lucy Stoner” that describes a married women keeping her maiden name. The suffrage movement was a raging fire, fueled by the heart of every woman in the cause, but someone needed to light the match, and these women helped to found the only non-violent revolution in the history of America.
Susan B. Anthony Amendment, giving women the right to vote. Another important figure in the history of women’s rights was Elizabeth Cady Stanton. When she was younger, she encountered fugitive slaves at the residence of Gerrit Smith, her cousin. She was the driving force behind the 1848 convention and became a leader in the women’s rights movement. Stanton authored the Declaration of Rights of the Women of the United States with Matilda Joslyn Gage, which states that women should not be held back or judged because of their gender. Finally, Lucy Stone was an important part of the women’s rights movement, paving the way for generations to come. As a young women, Stone’s father ridiculed her ambition to attend college, but she became the first Massachusetts women to earn a college degree, graduating from Oberlin in 1847. Studying Greek and Hebrew, she found crucial passages in the bible that had been translated wrong, the passages about women being inferior. When Stone married, she kept her last name, creating the phrase “Lucy Stoner” that describes a married women keeping her maiden name. The suffrage movement was a raging fire, fueled by the heart of every woman in the cause, but someone needed to light the match, and these women helped to found the only non-violent revolution in the history of America.