Lucy had a childhood where it was very fortunate and lucky because her father believed in educating children of both genders. Lucy was born on July 28, 1879 in Brooklyn, New York. She was raised as an Irish Catholic and was the fourth of 8 children. She attended Packer Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn Heights. Lucy was tall, had blazing red hair, blue eyes, and dimples. She was known for her robust sense of humor.
Lucy studied at many universities along with teaching at a school, slowly reaching her future achievements. She graduated from Vassar College at Poughkeepsie, New York in 1902. She also went to Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut and Columbia University in the city of New York. She then taught English at Erasmus High School in Brooklyn for two years. Lucy moved to …show more content…
Lucy and Alice formed the Congressional Union and later, the National Woman’s Party. Alice was the strategist while Lucy was the ultimate organizer. Lucy headed the National Woman’s Party’s lobbying in Congress, edited the National Woman’s Party journal The Suffragist, and spend more time in prison than any other American suffragist. She led political campaigns in western states, many of which already had women suffrage, urging women to vote against Democrats as long as the Party refused to pass suffrage. In 1919, Congress approved the amendment, and so Lucy was no longer active.She returned to Brooklyn to live with two unmarried sisters and went on to rear a newborn niece. Lucy passed away on December 22, 1966.
Lucy and many of the other suffragists suffered but still fought for women’s rights to vote. Thanks to the suffragists, especially Lucy Burns, women now have the right to