Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born November 12, 1815, in Johnstown, New
York. She was the fourth of six children. Later she would meet and marry Henry B.
Stanton, a prominent abolitionist. Together they would have seven children.
Although Elizabeth never went to college she was very learned in Greek and mathematics. During her life, Elizabeth was a very important person to the women's rights movement. This paper will present to you the difficulties she encountered and her major contributions. Nothing is easy when you are trying to change the opinion of the world.
In the nineteenth century it was only harder if you were a woman. Elizabeth
Stanton not only faced opposition from the outside world but also from those closest to her. After her only brother died she tried to please her father by studying and doing the things that her brother had done. Her father's response was that he wished she had been a boy. Her high hope of working with her husband to abolish slavery was shattered when she was not allowed to enter into the conventions. She, as a woman, was told to keep silent and to do her work quietly.
Who better than her husband, who champions the rights of black people, should understand and applaud her work. However, that was not the case. During the
Seneca Falls convention that she had organized, her husband left town rather than witness here propose the idea of women's suffrage to the group. When she lectured she was often booed and hissed at. She suffered much at the hands of the media. The only support that she ever received was from her fellow suffragists. This did not stop her from continuing her work and becoming an integral part to the early women's rights movement. With seven children and an entire household to manage, Elizabeth Cady