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    encouraging women to fight for their political voice‚ Stanton argues a valid‚ logical point to the men‚ convincing them is a much more difficult task‚ and they are the ones who can legalize her beliefs. She acknowledges her counterclaim‚ and understands that the public believes‚ “People object to the demands of those whom they choose to call the strong-minded‚ because they say ‘the right of suffrage will make women masculine.’” (Stanton). Stanton does not allow males dull or dumb down the female gender

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    Elizabeth Cady Stanton

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    2/24/14 Elizabeth Cady Stanton             There are many people that have contributed to what is now known as America. This place filled with opportunities‚ dreams‚ freedom and equality would have never been without the courageous people of the past. The souls willing to give up anything for a future where everyone is welcomed and accepted. Elizabeth Cady Stanton yearned for a life where women were praised and acknowledged. She desired something

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    Elizabeth Cady Stanton

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    Elizabeth Cady Stanton Leader in the Movement for Women’s Rights I. Early Life a. Elizabeth was born in 1815 in New York. b. She was one of eleven children and only six survived past their youth. This caused her mother to go into deep depression. c. Elizabeth received a good education for a woman and spent a lot of time of with her father who discussed books and legal issues with her. d. When her only surviving brother from her childhood died‚ her father was very upset and told Elizabeth that he

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    Edwin Stanton Porter

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    Edwin Stanton Porter was born on April 21‚ 1870 in Pennsylvania. He had grown up with his parents Thomas Richard Porter and Mary Jane Clark. He had worked in the electrical field at first and began experiencing with electricity. He had worked with light bulb currents and telegraphs. In early 1890’s he had opened his own small business as a tailor‚ until 1893‚ when he had joined the Navy. He served there as an electrician and telegraph operator. With his help communications were improved. After a

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    Virtual Shoplifters Everyone knows that shoplifting a CD is illegal and morally wrong. However‚ not all people agree that downloading music or copying a CD is theft. Most people are aware of the copyright laws‚ but some people are confused about the ethics of downloading music. I am one of those people who is confused. I download music on occasion. I have never felt I was participating in an unethical activity. However‚ I do understand that downloading music is cheating the artists from

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    "Elizabeth Cady Stanton" by Lois W. Banner was written to inform individuals on Woman’s Rights and also to know the biography of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Banner’s biography of Elizabeth Stanton expresses her journey through the Feminist Rebellion. Stanton was a women’s rights activist‚ feminist‚ editor‚ and writer. Banner captures Stantons obstacles she had faced through her leading role of being a Feminist Philosopher. Banner is an American feminist and has a strong passion for what Stanton endured to

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    The narrative by Doug Stanton is quite vivid in its elaboration‚ a fact that is contributed by the originality of his sources. Stanton in the narrative depends on the tales of Captain Charles Butler McVay III‚ Lewis Haynes who was the doctor in the ship and Giles McCoy who was a marine private. The most intriguing aspect of the narrative is that it is not entrenched on a war-history but rather an elucidation of men battling and attempting to survive the sea. The USS Indianapolis incident occurs in

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    Elizabeth Cady Stanton Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a female figure unlike no other. Mrs. Stanton was born on November 12‚ 1815 in Johnstown New York. Graduating from the Troy Female Seminary in 1832‚ she progressed into becoming a women rights activist who was also drawn to the abolitionist and temperance movements through visits to the home of her cousin‚ the reformer Gerrit Smith. Her cousin also introduced Mrs. Stanton to a fellow reformer and an agent for the American Anti-Slavery Society and

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    freedom was something America struggled to completely achieve for many years. Historians have written articles that explain why it was so hard to achieve religious freedom in America in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. One of the historians was Maura Jane Farrelly‚ who wrote the article “American Slavery‚ American Freedom‚ American Catholicism”. In Farrelly article‚ she “ explores the relationship between American slavery and American Catholicism”(Farrelly‚ 69). Another historian would be Charles

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    Period 6 Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) was an outstanding figure in the history of the fight for women’s rights‚ and also worked within the abolitionist movement. It has been 111 years since her death‚ and yet the standards she set for women’s rights still affect many movements today. One of Elizabeth’s greatest accomplishments was the organization of the Seneca Falls Convention‚ in which 300 people (including 40 men) attended to listen to guest speakers‚ such as Stanton‚ speak about the unfair

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