10.4 Elizabeth Cady Stanton- Declaration of Sentiments 1848 Elizabeth Cady Stanton drafted the Declaration of sentiments for women’s rights suffrage at Wesleyan Chapel at Seneca Falls‚ New York‚ on July 19‚ 1848. (Scholastic) It was based on the Declaration of Independence and described the types if discrimination women faced in America. She presented at the first women’s rights convention. Other women like Lucrettia Mott helped play a major role. There was a list of issues that were “resolved”
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In the book Elizabeth Cady Stanton: A Radical for Women’s Rights‚ the author Lois W. Banner wrote about the life of Stanton and the psychological problems that she had. Stanton is best known for her work in equal rights for women and achieving women’s suffrage. The book covers her entire life‚ from birth‚ to childhood‚ to middle and late life‚ then death. The reader of the biography felt as if he were being tortured not physically‚ but mentally because of the long and boring book. It took the reader
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Biography of Elizabeth Cady Stanton By: Kylie Fung Elizabeth Cady Stanton was both an abolitionist and a women’s right activist‚ feminist‚ editor‚ and writer. Her writing‚ Declaration of Sentiments‚ gave a revolutionary call to all women across the country. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born on November 12‚ 1815 in Johnstown‚ New York. After she graduated from the Emma Willard’s Troy Female Seminary in 1832‚ she started to get interested in abolitionist‚ temperance‚ and women’s rights movements from
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Elizabeth Cady Stanton HIS 132-IC1: Rogowski Darin Aldridge May 6‚ 2011 Throughout history‚ struggles have defined groups of people and focused their resolve to alter the course of human history. For women‚ the early trials seemed insurmountable‚ but with the birth of a single female‚ woman acquired an advocate and spokesperson who would forge a new and fiery path for the women’s rights movement. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a remarkable woman who from an early age recognized
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Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a political activist in more than just the abolitionist cause‚ she is also credited with being the mother of the woman’s suffrage movement. Stanton served as the president of the National Woman Suffrage Association and frequently lectured on topics of law. The education and informal legal training Stanton received through the men in her life undoubtedly aided her in her activist writing and speeches. Her father was a New York state congressman and judge and she informally
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over centuries ago. Elizabeth Cady Stanton‚ Edmund Burke‚ and Jeremy Bentham met on this day to have an important debate over human rights. Stanton gave her viewpoint on the issue‚ then we heard a conservative contradiction from Edmund Burke‚ and a utilitarian contradiction from Jeremy Bentham. In order to articulate this debateeffectively‚ this article will begin with the summation of Elizabeth Canton’s argument‚ then move to Burke and Bentham. Through
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Solitude of Self Elizabeth Cady Stanton Solitude of Self speech addressed the equality and rights of women in the United States. She felt as though women should have the right to choose whatever path they wanted no matter what the circumstances were. Stanton illustrated that‚ in order for women to be considered as participating citizens of our country‚ the boundaries of what women can do had to be omitted. Women were entitled to the same equalities as men because throughout the darkest situations
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Rhetorical Analysis Comparison: Jefferson and Stanton Jefferson begins by stating that when one decides that it is time to break political connections with another body that they should declare what compels them to the separation (Jefferson 1). Stanton begins almost identically by using Jefferson’s model and declaring that when women feel that they are not being given their god given position on earth‚ they are compelled to state why they feel that way (Stanton 1). The target audience that Jefferson was
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“Women’s struggle for equality was and is a long and hard battle.” Elizabeth Cady Stanton made her life goal to get women those same rights as men and that she did. Owing to the fact that because she spoke up for women in the U.S and many others like her‚ they were responsible for women having the right to inherit land and the simplest right of freedom. These are the things that she‚ unfortunately‚ did not grow up to have but things she advocated for us today to enjoy and cherish even when we don’t
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“We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal. Self-development is a higher duty than self-sacrifice. The best protection any woman can have... is courage.” - Elizabeth Cady Stanton Introduction The Women’s Rights Movement began in 1848‚ and lasted for about seventy years. The years leading up to the movement were very difficult for women. Women were considered weaker than men‚ therefore they were not treated equally. Women at this time were made totally dependant
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