Clara Barton and Angelina Grimke Would you have taken action to help people even though society deplores you from doing it?In the 1800’s in America to different individuals took a stand of what society did not have the courage to do.The author Ina chang wrote a biography about the abolitionist Angelina Grimke and Clara Barton,who both were doing grateful things in dangerous situation.Both individuals while being in different situation.Both individuals while being in different situation they were brave enough to take on situations that many people don’t have the courage to do. Angelina Grimke and Clara Barton both assisted many people.for example in the book A Separate Battle Women and the civil war.It states “Grimke and other women who joined the abolitionist movement ….face opposition from many
Such denials of equal opportunity gave rise to advocates of women's rights. Women's rights activists, such as Abby K. Foster, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Angelina Grimke, were deeply disappointed that they could not have a voice in the World Anti-Slavery Conference. Like most female radicals during this time, these women
By the early 1800’s, sisters Angelina and Sarah Grimke had already made a name for themselves as anti-slavery abolitionist. Speaking in tents and at religious gatherings. They Used their Quaker faith to help instill an equal mindset. The sisters, who were educators, were also authors. Several of their publications were for the supplication of the rights of African Americans. Written in a pamphlet by Angelina entitled: “Appeal to the Christian Women of the South” she wrote:
Fondly referred to as the "angel of the battlefield" (The Encyclopedia Britannica Online), Clara Barton served as one of the greatest humanitarians this country has ever known. Persistent beyond belief, Clara employed her remarkable interpersonal skills to teach unruly school children, to collect supplies to send to the battlefront, and to struggle to form the American Red Cross. An equal rights advocate, her most memorable successes consisted of improvements in education, foreign aid, and blacks' and women's rights. This American heroine, whose efforts and bravery have become legendary, worked diligently to reach her ideal: "creating the vigilant social conscience which alone can safeguard individual
One women activist was Susan Brownell Anthony who was born February 15, 1820 in South Adams, Massachusetts (“Susan B. Anthony”). Susan B. Anthony was a great woman who was determined to change women’s rights. For example, there is a quote that states, “Susan B. Anthony dedicated her life to the cause, the woman Suffrage Movement” (qtd. in “Susan Brownell Anthony”). Through Susan’s life
The abolitionist movement in the 19th Century is a great of example of people standing up against terrifying odds to help others. During this movement in the 19th Century many people worked hard to abolish slavery in the United States. Some protested, some argued, and some ever chose to take action to free and assist freeing slaves in the South (Garcia, 442). Those who took action were a part of the Underground Railroad. The Underground Railroad was a network of secret routes and safe houses set to help guide slaves escaping to the North and eventually Canada when the Fugitive Slave Act was published (the Fugitive Slave Act gave slave owners and other people the right to return slaves to the southern plantations and farms (Garcia, 422). Almost all the time slaves were treated brutally being beaten, fed little, and living in very harsh, bleak, and even sometimes austere living conditions (Garcia, 422). Those who were caught while in the act of escaping could usually be hanged, killed, or tortured (Garcia, 422). Those in the North, the abolitionists, and conductors of the underground railroad such as Harriet Tubman and Frederick Douglas all fought for the abolishment of slavery (Garcia, 422). The conductors of the Underground Railroad, freed slaves from their workplaces and led them North using the Underground Railroad under guidance of the
Women did not have a voice at all nor were they able to speak on important government matters. They were restricted solely to their activities within the domestic sphere, expected to be good house wives, mothers, and care only for the home and children. Standing up firmly for women, Angelia and Sarah Grimke held distinct positions in the antislavery movement because they were the daughters of a Southern Slaveowner. The ideals about women rights began with these two women, but it did not stop with them. Despite the debate about the place of women in the abolitionist movement, abolitionism did provide women with some sympathetic male allies like Fredrick Douglass, who took them serious and publicized their causes.
Clara Barton, born Clarissa Harlowe Barton, is one of the most significant figures in US history. Barton is well known for being a female pioneer in the field of teaching, as well as for her work in the US patent office during the Civil war. These feats alone make her a historical figure; however, she is also known for something which far surpasses these accomplishments. Clara Barton is recognized and remembered today for her extraordinary work as a nurse during the American Civil War, and for going on to establish the American Red Cross. (Clara Barton; Clara Barton)
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony – campaigned for women’s right to vote, property rights, and legal rights
In his declaration of the National Anti-Slavery Convention, William Lloyd Garrison denounced the horrors of slavery (Doc 1). A famous abolitionist, Garrison highlighted the brutality and dehumanization of slavery and bondage as a means of chasing equality. Depriving Americans the right to vote and the basic rights of humanity based on the color of their skin directly contradicts the tenets of the Constitution. Similar to William Lloyd Garrison was Frederick Douglass, a famous black abolitionist. An escaped slave, Douglass campaigned across America and even into Europe to preach the atrocities of slavery. Douglass was also a prominent writer who published numerous autobiographies, as well as his own newspaper, The North Star. Alongside the abolition movement was the women’s rights movement. A freed slave woman, Sojourner Truth worked toward both abolition women’s rights. In her 1851 speech, Truth highlights the toils of labor she has endured to demonstrate that she is just as capable at work as men. In addition, she notes the discrimination she experiences due to her race. She empowers women to act together as one to overcome the bondage of slavery to ultimately prove that women are a powerful working force in America. Similar to Truth were the Grimke Sisters, who witnessed slavery firsthand during their upbringing. The Grimke Sisters, both abolitionists and women’s rights activists, pushed for women to become involved in abolition. Women in America were notoriously denied the ability to work in stereotypically “men’s work.” Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s Declaration of Rights and Sentiments exemplifies the distinction between men and women in American society (Doc 6). She posits that there equality is not present in society — that men and women do not enjoy the same abilities and powers guaranteed by the Constitution.
She later got caught and was later put into prison in 1864 by confederate troops and taken into prison. Along with Mary Edward walker, Clara Barton, was an Army nurse. Clara was to serve help in curing injured men. She had a bad experience when she went to go cure a man, a bullet that killed the man she was helping was peireced threw her sleeve. She had been assisting him and tried to save him, but it was too late and he had died. Also these women made a legacy in life, Underground Railroad, being the first US army women surgeon, and the foundation of the American Red Cross. Mary Todd Lincoln, who was married to Abraham Lincoln. Although she was a lot different then the other important women in the civil war, she was just as important. She was the wife of the president during the war. Although she did not exactly fight or become a nurse of the war, she still had to take care of her family and all of Abraham’s stressful days. She had to mend to her children’s needs while Abraham was out making sure the troops in the war were in the right standings. When 1865 came around it was a terrible year for her, her family and her heart were crushed. Her loved one was assassinated, and her family and herself had no idea how to handle it. Being that she was the presidents wife, she was still important to make a legacy. Showed that women are strong enough to handle stress, children, and deaths in their family to be strong for
Sarah and Angelina Grimke were the first Southern women to become influential abolitionist, which spoke on the end of slavery; as well as social and political equality for freedmen and women as well. The Grimke sisters stretched the boundary of women’s public role, by giving speeches to audiences with men and women, and by speaking in front of a state legislature about African American rights. Sarah and Angelina broke many of the social and political boundaries subjected on women.
Angelina and Sarah Grimke were legends in their lifetime. The sister made history, speaking to mixed crowds of men and women. They advocated some of the most powerful anti-slavery paths, and the rights to a women’s public role. Their movement was not only aimed to end slavery, not to help racial discrimination throughout the United States. These ideas made them more sincere than many other reformers who advocated to end to slavery. Other advocates did not believe in equality for freedom and women. The Grimke sisters were also one of the first abolitionist to recognize the importance of women’s rights, while speaking and writing about the cause of female equality.
(Hannam 296) During the Anti-Slavery Movement, she had valuable experience in public speaking and running poilitical organizations through her work in the abolishionist movement. (298 ) in the process women were generally discouraged from taking active part in public life and expected to join women only groups in support of male organizations (ibid) While Elizabeth Cady Stanton is best known for her long contribution to the woman suffrage struggle, without her struggles these issues wouldnt have been effective in winning property rights for married women, equal guardianship of children, and liberalized divorce laws. These reforms made it possible for women to leave marriages that were abusive of the wife, the children, and the economic health of the family.
According to Foner, the author of The Gateway to Freedom, there was a direct correlation between free blacks and fugitive slaves presence in the antislavery movement. Many people from many backgrounds helped fugitive slaves and the abolitionist development. There are many different actions abolitionists took to further their cause; some of the abolitionists were politicians, for example, William H. Seward and Thaddeus Stevens (19). Those who facilitated the U.R. fought for the abolitionist movement, they helped using many different means. Whether it dealt with the Underground Railroad directly or indirectly many abolitionists took part in helping. Some devoted their livelihood and found a job within the committees, for example being a lawyer or newspaper editor, some people elected their own time while still holding a job outside of the movement.
Because of her concern for white masters and resulting choices to abandon her famous slave-holding family to move to the North, to write an address to southern women, and to speak in front of audiences of both men and women, Angelina Grimke adopted the abolitionist cause and often challenged her role in society. Originally, Grimke was promoting abolition out of concern for whites as she believed that slavery was anti-Christian; she was seen trying to discourage family from having slaves out of concern for her salvation. However, that family would have been a difficult one to persuade as they were the one of the most prominent slaveholding families in South Carolina; there were rumors that each family member had their own slave who would help