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Declaration Of Sentiments Analysis

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Like any major changes that happen within a society, there are usually people who have fought long and hard, or perhaps, have held powerful positions which enabled them to facilitate change. There were many women in history who were brave enough to speak against their religion and offer new teachings, women who were bold enough to bear arms, women in power who used their voice to speak against sexisism, and a woman who understood what it meant to live in two cultures and plainly prefer one over the other. Anne Hutchinson was a puritan living in the mid 1600s and left England to lead a new life in America (Kendall 14). She thought she would have more freedom in America, but she soon discovered that religious freedom did not exist. Although …show more content…

At the convention, Stanton presented the Declaration of Sentiments. The Declaration of Sentiments was a document which listed the ways in which women’s rights were violated. When Stanton wrote the Declaration of Sentiments she got inspiration and even took some passages from the Declaration of Independence. In the first paragraph of the Sentiments, Stanton makes connections between the Declaration of Independence and women’s rights. She directly lifts long passages from the Declaration of Independence weaving in her own opinion about women’s rights. She infers that it’s not just “men” we’re speaking about, but “mankind”, which includes women (Rossi 10). “We hold these truths to be self - evident: that all men and women are created equal; that they are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights” (Stanton 1). Stanton took this famous passage almost directly from the Declaration of Independence. She simply added the word “women” instead of just men. Also in the Sentiments, Stanton and Mott insisted that women get many more rights as they should as citizens. The most controversial request was for the women’s right to vote. “It was the first time in the United States that women had publicly demanded the right to vote,” (Rossi 10). Stanton and Mott were happy to simply have gotten the conversation started. Even though they were judged and even ridiculed …show more content…

Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton met at a temperance meeting and were both appalled at the fact that they were not allowed to speak (Rossi 11). Stanton convinced Anthony to join her in the women’s rights movement. Stanton needed someone to deliver her speeches because she was encouraged to spend more time at home with her family. “Stanton had a large family so she had little time to travel and lecture,” (Kendall 41). Stanton wanted to share her own ideas with other people, but her father and husband didn’t approve of her sharing any speeches or writings in public. This was similar to a situation the Grimke Sisters were in when people didn’t appreciate and approve of the fact that they were speaking their ideas out in the public (Deverell and White). Anthony Anthony had lots of spare time because she didn’t have a family, therefore, she could dedicate her spare time to helping the cause. Anthony and Stanton started a partnership together and ended up working with one another for about fifty years (Rossi 11). After helping with Stanton’s public speeches, the two women continued working together to bring awareness to women’s rights. Stanton and Anthony wrote an article together on divorces and how they hated males. This was especially a big shocker to people back in the 1800s (Rossi 15). Together, Stanton and Anthony started the NWSA, or the National Woman Suffrage Association which, “worked for a Constitutional amendment to give women the right to vote in national

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