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Elizabeth Cady Stanton: The Women's Rights Movement

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Elizabeth Cady Stanton, arguably the most important philosopher among the women's rights advocates of that time, married an abolitionist lecturer, Henry Brewster Stanton in 1840. Together they attended the World's Anti-Slavery Convention in London. It was there that Elizabeth Stanton met the Quaker minister Lucretia Mott, who became one of Stanton's most important mentors. As women, Mott and Stanton were banned from the convention floor. This common indignation was the motivation for their founding of the women’s rights movement. Both women were outspoken activists from early ages. In her 20s, Mott became a progressive Quaker minister well-known for her speeches against social injustice. At the age of 17, Stanton graduated from Emma Willard's

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