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Susan B Anthony In The Progressive Era

Decent Essays

The Progressive Era was full of people wanting to change their surroundings and laws in life. There were abolitionists, women’s rights activists, education reformists, and many other titles that people took to change the “inhumane” lives that they were being lead by. One woman in particular, Susan B. Anthony, took on more than just one of these titles. She took on much more than most others would or could have.
Anthony was born in February of 1820 in Adams, Massachusetts. She was raised in a
Quaker family with activist traditions. Having been brought up in this kind of household she learned at a young age what was moral and had a keen sense of justice.
Growing up in a Quaker household Anthony was taught that drinking liquor was sinful.
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The legislature refused as most of the 28,000 signatures were those of women and children. This act on the State legislatures part led to Anthony and Stanton’s movement of women’s suffrage.
Another one of Susan B. Anthony’s greatest impacts is her importance in women’s suffrage. After her and Stanton’s petition for more laws on limiting the sales of alcohol was declined because the amount of women’s signatures was greater than the amount of men’s
Anthony became greatly infuriated on the point that woman had no say in the government. In
1866, Stanton and Anthony founded the American Equal Rights Association and started printing a newspaper in Rochester, The Revolution, in 1868. In 1869 the suffrage movement split, with
Anthony and Stanton's National Association continuing to campaign for a constitutional amendment, and the American Woman Suffrage Association adopting a strategy of getting the vote for women on a state­by­state basis. Wyoming became the first territory to give women the vote in 1869. In the 1870’s Anthony campaigned vigorously for women’s right to vote, and

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