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Susan B. Anthonys Fight For Women's Suffrage

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The vote that changed the world: Susan B. Anthony’s Fight For Women’s Suffrage On November 5, 1872, Susan B. Anthony and fourteen of her supporters, went to a voter registration office set up in a barber shop in in Rochester, New York. The fifteen women illegally cast their vote in the presidential election. The election inspectors refused the women’s request, but Anthony would not give up and stated, “If you refuse us our rights as citizens, I will bring charges against you in Criminal Court and I will sue each of you personally for large, exemplary damages!" (The trial of). She continued to say, "I know I can win. I have Judge Selden as a lawyer. There is any amount of money to back me, and if I have to, I will push to the 'last ditch' in both courts” (The trial of). Anthony was a very courageous and determined women who fought for what was right. While most people recognize Anthony for her fight against women’s suffrage during the 19th century, she was actually taking stand in history by fighting for all basic human rights, which triggered Americans to choose a side. Even in her early years, Anthony realized that people of color and women weren’t considered equal to white men. Her father, Daniel Anthony, was a women’s and suffrage anti-slavery advocate. Mr. Anthony owned a cotton …show more content…

In the most famous speech in the history of the agitation for woman suffrage, she bashed a court that had “trampled under foot every vital principle of our government”(The Federal Judicial). She said she had not received justice under “forms of law all made by men, failing, even, to get a trial by a jury not of my peers.” (The Federal Judicial). Sentenced to pay a fine of $100 and the costs of the prosecution, she swore to “never pay a dollar of your unjust penalty.”(The Federal Judicial). Judge Justice Hunt said she would not be held in custody awaiting payment of her

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