There have been numerous women throughout history whom have influenced and helped spread change for feminism. The first wave feminists (from the 1800’s to the early 20th century) started numerous organizations to help and support women’s rights and also helped in part of passing legislations that further aid the rights granted to women. Some of the most important first wave feminists include Susan B. Anthony and Alice Paul. The second wave feminists (from the mid 20th century to late 20th century) helped further rights granted to women from the household to their lifestyle. Some important second wave feminists include Betty Friednas and Mary King and Casey Hayden. All four women made significant contributions to the feminist cause. …show more content…
Anthony’s main goal was to get women the rights that men had always had. “A History of U.S. Feminisms” states that Anthony “did not agree with the fourteenth amendment and said “I will cut off this right arm of mine before I will ever work or demand the ballot for the Negro and not the woman” (39). Essentially, she wanted the right for women to vote before the black man because she believed the woman deserved it more. Although she believed in the rights of women, she focused more on the rights for white women instead of those of color. Anthony helped start some of the most well-known Women”s organizations in history. Another first wave feminists was Quaker Alice Paul. In the early years of her feminist protests, she helped protest in London, met friend and partner Lucy Burns in jail, and participated in hunger strikes. Alice Paul “advocated for nonviolent, but militant action in pursuit of her goals.” Alice Paul and Lucy Burns seemed out Susan B. Anthony to become the directors of NAWSA’s Congressional committee. The committees focus was to help the suffrage amendment or better known as the Anthony amendment to pass. Once Paul and Burns took over they lobbied Congressmen to insure their vote on the amendment, but Paul soon became frustrated with NAWSA’s slower tactics. Paul wanted more action and did so by starting protests, picketing, and demonstrations. (“A History of U.S. Feminisms” 47). Although Anthony and Paul were working for women’s rights, the women
Susan B. Anthony, a women’s rights supporter, knew exactly what she believed in. She stood firm for herself and her beliefs. She felt the need to represent other women in fighting for their rights. She fought for women by campaigning for women’s rights all around the nation. When male members of the movement refused to let her speak at rallies, simply because she was a woman, she realized that women had to win the right to speak in public and to vote
Lucy Burns was a prominent suffrage leader of a group of women only in the United States [3]. She and her colleague Alice Paul, met at a university in England where they both became inclined by Emmeline Pankhurst who was the leader of the woman’s suffrage movement in England [5]. Burns and Paul joined the National American Women Suffrage Association and were founders of National Women’s Party when they came back to the states [5]. They both demonstrated to
The women’s rights movement has been influenced by the words and writings of many. Two influential people in the movement include Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Abigail Adams. These women paved the way for equality across the United States of America. Without these women speaking out and advocating in their different ways, equality in the country would be much farther
Anthony was insane for trying women equal but she always told herself that “[F]ailure was impossible” (qtd. in Matthews). Anthony registered to vote in Rochester and was charged $100 fine that she never paid, “[I]n 1872 after concluding that nothing in the Constitution specifically prohibited women from voting” (Susan B. Anthony). She refused to pay because it wasn’t fair that men got to vote but women didn’t. What made men more important than women? “Some saw no point in women voting; with no understanding of politics, they would only vote as their menfolk told them” (Lavender, William, and Mary). This is why people insulted and made fun of her, she believed in something not very many other people did. She needed to get men to agree with her. When Susan B. Anthony began the women’s suffrage movement “...women had few legal rights. [T]oday women have opportunities for higher education, the privilege of working at almost any occupation, the right to control or own property and children, the right to hold public office, and the right to vote” (Susan B.. Anthony). Through Susan Anthony’s hard work, efforts, and dedication she helped the world of women better. She knew that women were capable of things that nobody else thought we were able to do. Anthony never got to see the ratification of the 19th Amendment, because it took a century to get the world to agree with her. Before this happened, she wanted to get black men out of slavery so more people would start to like
In her early 20s, Anthony was a teacher. She showed an interest in social reform. At a state teachers convention, she was called to fight for better pay for women. She believed there was no difference in the minds of a man or a woman. She spoke publicly about this. But not just for gender, for different races, and different religions. And because of Anthony, women were admitted into university for the first time.
In attempt to be able to change laws and allowing the married women to own their own property, Stanton gave some public speeches and had spoken to members of the New York Legislature. The Women’s rights convention was on july 19th-20th and was located in Seneca Falls, New York (Adams, Page 17). At Least 40 of the 300 people that had attended this, were none other than men (Adams, Page 17). One of those men was Frederick Douglas, Douglas was a former slave and an abolitionist. He was with the argument to give women the rights that they needed. He had stated that “without women, they would have no way of protecting their rights or to make changes in the laws (Adams, Page 17).” Sixty-eight women and thirty-two men had signed the declaration at the end of the convention (Adams, Page 17). Susan B. Anthony kept the women’s movement moving the right direction. Anthony also went around the country giving speeches that were written by Stanton. She was a very dedicated person when it came to problems like this.
Susan B. Anthony devoted her life to the rights of women’s labor, receiving equal pay, and leading the women’s suffrage movement. She grew up in a home where politics was frequently discussed. Her family supported an end to slavery as part of the abolitionist movement. In her early years, she was a teacher and became involved in the temperance movement as well as the anti-slavery movement. Because she was a woman, she was not allowed to voice her opinion. This became a motivator for her to become a woman’s suffrage leader. A skilled, talented woman made a difference when she joined forces with Stanton. As mentioned earlier, Stanton and Anthony opposed the fourteenth and fifteen amendments for not liberating women. As Mayo states, “she published The Revolution, a radical paper, edited by Stanton (1868-1870), and lectured for over six years to pay off its debt.” (Rights for Women, para.3) She was arrested for voting in 1872. “She led a woman’s protest at the 1876 Centennial delivering a "Declaration of Rights" written by Stanton and Matilda Gage. She wrote and published, with Stanton and Gage the History of Woman Suffrage (1881-1885)” (Mayo para. 5). Although she was arrested and it seemed like nothing came easy, she never gave up. Anthony was a hard working woman that rallied many in hopes of advancing women’s rights. “She gathered signatures on suffrage petitions at the state and national levels, undertook arduous state tours to organize suffrage campaigns in the states
Anthony, who never married, spent more than 50 years of her life fighting for women’s equality rights and right to vote, and African American rights. She gave speeches, published a feminist newspaper, petitioned Congress and state legislatures, and supported African American rights. Susan B. Anthony died 14 years before adult women over 21 were given the right to vote
Anthony was an activist for women’s suffrage and equal rights for all throughout the mid 1800s and early 1900s. Early in her life, Anthony worked as an agent for the American Anti-Slavery Society, for which she regularly held meetings and distributed information to influence others in supporting the abolishment of slavery. Following the addition of the 13th amendment to the United States Constitution, Anthony published a newspaper, The Revolution, promoting an eight-hour work day and equal pay for women. Lastly, up until the Nineteenth Amendment was made to the U.S. constitution, Susan. B. Anthony campaigned for women’s rights, specifically the right to vote and therefore equally contribute to American government. In protesting for topics such as women’s suffrage, race equality, and equal pay for equal work, Anthony effectively stood up for what she and those who followed her believed
Almost all the suffragists and those people devoted to women’s rights followed her orders. And another outspoken woman is Alice Paul. When she studied in London, she learnt how to use some “unladylike” strategies to achieve her cause. When she returned to America, she brought this tactics to other women which helped promote the
Susan B. Anthony inspired to fight for women’s right while camping against alcohol..along with Elizabeth Cady Stanton also an activist, Anthony and Stanton founded the NWSA . Which helped the two women to go around and produced The Revolution, a weekly publication that lobbied for women’s rights.She also went on saying that if women ever wanted to get reaction men had…only thing stopping them,..having voting rights. An american social reformer and women’s right activist who played a pivotal role in the women’s suffrage movement, also a teacher who aggregate and compare about nature. She gave the “Women’s Rights to the Suffrage” giving outside the jail she was going to be held in, she gave this speech in person in 1873 and her audience were mostly white women that want virtues like men. Also men that wanted to put women in their place and friends of her and fellow citizens. Her main points are that women needed power that men had. Growing up in a quaker household she knew that women needed honor as men just like slaves experience getting their freedom. In Women’s right to suffrage Susan B. Anthony uses tone, reparation,and logos which dematices why women should have equal morality and voting abilities as men.
Anthony demanded women have a voice across multiple spheres and independence in their personal, economic, and political lives. She believed that suffrage was the ultimate expression of women truly being citizens. Her work inspired thousands of women to fight for suffrage through her social action, which eventually resulted in the 19th amendment. Without Susan B. Anthony’s many contributions, and the influences following her suffrage efforts, women would not have achieved the right to vote in 1920.
Susan B. Anthony was the leader of an organization, along with her partner Elizabeth Stanton, that worked to gain rights for women. Being the leader of the NAWSA meant that she was going to face many difficulties in order to reach her goal. “ The National American Women Suffrage Association (NAWSA) meeting held in New Orleans in 1903 was racially segregated.” This is one of the many problems Anthony and Stanton were going to face while trying
Anthony believed that regardless of gender or race, you as an American citizen should have the right to vote. Anthony voted without having a lawful right. She wanted to prove that she did not commit a crime, but instead she wanted to provide she exercised her human right. She was arrest because her vote was illegal because she was a women. After Anthony’s arrest, she gave a speech about illegally casting her vote and the point she was trying to make by voting. In Susan B. Anthony’s speech, she states “We, the people who formed the union. And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty, but to secure them”. To elaborate further on this statement, Anthony means that since America was built on having freedom and liberty, why don’t all people to include women have the right to
Alice Paul returned to the United States of America in 1910 where she enrolled in yet another school. She graduated from the University of Pennsylvania where she earned a Ph.D. in sociology. This is one piece of evidence supporting the great leadership that Alice Paul portrayed. She found a cause to identify to and then obtained the needed knowledge and education needed to achieve her goals. After graduating from the University, Paul launched herself into her vocation, becoming a “full-time” suffragist. Paul then joined National American Woman Suffrage Association which was founded by Elizabeth Stanton and Susan Anthony among others. Paul soon realized that the leadership styles employed by these two suffragist leaders did not agree with her personality and so she broke from the group, forming her own. Another piece of evidence, Paul understood herself and so knew what methods would agree with her leadership type and personality, essentially magnifying her impact. Paul then founded the Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage with Lucy Burns. “In 1916, NAWSA found itself on the conservative side of the movement.” (ocp.hul.harvard.edu) Paul a radical at