Susan B. Anthony was a leader in the Suffrage movement. She was a teacher until 1852 and then joined the Suffrage movement. She donated all her money to the cause and casted a ballot that opened a huge case. She was found guilty due to a corrupt jury forced by the judge. She was fined and jailed, but never received the punishments.…
Susan B. Anthony was a suffragist and public speaker who was the president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association. Susan was born on February 15, 1820 and Anthony was raised in a Quaker household. She had 8 siblings at first, but only 6 of them lived to be adults. When she grew up, Anthony became the president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association, but before that, her family had a failing business which she moved all around for. She used to be a teacher before becoming a leading abolitionist…
Today I am gonna talk about two people with many amazing accomplishments. Who did more? Who made life better? Who was selfless? Susan Brownell Anthony was born on February 15, 1820, in Adams, Massachusetts.…
Megan Shu Shu 1 Ms. Thurtle English 1AS November 7, 2014 Susan B. Anthony’s Fight for Women’s Rights Susan B. Anthony stood at the door of the voting room, taking a look at the inside of the room. The room was grey, small, there were no windows, and only one way out. The room was full of people concentrating on filling out their ballots. As she walked in, everyone took a moment and looked at her strangely, wondering what a women was doing voting. She had prepared to vote a long time ago and she was to do so.…
America: the country of dreams and perseverance. It's hard to imagine the tough work put into this wonderful place. Some of the greatest reformers came from this land of the almost-free. At one point, women were solely property but, most people wanted to change that, such as Susan B. Anthony. She is an American Icon because of her persistence, independence, and full and invested life.…
Her background in the abolitionists movement, with her family, gave her the bravery to step up and become a leader in the suffrage movement. With Elizabeth Cady Stanton they started their own newspaper called “The Revolution”. The paper called for equal opportunities and rights for women. Susan traveled throughout the west and up into Canada speaking and lecturing, always drawing big crowds. Through her travels, she organized a lot of men and women that helped grow the suffrage organizations locally.…
In Susan’s life time she faced many obstacles that she overcame. Susan B Anthony stated, “Men, their rights, and nothing more; women, their rights, and nothing less. I declare to you that woman must not depend upon the protection of man, but must be taught to protect herself, and there I take my stand.” Susan was a brave woman and she thought that women should be independent and shouldn’t rely on men for everything. Woman should be strong like her, and independent like her.…
Susan B. Anthony. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Ida B. Wells. These three influential women are symbols for feminism in America.…
Susan B. Anthony gave some women the braveness to stand up and fight for our rights, as women, not the “minority.” She never seen us as the minority. All we needed was someone to believe in us, someone to stand up and fight for our rights, and she was the start of something that would change the world for women…
Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Jane Addams, and most importantly, Virginia Minor. These women worked for centuries to gain women the right to vote, equal work wages, and equality next to men. While each of these women had a major part in women’s history, they each took a different approach at their successful efforts. Susan B. Anthony was born February 1820 to a Quaker family. Anthony’s parents encouraged education among all of their children.…
Without the help of women pioneers such as, Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, and Ida B. Wells, the 19th amendment would not have been ratified. Susan B. Anthony, saw that it was wrong for women to not have the same rights as men. When Anthony was thirty two years old, she went to her first woman's rights convention in Syracuse. Once Susan left she declared "that the right which woman needed above every other, the one indeed which would secure to her all the others, was the right of suffrage.” After that she spent the rest of her life fighting for the right to vote.…
Three very important women that help achieve this are Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Lucy Stone. Hailed as “the Napoleon of the women’s rights movement,” Susan Brownell Anthony led the fight for women’s suffrage for more than 50 years, bringing to the cause superb organizational abilities, boundless energy, and single-minded determination. Susan B. Anthony was born on February 15, 1820 in Adams, Massachusetts into a reform-minded Quaker family. At an early age, Anthony was most interested in reform movements, but only temperance and abolition. At great speed, she drove herself into work, involving herself with reform movements.…
Susan B. Anthony devoted her life to end women’s suffrage, and fought to prove that women had the right to vote. In the late 1800s voting was not permitted for women, and if they did they might get arrested. Anthony wrote and delivered stub speeches but didn’t have much success doing so. Nonetheless many years after she died her dedication made an impact in women’s right to vote, and in 1920 the 19th amendment was passed. In her speech Anthony talks about ending women’s suffrage, and her story of how she got arrested for trying to vote.…
Susan B. Anthony was a woman of her words, for she was always willing to put up a fight for what she believed in. Which was that everyone deserved the right to vote regardless of your sex or race. Another known suffragist during this movement was Frances Willard. In 1895 Frances stated, “A wider freedom is coming to the women of America. Too long has it been held that woman has no right to enter these movements……
She held lectures and argued the rights women should be getting. Her speeches diligently focused on how both genders should be equal. No matter how much hate surrounded her and the backlash she faced, there was no way she was going to back down from her stance in the idea. Her activism increased the amount of people to notice and take ideas from her. The life of this individual shows how one idea and one person could result into an everlasting…