Elizabeth Cady Stanton Lived: November 12, 1815 – October 26, 1902 Co-founder and President of the National Woman Suffrage Association Works –The Revolution.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
I. The Roots of The Movement. I. The Roots of The Movement. Women had few rights before the 1840’s Women could not vote or hold an office. Women.
Advertisements

Women Who Spoke Out. 1. Susan B. Anthony Leading organizer for women’s suffrage and equal rights Leading organizer for women’s suffrage and equal rights.
February 25, 2014 WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE. February 25, 2014 NB Pencil Homework Glue/tape In your NB create a 3 paragraph summary explaining: 1. Why women sought.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton Clay Castner, Johanna Hoehenwarter, Maddie Western.
Seneca Falls Convention 1. How was the line that starts with "We hold these truths to be self-evident..." changed from the original Declaration of Independence?
Aim: How did the Women’s Rights Movement create social change in America? Do Now: Pop Quiz HW: Declaration of Sentiments Worksheet.
WOMEN’S RIGHTS MOVEMENT Lucy Stone Susan B. Anthony.
Bellwork 3-4 Sentences in your notebook:
By: James Pope.  Abigail Adams writes to her husband, John Adams, who is attending the Continental Congress in Philadelphia, asking that he and the other.
Women and Reform. ELIZABETH CADY STANTON 1848,women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, NY all men and women are created equal The only issue that did.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton “Because man and woman are the complement of one another, we need woman’s thought in national affairs to make a safe and stable.
{ Elizabeth Cady Stanton By Zeenie Sharif and Mary Bond.
U.S History The Women’s Movement March 7, California Standard Examine the women’s suffrage movement (biographies, writing and speeches of.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Patriots’ week: Day Four: Women suffrage movement By: Ari Kohl.
Section 1 Suffrage Many progressives joined the movement to win voting rights for women.
Standard 15, element D Describe the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, establishing Prohibition, and the Nineteenth Amendment, establishing women’s suffrage.
C14 S 3 Many women abolitionists also worked for women’s rights. July 1848, Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton set up the first women’s rights convention.
SUSAN B. ANTHONY Beckie Vang Ms. Wilson English 1 Pre AP-Period 2.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
The Abolitionist Movement & Women’s Suffrage. Abolitionist Movement  Abolitionist movement is associated with the desire to get rid of slavery  Centered.
Anti-Slavery Movement & Women’s Rights
Women Suffrage youtube.co m/watch?v =CGHGDO_ b_q0.
WOMEN’S RIGHTS Jacob R, Ryan O, Kyra C. The Desire  Women wanted to be equal to a man  They wrote the “Declaration of Sentiment” and changed a few words.
WOMENS MOVEMENT OF EARLY 1800’s By: Lee Nay and Jesse spears U.S. history Ms. Ansel.
The Early Women’s Movement From Seneca Falls to Suffrage 1848 — 1920.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
The Seneca Falls Convention
Patriot Week Day Four By: Jack, Kevin and Elias. Intro In this presentation you will learn about gender equality. It gives equal rights to woman and men.
Susan B. Anthony Women’s Suffrage Act. Her Early Life Born on February 15, 1820 in West Grove, Massachusetts. Her parents were Daniel Anthony and Lucy.
Feminists. Sarah and Angelina Grimke Sisters and reformers who grew up owning slaves, but later became anti-slavery supporters and lecturers. Lectured.
Chapter 18 Section 4 Women’s organizations- right to vote.
Women’s Rights Jeanie Shin Yujin Yang Kori Kang Jiny Kim.
Chapter 8 The Northeast Section 5 The Women’s Movement CSS - 8.6, 8.6.6,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
WOMEN’S RIGHTS MOVEMENT. Women around the Country ◦North ◦Poor women were expected (and needed) to work to support the family ◦Especially in cities ◦South.
Seneca Falls Convention The women's rights meeting took place in Stanton's hometown of Seneca Falls, New York, in July The women's rights meeting.
Leading organizer of the Women’s Movement Founded organization to promote Women’s Suffrage (right to vote) Dedicated life to inspiring other women.
Women’s Rights The legacy of women’s struggle to earn equality in a world turned against them. By Kennedy Dorman.
Julia Feldman Sam Levine Jessica Ebert Aren Berkenbush
US History-Famous Women 9/4/12 Notes Needed for Test-2 weeks
Mr. Peltier Social Studies
What were the reasons for and against women’s suffrage?
Topic: Women’s Movement
Reformers sought to improve women's rights in American society.
Women’s Rights.
Women & Voting Rights (Suffrage)
Reformers sought to improve women’s rights in American society.
ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS The Women’s Movement
Important figures in Women’s history
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Women's Rights Movement
In the mid-1800s, a woman could
Women and Reform 8.3.
Ch. 14 Sec. 5 “Women’s Rights” P
Susan B. Anthony Women’s Suffrage Act.
SUSAN BROWNELL ANTHONY
Abolitionist and Suffrage Movement
Chapter 8 The Northeast Section 5 The Women’s Movement
SUSAN BROWNELL ANTHONY
Women’s Rights Women were unable to vote
Explain in at least 3 complete sentences.
The American Women’s Suffrage Movement
Chapter 14 Section 3.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Reform The Spirit of Reform improvement or change for the better
13-5 Women’s Rights Pages Women’s Struggle for Equal Rights (Women begin to divide focus between abolition & Women’s Rights Movements)
Women’s Rights Reformers
Women’s Rights & Suffrage
Women’s Suffrage.
Presentation transcript:

Elizabeth Cady Stanton Lived: November 12, 1815 – October 26, 1902 Co-founder and President of the National Woman Suffrage Association Works –The Revolution (weekly paper) –The Woman’s Bible –The History of Woman Suffrage, vol. 1-3 –Eighty Years And More: Reminiscences –Seneca Falls Convention Declaration of Sentiments

“I am the better writer, she the better critic...and together we have made arguments that have stood unshaken by the storms of thirty long years; arguments that no man has answered.” -Elizabeth Cady Stanton about herself and Susan B. Anthony

Elizabeth Cady Stanton was one of the leading figures in the fight for women suffrage. She not only helped found the National Woman Suffrage Association, later the National American Woman Suffrage Association, she also wrote many works about women’s rights, attempting to gain support for the cause. One of these works was The Woman’s Bible, in which she criticized the Old Testament’s treatment of women. She also helped write the “Declaration of Rights and Sentiments”, modeled after the Declaration of Independence. This declaration did not only call for women’s right to vote but also their right to own property, higher education, divorce, and may of the other rights that men possessed. She may not have lived long enough to see all of her wishes come to fruition, but she certainly helped set women on the path to more equal rights.

Websites _stanton_subj.htmlhttp:// _stanton_subj.html cady-stanton \ cady-stanton \