How Did Elizabeth Cady Stanton Impact The Women's Rights Movement?

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Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a great leader and a great hero for women’s rights. Thanks to her women now can do what men can do. This is because someone like Elizabeth Cady Stanton stood up and fight for what is right. In the two text “The birthplace of women’s rights” by Howard Mansfield and “A Powerful Partnership” by Jean McLeod and Karen Gib, both explains how Elizabeth Cady Stanton made an big impact on the Women’s right act in the 1800s. But there’s one text that talks argues about her the most.

First in Passage 2 “A Powerful Partnership” by Jean McLeod and Karen Gib talks a lot about what Elizabeth Cady Stanton did and her partner Anthony did. Both of them had worked together and got the job done and both of them suffered together. Anthony prepared the speech and Elizabeth did the speech. It explains how she went to a lot of meetings. She had made the Women’s Rights 1 Convention that she and four other women had organized in 1848. This was in lines 10-11. Also “Anthony was unmarried and therefore freer to travel, attend conventions, and organize groups of people to work for suffrage. She was also skilled in raising money for expenses, such as leasing halls and printing posters and pamphlets. Stanton, on the other hand, was tied to her home and 20 the care of her family of seven children, but she had a way with a pen. She could write speeches.”
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Also what she had done and what was happening to make her stand up. It says that they discussed some of the issues like women being locked out of jobs, locked out of education, and locked out of the vote. “The women placed a small notice in the Seneca County Courier and persuaded a minister to open his church to them.” This was said in lines 15 and