What Is The Impact Of Susan B Anthony On Women's Suffrage

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Women’s Suffrage
Susan B. Anthony, born into an activist Quaker household, daughter of Daniel Anthony and Lucy Read, was an icon of the women’s suffrage movement. Growing up, she was “instilled with a strong sense of moral and social justice” (Library of Congress, “God In America.”) by her father. Her family would also hold Anti-Slavery meetings at their farm on Sundays and Fredrick Douglass would sometimes join. When she became a school teacher, she began “advocating for abolition and temperance” (Library of Congress, “God In America.”). It wasn’t until 1852, when she heard Lucy Stone’s speech at the Syracuse Convention, that she was then convinced to join the women’s rights movements. Anthony was also an “agent for the American Anti-Slavery society” (“Susan B. Anthony House”, 2013). She made speeches, hung posters and arranged meetings.
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The association had other members and they “focused their efforts on a federal women’s suffrage amendment” (Library of Congress, “Women’s Rights.”). The two also created a publication known as The Revolution that advocated for women’s rights. After the passage of the 14th and 15th amendments allowed freed African American men to vote, Anthony wanted the same for women. She believed that women deserved the same rights as men. She also refused to divide the women’s rights movement because she believed that both religious and irreligious women would want to take part in changing