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  1. Though her defining cause became women’s suffrage, Susan B. Anthony was also an active anti-slavery activist. Born into a Quaker family in February of 1820, Anthony grew up amongst reformers. John Brown (1939) by John Steuart Curry Huntington Museum of Art. Her brother, Merritt, even fought alongside famous abolitionist John Brown in the ...

  2. Dec 11, 2023 · The trial of Susan B. Anthony v. the United States began on June 17, 1873. Presiding was Judge Ward Hunt, an outspoken opponent of women’s suffrage. Perhaps fearful of Anthony’s compelling oratorical skills, Hunt refused to let Anthony testify on her own behalf.

  3. She was the first actual woman printed on a circulating U.S. coin (as opposed to the iconic female figure of Liberty); the Susan B. Anthony dollar coin was minted in 1979–1981 and again in 1999. Susan Brownel Anthony was born February 15, 1820, to Daniel Anthony and Lucy (Reed) Anthony in Adams, Massachusetts, the second of eight children.

  4. Susan B. Anthony recognized that without the right to vote women would keep fighting the same battles for equality over and over again. She traveled many miles, giving hundreds of speeches, gathering thousands of signatures on petitions, and organizing suffragists, to press for women’s suffrage. In 1872 Susan B. Anthony forced the issue.

  5. March 13, 1906. Anthony dies in Rochester, New York, 14 years before ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which officially granted women the right to vote. A timeline of the life of American activist Susan B. Anthony who fought for woman suffrage, or women’s right to vote, in the United States. Her work helped ...

  6. Susan B. Anthony was a teacher, a speaker and an American civil rights leader who fought for rights for African Americans and women. She spoke out against slavery and fought for suffrage, or the right to vote for African Americans and women. Susan cast her vote in the 1872 presidential election and was arrested for doing so.

  7. Apr 6, 2016 · Susan B. Anthony: ‘It Was We, the People; Not We, the White Males’. On November 1, 1872, Susan B. Anthony entered a barbershop in Rochester, N.Y., that doubled as a voter registration office and insisted she had as much right to vote as any man. Startled officials allowed her to register after she threatened to sue them.

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