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  2. Introduction. Elizabeth Cady Stanton helped to start the women’s rights movement in the United States. She led the fight to give women the right to vote in elections. Early Life. Elizabeth Cady was born in Johnstown, New York, on November 12, 1815. She was a good student, but she could not go to college. Colleges did not accept women then.

    • Early Life
    • Marriage
    • Children
    • Declaration of Sentiments
    • Susan B. Anthony
    • Women’s Suffrage Movement Divides
    • Stanton’s Later Years
    • Legacy
    • Sources

    Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born in Johnstown, New York, on November 12, 1815, to Daniel Cady and Margaret Livingston. Her father was the owner of enslaved workers, a prominent attorney, a Congressman and judge who exposed his daughter to the study of law and other so-called male domains early in her life. This exposure ignited a fire within Elizabe...

    In 1839, Elizabeth stayed in Peterboro, New York, with her cousin Gerrit Smith—who later supported John Brown’s raid of an arsenal in Harper’s Ferry, West Virginia—and was introduced to the abolitionist movement. While there, she met Henry Brewster Stanton, a journalist and abolitionist volunteering for the American Anti-Slavery Society. Elizabeth ...

    Stanton bore six children between 1842 and 1859 and had seven children total: Harriet Stanton Blach, Daniel Cady Stanton, Robert Livingston Stanton, Theodore Stanton, Henry Brewster Stanton, Jr., Margaret Livingston Stanton Lawrence and Gerrit Smith Stanton. During this time, she remained active in the fight for women’s rights, though the duties of...

    Then, in 1848, Stanton helped organize the First Women’s Rights Convention—often called the Seneca Falls Convention—with Lucretia Mott, Jane Hunt, Mary Ann M’Clintock and Martha Coffin Wright. Stanton helped write the Declaration of Sentiments, a document modeled after the Declaration of Independencethat laid out what the rights of American women s...

    The seeds of activism had been sown within Stanton, and she was soon asked to speak at other women’s rights conventions. In 1851, she met feminist Quaker and social reformer Susan B. Anthony. The two women could not have been more different, yet they became fast friends and co-campaigners for the temperance movement and then for the suffrage moveme...

    When the Civil War broke out, Stanton and Anthony formed the Women’s Loyal National League to encourage Congress to pass the 13th Amendmentabolishing slavery. In 1866, they lobbied against the 14th Amendment and 15th Amendment giving Black men the right to votebecause the amendments didn’t give the right to vote to women, too. Many of their aboliti...

    In the early 1880s, Stanton co-authored the first three volumes of the History of Woman Suffrage with Matilda Joslyn Gage and Susan B. Anthony. In 1895, she and a committee of women published The Woman’s Bible to point out the bias in the Bibletowards women and challenge its stance that women should be submissive to men. The Woman’s Biblebecame a b...

    Stanton died on October 26, 1902 from heart failure. True to form, she wanted her brain to be donated to science upon her death to debunk claims that the mass of men’s brains made them smarter than women. Her children, however, didn’t carry out her wish. Though she never gained the right to vote in her lifetime, Stanton left behind a legion of femi...

    Address to the Legislature of New York, 1854. National Park Service. Declaration of Sentiments. National Park Service. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Biography. Biography. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. National Park Service. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. VCU Libraries Social Welfare History Project. Susan B...

  3. Author, lecturer, and chief philosopher of the woman’s rights and suffrage movements, Elizabeth Cady Stanton formulated the agenda for woman’s rights that guided the struggle well into the 20th century. Born on November 12, 1815 in Johnstown, New York, Stanton was the daughter of Margaret Livingston and Daniel Cady, Johnstown's most ...

  4. Elizabeth Cady Stanton ( née Cady; November 12, 1815 – October 26, 1902) was an American writer and activist who was a leader of the women's rights movement in the U.S. during the mid- to late-19th century.

  5. May 17, 2018 · Daughter of Daniel and Margaret Livingston Cady; married Henry Brewster Stanton, 1840; children: seven. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was the fourth of six children. Her father was a lawyer, politician, and judge. Listening to his clients and reading his law books, she learned at an early age of the injustices women suffer.

  6. Dec 11, 2023 · Early Life and Family Background. Acclaimed suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born on November 12, 1815, in Johnstown, New York. She was the eighth of Daniel and Margaret Livingston Cadys eleven children.

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