Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Correspondence, Writings, SpeechesA survey of the works of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anothony beginning with the organization of the Seneca Falls convention and covering American feminism and woman suffrage. |
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Page 158
... Amendment . The latter , in noticing the recent decision of Judge Cartter , of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia , denying to women the right to vote under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments , says : If the people of ...
... Amendment . The latter , in noticing the recent decision of Judge Cartter , of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia , denying to women the right to vote under the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments , says : If the people of ...
Page 159
... amendment of their Constitution , could expunge , without any explanatory or assist- ing legislation , an adjective of five letters from all State and local constitutions , and thereby raise millions of our most ignorant fellow ...
... amendment of their Constitution , could expunge , without any explanatory or assist- ing legislation , an adjective of five letters from all State and local constitutions , and thereby raise millions of our most ignorant fellow ...
Page 160
... Amendment was not to secure to black men their right to vote it did nothing for them , since they possessed everything else before . But if it was intended to prohibit the States from denying or abridging their right to vote , then it ...
... Amendment was not to secure to black men their right to vote it did nothing for them , since they possessed everything else before . But if it was intended to prohibit the States from denying or abridging their right to vote , then it ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
Stanton Address Delivered at Seneca | 27 |
Anthony Letter on temperance August | 36 |
Copyright | |
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abolitionists Amendment American Angelina Grimké Anna Howard Shaw Anthony's antislavery ballot Beecher believed Black suffrage Cady Stanton Papers Christian church citizens civil Constitution convention declared degradation demand divorce document Elizabeth Cady Stanton Elizabeth Stanton emancipation enfranchisement father feel feminism feminist Frances Willard freedom Gerrit Smith give Grimké Harper human husband idea International Council labor laws legislation Library of Congress live Lucretia Mott Lucy Stone male marriage meeting ment Miss Anthony moral mother Mott National natural rights NAWSA negro numbers NWSA Olympia Brown organization party principles protection question radical reform religious Republican right to vote Sarah Grimké Schlesinger Library Seneca Falls sentiment sexual slave slavery social society soul speech Stanton and Anthony Stanton Letters suffragists Susan thou tion Union unto Victoria Woodhull wife Woman Suffrage Association Woman's Bible women women's movement women's rights Woodhull wrote York