Suffragist Movement Supported PDF
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Khushal School for Girls
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Summary
This document examines the suffragist movement, featuring key figures and their activism. It explores the context surrounding their campaigns and the publications associated with them. The document also mentions important figures like Lucretia Mott and Sojourner Truth.
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Activism / Movement TITLE SUFFRAGIST'S Context from where the title / quotation Publication Used for Suffrage Suffragist # Nam...
Activism / Movement TITLE SUFFRAGIST'S Context from where the title / quotation Publication Used for Suffrage Suffragist # Name of SUFFRAGIST CHAPTER was stated Campaign Supported Civil rights battles were not considered as war; she was not againts the beliefs of quakers. Engaging in civil battle was not I am no advocate of againts quakerism because it does not 1 LUCRETIA COFFIN MOTT passivity. mean quietism. Abolition You may hiss as much as you please, but women The audience of angry men who were will get their rights booing her speech. "Man is between a 2 SOJOURNER TRUTH anyway. hawk & a buzzard". Abolition The statement of Abby Kelly Foster when Bloody feet, sisters, have reminding them of the bravery of the worn smooth the path by women who paved the way to suffrage. which you come up Another quote from Abby: "Harmony? I 3 ABBY KELLY FOSTER hither. don't want harmony. I want truth!" Abolition ELIZABETH CADY The right is ours, have it The rallying cry of the woman's vote as a Women's Rights 4 STANTON we must, use it, we will. movement? (other than to vote) Men decreed that women belong in the Leave women, then, to home. Lucy fought for woman's right to The Woman's Journal - Funded 5 LUCY STONE find their sphere. take whatever place she chose in society. by Lucy Stone & Edited By Julia Abolition Make your protest againts tyranny, Julia saw the vote as a way to break free of Women's Rights 6 JULIA HOWARD HOWE meanness, and injustice. societal injustice. (other than to vote) 1. The North Star - Anti-slavery Men, their rights, & & Women's Rights newspaper - nothing more; women Publisher 2.) The Revolution Temperance (And SUSAN BROWNELL their rights, and nothing The title of the chapter is the masthead of Magazine- Co-editors Susan, later Anti Slavery & 7 ANTHONY less. the suffrage magazine, The Revolution. Elizabeth & Parker Pillsburry Woman's Rights) Can anything be plainer than that a woman, in 1871, urging everyone to agree that the Fought for women to ISABELLA BEECHER being a person is a constitution's word of "people" already own property in her 8 HOOKER citizen? included the women the right to vote. State (CT). Mary Ann believed that black women Social condition of needed to take leadership roles, only then the Black would jobs, education, better living community. Fought Who shall overrule the conditions would follow. It all started with The ProvinCial Freeman (For the Fugitive Slave 9 MARY ANN SHEDD CARY voice of a woman? a vote. the Black community) Act - deportation. The Nat'l Citizen & Ballot Box Matilda died 2 years before 1900 started. 1878 to 1881. The motto of This statement was her call to the next each issue released was: "The generation to continue the fight. This Pen Is Mightier Than The statement was to guide the the next Sword". In 1883 She wrote Abolitionist feelings The soul must assert its generation of women to take their rightful her legacy a book: Woman, in childhood; 10 MATILDA JOSHLYN GAGE own supremary or die. place. Church & State. Temperance Frances didn’t frame suffrage as a right. "Wheel Within a Wheel", a best The guns are ballots and She saw it as a means to an end, she seller encouraging women to 11 FRANCES WILLARD the bullets are ideas. called "home protection" fight. hit the road. Temperance