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WellBeingEllipse

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Khushal School for Girls

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suffragists women's rights activism 19th amendment

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The document is a table that features a list of Suffragists, detailing their professions, ancestry, religion, and activism. It highlights their publications and movements supported, including abolition, women's rights, civil rights, and temperance. Many of the figures listed were teachers, editors, and writers and played a role in the struggle for women’s suffrage and other social reforms.

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Okay, here's the structured markdown conversion of the document you provided, with focus on text transcription, table formatting and summarization! ### Suffragists, Publications and Activism | # | Suffragist | Publication Used to Awaken the Public About Women's Rights & Suffrage...

Okay, here's the structured markdown conversion of the document you provided, with focus on text transcription, table formatting and summarization! ### Suffragists, Publications and Activism | # | Suffragist | Publication Used to Awaken the Public About Women's Rights & Suffrage | Profession | Ancestry | Religion | Activism/Movement Supported other than 19th Amendment | |---|-----------------------|--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|----------------------------|-------------------------------|--------------------|----------------------------------------------------------| | 1 | Lucretia Coffin Mott | - | Teacher | White - Island of Nantucket, MA | Quaker | Abolition | | 2 | Sojourner Truth | - | - | Afro American - New Paltz, NY | Unknown | Abolition | | 3 | Abby Kelly Foster | - | Teacher, Lecturer | White - Pelham | Quaker | Abolition | | 4 | Elizabeth Cady Stanton| - | Teacher, writer | - | Unknown | Women's Rights (other than to vote) | | 5 | Lucy Stone | The Woman's Journal - Funded by Lucy Stone & Edited By Julia | Teacher | White - MA | Unknown | Abolition | | 6 | Julia Howard Howe | - | Playwright/Editor | White - NYC | Unknown | Women's Rights (other than to vote) | | 7 | Susan Brownell Anthony| slavery & Women's Rights newspaper -Publisher 2.) The Revolution Magazine- Co-editors Susan, Elizabeth & Parker Pillsburry | Teacher | White - Western NY | Quaker | Temperance (And later Anti Slavery & Woman's Rights) | | 8 | Isabella Beecher Hooker| - | Plain housewife | White - CT | Spiritualism (CT) | Fought for women to own property in her State | | 9 | Mary Ann Shadd Cary | The Provinvial Freeman (For the Black community) | Teacher | Afro American - DE | Unknown | Social condition of the Black community, Fought the Fugitive Slave Act-deportation | | 10| Matilda Joslyn Gage | The Nat'l Citizen & Ballot Box 1878 to 1881. The motto of each issue released was: "The Pen Is Mightier Than The Sword". In 1883 She wrote her legacy a book: Woman, Church & State. | Publisher newspaper Editor | White - Fayetteville, NY | Anti Religion | Abolitionist happenings in childhood; Temperance | | 11| Frances Willard | "Wheel Within a Wheel", a best seller encouraging women to hit the road. | Teacher and a Public Speaker | White - IL | Christian | Temperance | | 12| Anna Howard Shaw | - | Methodist Minister / Doctorate in Medicine | White - MI | Methodist | Temperance | | 13| Carrie Chapman Catt | The Origin of Species book (that humans could evolve in moral & intellectual ways, becoming higher beings) | Principal, Co-editor of her husband publishing; journalist | White - Al | - | Women's Rights to vote locally, Slaves were freed but there was racial descrimination. She fought the ill treatment to the black. | | 14| Ida B. Wells-Barnett | The Memphis Free Speech & Headlight. | Publisher & Co-editor | Afro-American & part Native American; Father was white- TN | - | Pioneer of the modern civil rights; Education reform | | 15| Mary Church Terrell | - | - | - | -| - | | 16| Lucy Burns | - | - | White - NY | | - | | 17| Jeanette Rankin | - | Teacher, Social Worker | White - MT | - | - | | 18| Adelina Otero-Warren | - | Socialite | White/Hispanic - Albuquerque, NM | Roman Catholic | - | | 19| Alice Paul | A Vindication of the Rights of Women book. | Social Worker | White - NJ | Quaker | - | ### Context of the Title From Where It Stated | # | Suffragist | Title of The Chapter | Context of the Title From Where It Stated | |----|----------------------------|---------------------------------------------------|-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 1 | Lucretia Coffin Mott | I am no advocate of passivity. | Civil rights battles were not considered as war. Engaging in civil battle was not against quakerism because it does not mean quietism. | | 2 | Sojourner Truth | You may hiss as much as you please, but women will get their rights anyway. | The audience of angry men who were booing her speech. "Man is between a hawk & a buzzard". | | 3 | Abby Kelly Foster | Bloody feet, sisters, have worn smooth the path by which you come up hither. | The statement of Abby Kelly Foster when reminding them of the bravery of the women who paved the way to suffrage. | | 4 | Elizabeth Cady Stanton | The right is ours, have it we must, use it, we will. | The rallying cry of the woman's vote as a movement? | | 5 | Lucy Stone | Leave women, then, to find their sphere. | Men decreed that women belong in the home. | | 6 | Julia Howard Howe | Make your protest against tyranny, meaness, and injustice. | Julia saw the vote as a way to break free of societal injustice. | | 7 | Susan Brownell Anthony | Men, their rights, & nothing more; women their rights, and nothing less. | The title of the chapter is the masthead of the suffrage magazine, The Revolution. | | 8 | Isabella Beecher Hooker | Can anything be plainer than that a woman, being a person is a citizen? | Urging everyone to agree that the constitution's word of "people" already included the women the right to vote. | | 9 | Mary Ann Shadd Cary | Who shall overrule the voice of a woman? | Mary Ann believed that black women needed to take leadership roles | | 10 | Matilda Joslyn Gage | The soul must assert its own supremacy or die. | Statement was her call to the next generation to continue the fight. | | 11 | Frances Willard | The guns are ballots and the bullets are ideas. | Frances didn't frame suffrage as a right, She saw it as a means to an end, she called "home protection" fight. | | 12 | Anna Howard Shaw | In the people's voice there is a soporano as well as a bass. | Anna's view; democracy demands equality. | | 13 | Carrie Chapman Catt | We women demand an equal voice, we shall accept nothing less. | Slogan when she promoted world suffrage: We women demand an equal voice, we shall accept nothing less. Women Arise: Demand the Vote!. | | 14 | Ida B. Wells-Barnett | The way to right wrongs is to turn the light of truth upon them. | Ida was referring to the racist when she said: Turn the light of truth upon them. | | 15 | Mary Church Terrell | Lifting as we climg oward & upward we go. | Women's vote could reform cruel labor practices | | 16 | Lucy Burns | Mr president, what will you do for woman suffrage? | Lucy and 9 others attended Wilson's annual address to Congress with a banner,"What will you do to woman's suffrage"? | | 17 | Jeanette Rankin | How shall we answer their challende gentlemen? | Jeanette Rankin challenged the congress about suffrage. | | 18 | Adelina Otero-Warren | We will win. | Nina and the New Mexico suffragists suffered setback after setbacks, until Feb 1920, finally NM voted on the 19th amendment. | | 19 | Alice Paul | Votes for women. | Success would have been delayed for many years to come, had it not been for Alice Paul and Lucy Burns' militant activism. |

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