Final Exam People #7: Women's Rights Movement

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For Prof. Garmon's AMST 100 Final. People from the Women's Rights Movement

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Elizabeth Cady Staunton

co-founder of the Seneca Falls Convention, attempted to attend the first Anti-Slavery Convention but was denied then eventually told she could sit in the back and be silent. Helped lead the National Women’s Suffrage Association.

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Lucrecia Mott

co-founder of the Seneca Falls convention, attempted to attend the first Anti-Slavery Convention but was denied then eventually told she could sit in the back and be silent.

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Sojourner Truth

delivered the “Ain’t I a Woman” speech at the National Women’s Rights Convention

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Susan B. Anthony

helped lead the National Women’s Suffrage Association

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Betty Friedan

wrote The Feminine Mystique (1963) and challenged the idea that women should only be housewives. Helped found the National Organization for Women

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Shirley Chisholm

helped found NOW and was the first African American woman elected to Congress

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Alice Paul

 former suffragette who proposed the first Equal Rights Act in 1923, which was a one-sentence amendment to the Constitution that said men and women would have equal rights

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Martha Griffiths

proposed a second Equal Rights Act in 1972, which passed in Congress and was only ratified by 35 states so it did not get added to the Constitution.

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Phyllis Schlafly

conservative constitutional lawyer who opposed Griffiths’ ERA, saying it would overturn many important accomplishments of the first wave of american feminism and was scared it would mean women could be drafted to war

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Margaret Sanger

formed the American Birth Control League in 1921 which eventually became Planned Parenthood. Her goal was to educate Americans about birth control and contraceptives and give women options.