#ElizabethCadyStanton
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saramackenzie1982 · 2 years ago
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#InternationalWomensDay2023 #WeCanDoThis #WomensLiberation #WomensSuffrage #WomensHistory #WomensMovement #DiversityAndInclusion #IGotTheVote #WomenGainedRights #ForeverGrateful #SusanBAnthony #ElizabethCadyStanton #HarrietTubman #SallyRide #QueenElizabethII #JustAFewExamples #CountlessMore #NonethelessShePersisted https://www.instagram.com/p/Cph2EV8s8XW/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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mdanishurrahman · 2 years ago
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NOISEMAKERS of the Week
Women's Equality Day is observed each year in the month of August. The day celebrates the passage of the 19th Amendment, which granted women the right to vote on August 26, 1920. With the ratification of this amendment, millions of women across the country were finally able to make their voices heard by voting.
This week we celebrate as "Noisemakers of the Week" the trailblazing women who fought to deliver a better future for all American women. Suffrage activists such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, Susan B. Anthony and Alice Paul defied danger, used their voices, and worked tirelessly for decades to realize what we know today as basic rights - the right to vote and own property.
The 2022 Women's Equality Day theme is: “Celebrating Women's Right to Vote" a right more important than ever in the wake of the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade and eliminate a woman’s constitutional right to choose.
In acknowledging the day, The White House issued a Presidential Proclamation, reading in part:
"On August 26, 1920, after decades of hard-fought advocacy, women won the right to vote, and our Nation moved one step closer to living out our sacred ideal that all people are created equal. On Women’s Equality Day, we honor the movement for universal suffrage that led to the 19th Amendment, celebrate the progress of women over the years, and renew our commitment to advancing gender equity and protecting women’s rights." To read more, please visit https://us2.campaign-archive.com/...
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schooloffeminism · 3 years ago
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#Herstory #UnDiaComoHoy #NoraStanton Blatch Barney (30 de septiembre de 1883, Basingstoke, Inglaterra - 18 de enero de 1971, Greenwich, Estados Unidos) fue una i#ngenieracivil, #arquitecta, #activista #sufragista y #feminista estadounidense. Fue una de las primeras mujeres en graduarse en ingeniería en Estados Unidos. Miembro de una familia de luchadoras por los derechos de las mujeres, hija de la sufragista #HarriotStantonBlatch y nieta de la histórica #ElizabethCadyStanton, se negó a renunciar a su carrera de ingeniera haciendo frente a la exigencia de su marido, el inventor Lee De Forest, de quien se separó al año de casarse. Éste denunció públicamente en un artículo del New York Times en 1911 las complicaciones de tener una esposa con carrera universitaria. Junto a su actividad laboral Nora dedicó también tiempo al activismo en favor de los derechos de las mujeres y a la lucha sufragista. Mientras estudiaba en la Universidad Cornel fundó un Club Sufragista y de 1909 a 1917 hizo campaña en Nueva York. Asumió la presidencia de la Unión Política de Mujeres en 1915 sucediendo a su madre y editó el Women’s Political World. Participó por tanto en la lucha del Partido Nacional de las Mujeres para la Enmienda sobre Igualdad de Derechos. Mantuvo el activismo político hasta sus últimos años escribiendo panfletos como World Peace Through a People's Parliament en 1944 y Women as Human Beings (Mujeres como seres humanos) publicado en 1946. — Wikipedia #womeninscience #mujeresyciencia #educarenigualdad #educarenfeminismo #schooloffeminism https://www.instagram.com/schooloffeminism/p/CY3O-k3qKEa/?utm_medium=tumblr
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yourthomasjefferson · 5 years ago
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#Repost @americanhistoricaltheatre with @get_repost ・・・ During our recent Zoom meeting, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis was interrupted by her children's need for cookies. The first minute of the ensuing conversation —ultimately touching on such subjects as delicious baked goods, the drinking of adult beverages, temperance, and the 18th Amendment— presented here. The full (5 minute) conversation can be found on our Youtube and Facebook pages, which are linked in our profile bio. . . (In order of appearance in the full vodeo) . #JacquelineKennedyOnassis — Jill Lawrence Holland . #FranklinDelanoRoosevelt — Neill Hartley . #ThomasJefferson — Steve Edenbo . #ElizabethCadyStanton — Kim Hanley . #RosaParks — Alexandra M. Ford . #AlexanderHamilton — Eben Kuhns . #LouisaMayAlcott — Pat Jordan . #AbrahamLincoln — Bob Gleason . . If you would like to invite any of these historical figures to share their fun, unique perspectives and leadership insights at your next Zoom meeting or other distance technology event, contact us! This video could not have been produced without the irreplaceable technological assistance of the The Alexander Hamilton Awareness Society and Sergio Villavicencio . . . #americanhistory #suffragette #womensrights #blackhistory #lookalike #reenactor #theatre #quarantinelife #zoom #zoommeeting #foundingfathers #civilwar #fdr #jackieo #jacquelinekennedy #prohibition #temperance #hamilton #lincoln #abelincoln https://www.instagram.com/p/B_-fth5Dja4/?igshid=xwmsjzo7zcnp
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pgcclibrary · 5 years ago
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𝐄𝐥𝐢𝐳𝐚𝐛𝐞𝐭𝐡 𝐂𝐚𝐝𝐲 𝐒𝐭𝐚𝐧𝐭𝐨𝐧 was one of the leading suffragists of 19th-century America. As coorganizer with Susan B. Anthony of the first women's rights convention in the United States, as the author of the first public statement calling for women's suffrage, and as the coauthor of History of Woman Suffrage, a massive work documenting the suffragist movement's history in the 19th century, Stanton was a major figure in popularizing the cause of women's rights.⠀ ⠀ In 1851 Stanton met Susan B. Anthony and formed a working partnership that would unite them for the rest of their lives. The two women complimented each others' strengths: Anthony was a strong organizer while Stanton was better at persuasive argument; Anthony could organize the movement's activities while Stanton was a popular writer on its behalf. The two women founded a new independent organization, the National American Woman Suffrage Association, to work for the right of women to vote.⠀ ⠀ In 1881 Stanton and Anthony, working with Matilda Joslyn Gage, gathered many of their speeches and writings for periodicals and published the first volume of A History of Woman Suffrage. The massive work would eventually fill six volumes, the last being published after Stanton's death in 1902.⠀ ⠀ ==⠀ ⠀ Source: "Elizabeth Cady Stanton." Feminist Writers, edited by Pamela Kester-Shelton, St. James Press, 1996. Gale In Context: Biography⠀ .⠀ .⠀ .⠀ #pgcc #pgcclibrary #womenshistorymonth #elizabethcadystanton (at Prince George's Community College) https://www.instagram.com/p/B9XCjHjBRuL/?igshid=nthwn031419p
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rjbailey · 5 years ago
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Reposted from @quotabelle - “The best protector any woman can have, one that will serve her at all times and in all places, is courage.” ~ Elizabeth Cady Stanton . . 100 years ago today, the US Senate passed the proposed 19th Amendment to the US Constitution sending it to the states to ratify to give women the right to vote. It took decades of work to get to this point ~ and it would be more than another year before the amendment would become law in August 1920. Many courageous and determined women worked tirelessly, in addition to the two best known names, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. Among them: Alice Paul, Mary Church Terrell, Lucretia Mott, Ida B. Wells and Hallie Quinn Brown, to name a few. And, research in recent years shows that many of these leaders looked to Native American women of the time to learn from the political power and respect afforded women of indigenous nations. Cheers to the many women and men who courageously championed freedom and equality ~ and those among us to continue to be vocal to protect equal rights and human rights. . #BeautifullySaid by #elizabethcadystanton #suffragette #19thamendment #suffrage100 #womensrighttovote #womenleaders #gritandgrace #quotabelle - #regrann https://www.instagram.com/p/ByTNo4Rlek-/?igshid=4w1xwbncoh35
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irgroomer · 6 years ago
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Emilee is part of a wax museum! Her character is Elisabeth Cady Stanton. #daughter #mydaughter #ilovemydaughter #child #mychild #ilovemychild #kid #mykid #ilovemykid #school #elizabethcadystanton #presentation #speech (at Roy Waldron School Drama Team) https://www.instagram.com/p/BxxEP3wB2N3/?igshid=y7z1wampzdsv
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bricehammack · 3 years ago
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#Pokémon #NewYorkCity #Manhattan #CentralPark #LiteraryWalk #WomensRightsPioneersMonument #SojournerTruth #SusanBAnthony #ElizabethCadyStanton #MeredithBergman #BriceDailyPhoto https://www.instagram.com/p/CSulru4LO5J/?utm_medium=tumblr
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galaxyofcomics · 4 years ago
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The Graphic Library series is an amazing resource! . . . . . #elizabethcadystanton #susanbanthony #feminism #suffragette #sojournertruth #vote #womensvote #suffrage #senecafalls #votesforwomen #alicepaul #thamendment #womenshistory #otd #tradingcards #herstory #remembertheladies #madeinamerica #heritagecards #ushistory #americanhistory #archivesladieswholead #rightotvote #idabwells #womensrights #womenempowerment #lucretiamott #equality #Galaxyofcomics (at Galaxy of Comics) https://www.instagram.com/p/CPOHVrXhZ-B/?utm_medium=tumblr
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monriatitans · 4 years ago
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Tue, March 16, 2021 “I am always busy, which is perhaps the chief reason why I am always well.” - Elizabeth Cady Stanton ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~ #elizabethcadystanton #elizabethcadystantonquote #elizabethcadystantonquotes #educational #educationalpost #womenshistorymonth #womenshistory #whm #learnsomethingneweveryday #becomesmartereveryday #monriatitans #quotescreatorapp @quotescreatorapp https://www.instagram.com/p/CMgiH9ajvq0/?igshid=drjs7x843rg3
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bonniefillenwarth · 6 years ago
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Today’s adventure was Seneca Falls with Elizabeth Cast Stanton’s House, the McClintock House, Wesleyan Chapel, and the Women’s Rights National Historic Park @womensrightsnps #senecafalls #womensrights #suffrage #elizabethcadystanton #suffrageroadtrip #nationalparks (at Seneca Falls, New York)
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schooloffeminism · 2 years ago
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#Herstory #UnDíaComoHoy #ElizabethCadyStanton (Johnstown, NY, 12/11/1815 – NY, 26/10/1902), #sufragista y #abolicionista estadounidense que ha pasado a la historia como una de las mayores #pioneras por la lucha de los derechos de las mujeres. Participó en la #DeclaracióndeSenecaFalls, durante la Convención de Seneca Falls, en 1848, considerado el primer movimiento organizado por los derechos de la mujer y por el #sufragiofemenino en EEUU. Fue presidenta de la National American Woman Suffrage Association desde 1890 hasta 1892. Antes de que Stanton participara en los movimientos por los derechos femeninos ya era una #activista abolicionista, junto a su marido Henry Brewster Stanton, cofundador del Partido Republicano, y su primo Gerrit Smith. A diferencia de otros activistas implicados en los movimientos por los derechos de la mujer, Stanton luchó no solo por el voto femenino sino por más reivindicaciones: derechos parentales de la mujer y de custodia, derechos de propiedad, derechos laborales, derechos por mejores salarios, derecho al divorcio, a la salud de la familia y al control de la natalidad. Además, estaba a favor del movimiento por la templanza. Después de la guerra de Secesión estadounidense, se produjeron divisiones en el joven movimiento feminista porque Stanton se opuso a la inclusión de la 14ª y 15ª enmienda de la Constitución estadounidense, al no reconocer el voto femenino. Se opuso también a dar protección legal y derecho a voto a afroamericanos mientras que se le siguiera negando el voto a la mujer, tanto blanca como negra. Su posición produjo la división de la organización en dos, aunque finalmente se volvieron a unir, con Stanton como presidenta de la organización, veinte años después del movimiento femenino original. Stanton construyó hábilmente su propia imagen pública y ha pasado a la historia por su legado como una de las grandes radicales y reformadoras sociales en la historia de EEUU. Llegó a escribir tanto The Woman's Bible como su autobiografía Eighty Years and More, y muchos artículos sobre los derechos de la mujer y el voto femenino. #efemérides
#educarenigualdad #educarenfeminismo #schooloffeminism https://www.instagram.com/p/CkK6c2Lj-Le/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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yourthomasjefferson · 5 years ago
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Herein, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and I join @americanhistoricaltheatre and @freedomsfoundation to suggest ways to time your #handwashing with an historical perspective on modern improvements in sanitary measures . . . Kim Hanley is not only Elizabeth Cady Stanton, but also the Executive Director of AHT. She made her own clothing as well as the waist coat and breeches that I am wearing . . . My shirt was made by Cobb Creek Merchants . . . #ThomasJefferson #ElizabethCadyStanton #YourThomasJefferson #AHTheatre #washyourhands #soap #history #reenactor #historical https://www.instagram.com/p/B9xw9opDfRD/?igshid=15u6h7km8fpw8
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rjbailey · 4 years ago
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Reposted from @quotabelle “The best protector any woman can have, one that will serve her at all times and in all places, is courage.” ~ Elizabeth Cady Stanton . . It took decades to get to this day in 1920 when the 19th Amendment to the US Constitution was ratified, granting voting rights to women...although not all women. That came decades later with passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Here’s to the courageous, tenacious women who didn’t give up ~ and those who keep bravely working for an equal, humane, compassionate world. . #BeautifullySaid by #elizabethcadystanton #womenssuffrage #19thamendment #womensupportingwomen #vote #bravely #gritandgrace #quotabelle - #regrann https://www.instagram.com/p/CEHpOeIFHDM/?igshid=1o6hj2fqxhgcl
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jarrydwillis · 5 years ago
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Happy #MothersDay Phoebe Burns, the mom who saved the #SusanBAnthony Amendment 🗳 🗽 #Suffrage #WomensRights #VotingRights #MoralCourage #19thAmendment #SusanBAnthonyAmendment #SenecaFalls #MargaretSanger #ElizabethCadyStanton #Psychology #UCSD #TritonPride 🔱 #GamerGirl #WomenRunTheWorld 👸🏻 https://www.instagram.com/p/CACWTgfg3v-/?igshid=z0u3a79m99g2
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anyasetsfire · 7 years ago
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“It was just so in the American Revolution, in 1776, the first delicacy the men threw overboard in Boston harbor was the tea, woman's favorite beverage. The tobacco and whiskey, though heavily taxed, they clung to with the tenacity of the devil-fish.”
- Elizabeth Cady Stanton
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