Audiolibro: Eighty Years and More; Reminiscences 1815-1897
- Download 01 â Childhood audio
- Download 02 â School Days audio
- Download 03 â Girlhood audio
- Download 04 â Life at Peterboro audio
- Download 05 â Our Wedding Journey audio
- Download 06 â Homeward Bound audio
- Download 07 â Motherhood audio
- Download 08 â Boston and Chelsea audio
- Download 09 â The First Womanâs Rights Convention audio
- Download 10 â Susan B. Anthony audio
- Download 11 â Susan B. Anthony (continued) audio
- Download 12 â My First Speech Before a Legislature audio
- Download 13 â Reforms and Mobs audio
- Download 14 â Views on Marriage and Divorce audio
- Download 15 â Women as Patriots audio
- Download 16 â Pioneer Life in Kansas â Our Newspaper âThe Revolutionâ audio
- Download 17 â Lyceums and Lecturers audio
- Download 18 â Westward Ho! audio
- Download 19 â The Spirit of â76 audio
- Download 20 â Writing âThe History of Woman Suffrageâ audio
- Download 21 â In the South of France audio
- Download 22 â Reforms and reformers in Great Britain audio
- Download 23 â Woman and Theology audio
- Download 24 â England and France Revisited audio
- Download 25 â The International Council of Women audio
- Download 26 â My Last Visit to England audio
- Download 27 â Sixtieth Anniversary of the Class of 1832 â The Womanâs Bible audio
- Download 28 â My Eightieth Birthday audio
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DescripciĂłn
Elizabeth Cady Stanton was one of the premier movers in the original womenâs rights movement, along with Susan B. Anthony, her best friend for over 50 years. While Elizabeth initially stayed home with her husband and many babies and wrote the speeches, Susan went on the road to bring the message of the womenâs rights movement to an often hostile public. When black men were given the vote in 1870, Susan and Elizabeth led the womenâs rights establishment of the time to withhold support for a bill that would extend to black men the rights still denied for women of all colors. The two women worked for over 50 years on the womenâs rights cause, yet neither lived to see women get the right to vote when it finally came in 1920.
Elizabeth begins her memoirs with this quotation, âSocial science affirms that womanâs place in society marks the level of civilization.â She dedicates this book to âSUSAN B. ANTHONY, MY STEADFAST FRIEND FOR HALF A CENTURYâ. (Description written by Becky Miller)
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