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History of Woman Suffrage Volume 1 edited by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Matilda Joslyn Gage, 1887Anthony teaches at an academy for girls and women in upstate New York.
1852
Being turned away from speaking at a temperance meeting prompts Anthony to organize the Woman’s New York State Temperance Society. The temperance movement promoted avoidance of drinking alcoholic beverages.
1856
Active in the abolitionist movement to end the institution of slavery, Anthony begins service as chief New York agent of the American Anti-Slavery Society.
1868
Along with fellow women’s rights activist Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Anthony founds the women’s rights newspaper, The Revolution.
1869
Anthony organizes a women’s suffrage convention in Washington, D.C., in January. Later that year she
Nineteenth AmendmentThe Nineteenth Amendment, which granted women the right to vote in the United States.
National Archives and Records Administrationforms the National Woman Suffrage Association.
1872
Anthony casts a vote in the presidential election. She argues that since she is considered a citizen under the Fourteenth Amendment, she should have the right to vote. For the act of casting a vote, she is arrested and fined $100, which she refuses to pay.
1892
Upon Stanton’s retirement, Anthony becomes president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association.
March 13, 1906
Anthony dies in Rochester, New York, 14 years before ratification of the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which officially granted women the right to vote.
United States, country in North America, a federal republic of 50 states. Besides the 48 conterminous states that occupy the middle latitudes of the continent, the United States includes the state of Alaska, at the northwestern extreme of North America, and the island state of Hawaii, in the