Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Eighty Years and More
Buch
Excerpt: ...the black man pass in was to introduce the word male into the national Constitution. After the generous devotion of such women as Anna Carroll and Anna Dickinson in sustaining the policy of the Republicans, both in peace and war, they felt it would come with a bad grace from that party to place new barriers in woman's path to freedom. But how could the amendment be written without the word male, was the question. Robert Dale Owen being at Washington, and behind the scenes at the time, sent copies of the various bills to the officers of the Loyal League, in New York, and related to us some of the amusing discussions. One of the com…
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Excerpt: ...the black man pass in was to introduce the word male into the national Constitution. After the generous devotion of such women as Anna Carroll and Anna Dickinson in sustaining the policy of the Republicans, both in peace and war, they felt it would come with a bad grace from that party to place new barriers in woman's path to freedom. But how could the amendment be written without the word male, was the question. Robert Dale Owen being at Washington, and behind the scenes at the time, sent copies of the various bills to the officers of the Loyal League, in New York, and related to us some of the amusing discussions. One of the committee proposed persons instead of males. That will never do, said another, it would enfranchise wenches. Suffrage for black men will be all the strain the Republican party can stand, said another. Charles Sumner said, years afterward, that he wrote over nineteen pages of foolscap to get rid of the word male and yet keep negro suffrage as a party measure intact; but it could not be done. Miss Anthony and I were the first to see the full significance of the word male in the Fourteenth Amendment, and we at once sounded the alarm, and sent out petitions for a constitutional amendment to prohibit the States from disfranchising any of their citizens on the ground of sex. Miss Anthony, who had spent the year in Kansas, started for New York the moment she saw the proposition before Congress to put the word male into the national Constitution, and made haste to rouse the women in the East to the fact that the time had come to begin vigorous work again for woman's enfranchisement. Leaving Rochester, October 11, she called on Martha Wright at Auburn; Phebe Jones and Lydia Mott at Albany; Mmes. Rose, Gibbons, Davis, at New York city; Lucy Stone and Antoinette Brown Blackwell in New Jersey; Stephen and Abby Foster at Worcester; Mmes. Severance, Dall, Nowell, Dr. Harriet K. Hunt, Dr. M.E. Zackesewska, and...
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Produktdetails
- ISBN: 978-1-153-60351-5
- EAN: 9781153603515
- Produktnummer: 14787730
- Verlag: Books LLC, Reference Series
- Sprache: Englisch
- Erscheinungsjahr: 2013
- Seitenangabe: 132 S.
- Masse: H24.6 cm x B18.9 cm x D0.7 cm 272 g
- Abbildungen: Paperback
- Gewicht: 272
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