News

Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) was never able to cast a vote legally, though she helped secure that right for women across America. As the philosopher of the women’s rights movement in 19th- ...
Elizabeth Cady Stanton is known for helping to launch the American women's rights movement, but she sometimes also got in the way of that cause. Historian Lori Ginzberg says Stanton often ...
JOHNSTOWN – Elizabeth Cady Stanton seemed to have it all – wealth, status and a brilliant mind. The curly haired young woman, whom a local women’s rights historian described as bright and ...
Elizabeth Cady Stanton helped start the movement for women's suffrage by organizing the first women's rights conference in 1848. TODAY "After 160 years in Central Park, the only ...
Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton died at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon at her home in the Stuart Apartment House, 230 West Ninety-fourth Street. Had she lived until the 12th of next month she would ...
ADAMS — Two documents concerning the early years of one of history’s most consequential friendships are now for sale at $15,000 apiece. The signatures of Susan B. Anthony — who was born in Adams and ...
May 10, 2001 Elizabeth Cady Stanton Portrayal. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, portrayed by Ms. Stearns, talked about her role as a pioneer in the women’s rights movement.
How Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton met Born in Johnstown, New York, Stanton organized the first women’s rights convention in 1848 in Seneca Falls with Lucretia Mott, a Nantucket ...
Crews throughout are slated to replace 11 welcome signs with displays paying homage to hometown suffragette Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Skip to main content. You are the owner of this article. Edit ...
Elizabeth Cady Stanton is identified as a women’s suffrage leader. However, she was also a religious Freethinker who published clear-eyed, detailed commentaries on both the Old and New Testaments in ...
Suffragette Elizabeth Cady Stanton's desk on display in new exhibit at Museum of American Revolution. PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- America's Founding Fathers made a declaration - women made revisions.