Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
5 facts about Susan B. Anthony
5 facts about Susan B. Anthony
May 14, 2026 9:44 AM

Today is the 199th anniversary of the birth of Susan B. Anthony. In honor of her legacy, here are five facts you should know about the great American social reformer:

1. Anthony was born in Massachusetts in 1820 to a family of devout, radical Quakers. Her parents raised her and her siblings to have a passion for social reform, and stressed the importance of issues such as prison reform and the abolishment of slavery.Although she continued to describe herself as a Quaker, as an adult Anthony was a member of the Unitarian Church. When asked if she prayed, she once answered: “I pray every single moment of my life; not on my knees but with my work. My prayer is to lift women to equality with men. Work and worship are one with me. I can not imagine a God of the universe made happy by my getting down on my knees and calling him ‘great.’”

2. In 1853 Anthony lobbied the state of New York State to extend property rights to married women. At the time a woman could not own and inherit property in her own name, keep her own wages, or even enter into a contract. In her diary she wrote, “Woman must have a purse [i.e., money] of her own, & how can this be, so long as the wife is denied the right to her individual and joint earnings. Reflections like these, caused me to see and really feel that there was no true freedom for woman without the possession of all her property rights. . .” It wasn’t until 1860 that a law passed giving women the right to own separate property, enter into contracts, and be joint guardians of their children.

3. In 1863 Antony joined with her friend and fellow activist Elizabeth Cady Stanton in organizing the Women’s Loyal National League, the first national women’s political organization in the U.S. The League campaigned for an amendment to theU.S. Constitutionthat would abolish slavery, and collected nearly 400,000 signatures—the largest number of signatures ever introduced on a congressional petition up to that time. The petition drive aided the introduction and subsequent passage of the Thirteenth Amendment.

4. Anthony, again with Stanton, co-founded the National Women’s Suffrage Association (NWSA) in 1869. In 1871 the NWSA adopted a strategy of having women attempt to vote and then file a federal lawsuit when they were turned away. Anthony herself was arrested for attempting to vote in the presidential election of 1872. At the trial of her case, United States v. Susan B. Anthony, she castigated the process as a “high-handed outrage upon my citizen’s rights,” and said to the judge “you have trampled under foot every vital principle of our government. My natural rights, my civil rights, my political rights, my judicial rights, are all alike ignored.” She was convicted and sentenced to pay a fine of $100—which she refused to do.

5. In 1878 Senator Aaron A. Sargent of California introduced the “Anthony Amendment,” an amendment to the U.S. Constitution that stated,” The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.” His bill was rejected but was introduced every year for the next 41 years. In 1919 the exact text of his bill was approved by Congress and ratified by three-fourths of the states in 1920, ing the Nineteenth Amendment. Anthony died in 1906, though, and never saw woman’s suffrage e the law of the land.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Even Big Bird knows better
You may have seen this story a few weeks back toward the end of last year: “Some faith groups say bottled water immoral,” by Rebecca U. Cho of the Religion News Service. The core of the story revolves around this assertion made by the National Council of Churches Eco-Justice Program and a number of other mainline projects: Drinking bottled water is a sin. Cassandra Carmichael, director of eco-justice programs for the National Council of Churches, bases this claim on the...
Religion, recidivism, and reform
The Detroit News ran mentary from the end of last year on the role of religion and prisoner reform today, “Don’t prevent religion from helping to reform prisoners.” The version that ran today omits the references to Jeremy Bentham, which you can get from the original and this related blog post. In related news, Prison Fellowship president Mark Earley reports today that the “Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals has set February 13, 2007, for oral arguments in the appeal of...
Faith-based weather broadcasting
Via Drudge, the Weather Channel “Climate Expert” is taking serious flack (check ments) for her call to pull the credentials of any media meteorologist who doesn’t endorse the theory of human-caused global warming. The cover provided by her boss doesn’t garner any more favorable feedback. I think people want more science from scientists and less dogma. I know I do. UPDATE: On the other hand, this seems a little over the top. If forecasters can’t reliably tell us what will...
The global warming trough
Kim Strasell in OpinionJournal today: CEOs are quick learners, and even those who would get smacked by a carbon cap are now devising ways to make warming work to their political advantage. The “most creative” prize goes to steel giant Nucor. Steven Rowlan, pany’s environmental director, doesn’t want carbon caps in the U.S.–oh, no. The smarter answer, he explains, would be for the U.S. to impose trade restrictions on foreign firms that aren’t environmentally clean. Global warming as foil for...
Jewish theology and economic theory
Pick up the new monograph, Judaism, Markets, and Capitalism: Separating Myth from Reality, from the all-new Acton Bookshoppe today! How does one account for the widespread distaste among Jews for a free market political agenda? Why is it that Jews, who earn per capita almost twice as much as non-Jews in America, “fervently support relatively collectivist social policies”? Corinne and Robert Sauer, co-founders of the Jerusalem Institute for Market Studies, contend that “it is not at all true that Judaism...
Rangel at the helm
mittee, arguably, has more power or attracts more lobbyists than the Committee on Ways and Means,” writes the NYT’s Robin Toner. “Representative Charles B. Rangel, Democrat of New York, joined mittee in 1975, and now, at the age of 76, has finally arrived at the very top.” “[Jesus] said the rich are going straight to hell.” Jared Bernstein, a liberal economist, said: “When the Ways and Means Committee has worked well, they’ve identified social needs and advocated for the funds...
Negotiating entitlements
Last night the President spoke of “the challenge of entitlements” and said that “Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid mitments of conscience — and so it is our duty to keep them permanently sound.” “With enough good sense and good will, you and I can fix Medicare and Medicaid — and save Social Security,” he averred. The ability of the federal government to negotiate drug prices has been an aspect of the recent debate over Medicare that was brought to...
The long, slow march of freedom
With respect to the extension of political, economic, and religious freedom, East Asia contains some of the more challenging spots on the globe. mented in the past on Korea and China. It seems safe now to place in the column “making progress” a nation that had been one of the most totalitarian, Vietnam. Concerning the sphere of religious freedom, Zenit offers this interview (Daily Dispatch 01-25) with French Archbishop Bernard-Nicolas Aubertin of Tours. Aubertin characterizes the situation of the Catholic...
Child labor is too expensive
Child labor is too expensive, at least for the Grand Rapids Press. As part of “cost-cutting measures,” The Press will no longer be delivered by paperboys and papergirls under the age of 18. According to , “In a change to the way they deliver their papers to their carriers, The Press announced they will drop off their papers to depots around the city instead of at neighborhood corners. The carrier will have to go to that depot to get their...
Porn drives tech? Maybe not…
They say that technology drives culture (HT: Zondervan>To The Point). But what drives technology? Many believe that pornography is the driving force behind adoption of particular technologies. Thus, says Slate television critic Troy Patterson, “Watching YouTube is far closer to consuming Internet pornography than staring at the television. … But then, all media culture has an increasingly pornographic feel, doesn’t it?” Let’s look at some actual cases where this claim has been made (HT: Slashdot). In a recent TG Daily...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved