Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
5 facts about Susan B. Anthony
5 facts about Susan B. Anthony
Feb 11, 2026 9:09 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
How Hong Kong moved from two systems to one tyranny
Since the National Security Law was imposed Beijing in 2020, basic human and civil rights in Hong Kong have been increasingly crushed, with no end in sight and emigration the only short-term solution. Read More… Hong Kong has e the face of China’s dictatorship, the most dramatic evidence of Xi Jinping’s determination to extinguish even the hint of dissent among his people. Today residents of the Special Administrative Region are ruled pletely and cruelly by the Chinese Communist Party as...
How China’s communist regime will outlast the USSR’s
Smart economics, Western goodies, and cruel politics have helped Beijing avoid a Soviet-style collapse—for now. Read More… The collapse of the Soviet Union 74 years after the Bolshevik revolution was supposed to herald the end munism. Yet the People’s Republic of China lives on, 72 years after Mao Zedong famously proclaimed the founding of the PRC in Beijing. That regime is on course to outlast the USSR. Why did one collapse and the other survive, even thrive? It isn’t because...
“Political Catholicism,” liberalism, and the myth of neutrality
It remains unclear whom the neo-integralists and post-liberals are debating with, since there’s mon ground between the different camps than anyone would admit. The issue is specifics: What do they really want? Read More… On Twitter and in essays at The American Conservative, Sohrab Ahmari has argued that the debates about liberalism, post-liberalism, and integralism are “exhausted,” and that what he calls “political Catholics” are taking “these battles in other, more concrete dimensions.” In his most recent essay, coauthored by...
Journalist denied visa renewal by Hong Kong authorities without explanation
Sue-Lin Wong will no longer be able to cover news on China for The Economist in a move perceived to be one more crackdown on freedom of the press in Hong Kong. Read More… Hong Kong authorities denied a foreign journalist for The Economist renewal of her visa without any explanation, the magazine reported. Sue-Lin Wong, an Australian citizen, was a reporter based in Hong Kong but is no longer able to continue her work covering news on China and...
Former Next Digital CEO denied bail after five months in prison
Cheung Kim-hung, former CEO of the pany founded by pro-democracy activist Jimmy Lai, must continue to sit in jail as he awaits his Dec. 28 court date, accused of violating the broad and oppressive National Security Law imposed by Beijing. Read More… After enduring five months in prison awaiting trial on conspiracy charges under Hong Kong’s National Security Law (NSL), Cheung Kim-hung, former CEO of Next Digital pany, was denied bail by the city’s high court. The presiding judge, D’Almada...
Despite displays of strength, China has key weaknesses
It’s easy to worry over China’s increasing bellicosity and economic strength, but its demographic woes, regional challengers, and declining productivity provide new opportunities for the West and its allies. Read More… The recent announcement that China had tested something akin to a Fractional Orbital Bombardment System, which is launched into space and then orbits the globe before discharging a missile at its target, underscored yet again that America and its allies have serious grounds to be worried about China. Whether...
Removing statues won’t erase the past, could mar the future
There is no option to erase the past and start anew; what we imagine we were will determine, in part, what we e, and a transformative grace applied to our past will secure a brighter future. Read More… Monuments have been created for thousands of years. The word monument itself finds its Greek etymological roots inMnemosyne, the name of the ancient goddess of memory and mother of the nine muses. It is from memory that human culture itself arises and...
Hong Kong’s extreme National Security Law wins second conviction
One more pro-democracy activist has been convicted under Beijing’s highly repressive NSL, which seeks to suppress “subversion” by crushing human rights. Read More… A Hong Kong court has handed down a second conviction under the wide-sweeping National Security Law (NSL), this time for chanting pro-independence slogans. According to ABC News, Ma Chun-man was convicted on Oct. 25 for inciting secession by chanting slogans such as “Hong Kong independence, the only way out” on 20 different occasions between August and November...
Does Hollywood love beauty more than profit?
Filmmaker Denis Villeneuve dazzles audiences and critics alike with genre films where you wouldn’t expect to find much love. What is his secret? Read More… Beauty has the power to spellbind everyone—the proof is Canadian director Denis Villeneuve. His last three movies, Dune (2021), Blade Runner 2049 (2017), and Arrival (2016), have earned him a reputation as a visionary and a sensitive director, despite science fiction as his genre, which normally is considered either too sophisticated for the broad audience...
The trial of Jimmy Lai and seven other pro-democracy activists has begun in Hong Kong
In what is sure to make headlines worldwide, former newspaper publisher Jimmy Lai and seven others are being tried for participating in a Tiananmen Square Massacre vigil last year, now banned under the extremist National Security Law. Read More… The trial of outspoken media tycoon and longtime Acton friend Jimmy Lai, along with seven other influential pro-democracy activists, began Nov. 1 in a Hong Kong court. The group is being tried for participating in an unauthorized Tiananmen Square Massacre vigil...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved