US History

Fort Burrows

15.3 -- A Call for Women’s Rights

Seneca Falls Convention - an 1848 meeting at which leaders of the women’s rights movement called for equal rights for women

Women’s Rights Movement - an organized campaign to win property, education, and other rights for women

delegate – person who acts for or represents others

inferior – less important or worthy

persuasive logic – convincing argument in favor of one side of an issue

resolution – opinion about an issue made by a formal organization

ridicule – to mock or make fun of

suffrage – the right to vote

Hudson River School – group of American artists who painted landscapes of New York’s Hudson River Valley in the mid–1800s

transcendentalist – member of the small, influential group of New England writers

and thinkers who believed that the most important truths in life transcended, or went beyond human reason

individualism – concept that stresses the importance of each individual

civil disobedience – idea that people have a right to disobey laws they consider to be unjust if their consciences demand it

critic – person who opposes the views of others

fugitive – person running away from arrest or punishment

idealize – to think of or imagine something as perfect

material wealth – possessions or money

As you have read, Sarah and Angelina Grimké became very powerful speakers against slavery and eventually FOR Women’s Rights. However, their bold activities shocked many people, including some male abolitionists. Many ministers refused to let the Grimkés speak in their churches. One minister did allow them to speak – but left as soon as he introduced them. He announced that he would rather rob a chicken coop than hear a woman speak in public. A friend of the Grimkés made fun of such attitudes in a poem:

“ They’ve taken a notion to speak for themselves, …

And are wielding the tongue and the pen;

They’ve mounted the rostrum; the quarrelsome elves! …

And – oh horrid – are talking to men!”

Mary Chapman, “The Times That Try Men ‘s Souls”

More determined than ever, the Grimkés continued their crusade. “Can you not see,” Angelina asked one abolitionist, “that woman could do and would do a hundred times more than a slave, if she were not fettered?” Now, however, the Grimkés had a second topic to lecture about: women’s rights.

Seeking Equal Rights

By the mid-1800s, women still had few political or legal rights; they could not vote or hold office

When a woman married, her husband became the owner of all her property

All her earned wages belonged to her husband

A husband had the legal right to hit his woman…as long as he did not seriouslyinjure her

Women, like the Grimkes sisters, joined the abolitionist movement

As they worked for slave’s rights, they realized that women lacked FULL social / political rights

Black and white, man and woman, joined together to fight for women’s rights

 Sojourner Truth

 Black woman that told the truth about women working as hard as a man

 Born a slave in New York, she became the most effective women’s rights leader

 Her original name was Isabella; she believed that GOD wanted her to

sojourn, or travel, across the land speaking the truth

 After she gained freedom from slavery, she changed her name to Sojourner Truth

 Her words were seldom written but her message spread by word of mouth

 Truth ridiculed the idea that women were inferior to men…

“I have as much muscle as any man, and can do as much work as any man. I have plowed and reaped and husked and chopped and mowed, and can any man do more work than that?” Sojourner Truth, speech at Akron’s Women’s Rights Convention, 1851

An American Profile
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
1815 - 1902
Elizabeth Cady’s first memory was of an adult visitor sympathizing with her parents on the birth of her younger sister. Another girl!!! Witty, energetic Elizabeth was viewed as a rebellious daughter who loved riding horses, detested sewing, and enjoyed spending time in her father’s office. There, the clerks teased her by reading aloud laws that denied basic rights to women.
In 1839, Cady met abolitionist Henry Stanton. At their wedding ceremony, the couple removed the ‘obey’ from their vows. Elizabeth Cady Stanton chose to obey only her sense of right and wrong.
In July 1848 more than 300 men and women assembled in Seneca Falls, New York, for the nation's first women's rights convention. Elizabeth Cady Stanton documented the historic 1848 meeting by compiling this scrapbook of contemporary newspaper clippings.
Stanton, thirty-two years old at the time of the Seneca Falls Convention, grew gray in the cause. / Cady and her daughter, Harriot, 1856

In 1851 she met temperance worker Susan B. Anthony, and shortly the two would be joined in the long struggle to secure the vote for women. Stanton and Anthony were actually very close as friends. They had many outings and would spend time together a lot, just like any other best friends would do!

 Mott and Stanton

 Influential women’s rights abolitionists; Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton

 Mott, a Quaker, was a quiet speaker

 She influenced listeners with her persuasive logic

 Very organized, she set up petition drives across the North

 Stanton, daughter of a New York judge

 She was an excellent student and athlete

 She never received much attention from her father; she once said,

“father would have felt a proper pride had I been a man”

 In 1840, the two women tried to join the World Antislavery Convention in London

 The officials refused to let women take an active role at the meeting; female delegates were forced to sit behind a curtain, hidden from view

Seneca Falls Convention – July 19-20, 1848

While in London, Mott and Stanton, began thinking about a convention in the United States to draw attention to the problems women faced

"The men…had shown a great need for some education on that question”; the question of women’s rights

To be discussed at Seneca Falls Convention

 Women Are Created Equal

 Delegates approved a Declaration of Sentiments; modeled after our own Declaration of Independence

 We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal

 Declaration of Sentiments demanded equality for women at work, at school,

and at church

 One resolution met opposition; the demand that women be allowed to vote

 There was delegate hesitation, but in the end, the resolution narrowly passed

 A Long Struggle

 The convention started the campaign for women’s rights movement

 In comes Susan B Anthony; she traveled across the country and was a ‘tireless’ speaker

 Hecklers and egg chunkers never stopped her from finishing her speech

 Women did gain legal rights in some states

 New York passed laws allowing married women to keep ‘their’property and the earned

wages (pre-married)

 The struggle for equal rights would continue for many more years

¿¿ What was the significance of the Seneca Falls Convention ?

______

New Opportunities in Education

At the convention, women agreed education was a key,

“The girl must be allowed to romp and play, climb, skate, and swim. Her clothing must be more like those of the boy – strong, loose-fitting garments, thick boots… She must be taught to look forward to a life of self-dependence and, like the boy, prepare herself for some profitable trade profession.” Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Letter, 1851

Women from poor families had little hope in learning to read

Middle class women were taught to dance and draw; not science or math

Women were expected to care for their families; why did they need an education?

 New Careers

 Some men’s colleges began to admit women

 Women became more educated; they began teaching, especially in elementary, grade schools

 Elizabeth Blackwell attended a medical school; Geneva College in New York

 Blackwell was the 1stUS woman to earn a medical degree

 She helped found the 1st medical school for women

 Maria Mitchell was an astronomer

 Sarah Josepha Hale was editor for Godey’s Lady Book; a magazine for women

 Antoinette Blackwell, 1st American woman to be ordained a minister

 She campaigned for abolitionism, temperance, and women’s right to vote

15.4 -- American Art and Literature

“How hard you’re working today, tomorrow will give you back.

If tomorrow you don’t see much success, it’s because today you’re not working hard enough”

David Tran, April 2016

American Painters

♣ Before 1800, most American painters studied in Europe

♣ Benjamin West, of Philadelphia, was appointed as the historical painter for King George III

♣ Two of West’s students, Charles Wilson Peale and Gilbert Stuart, painted famous portraits of George Washington

♣ In the mid-1800s, American artists developed their own style; they were known as

the Hudson River School

♣ Asher B Durand and Thomas Cole painted New York’s Hudson River Region

♣ African American, Robert S Duncanson learned the Hudson River School style

♣ George Caleb Bingham from Missouri, painted frontier life along the rivers that fed into Ole’ Man River ( Mississippi River )

♣ George Catlin and Alfred Jacob Miller painted daily life of Indians on the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains

♣ Hudson River School – creator of natural landscape of the United States

The “Inner Light”

♦ In New England, a group of writers and thinkers called themselves transcendentalists; the most important truths went beyond human reason

♦ They believed individuals should live up to their divine possibilities; support social reform

 Emerson

♦ Ralph Waldo Emerson was the most popular essayist and lecturer of his day

♠ He spoke on self-reliance and human character

♣ He believed civilization provided wealth, but nature exhibited higher values that came from GOD

♥ individualism; each person had an inner light to guide their lives and improve society

♦ He wrote, “Trust thyself, every heart vibrates to that iron string”

 Thoreau

♦ Henry David Thoreau ( thuh ROW ) believed the growth of industry and cities were

ruining the nation

♠ He urged people to live simply and close to nature

♥ Individuals must decide right from wrong

*** Still very important today for CMSE 8th Graders to hear

♦ “If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he

hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music he hears.”

♠ Thoreau’s different drummer told him slavery was wrong

♣ He favored civil disobedience

♥ Sent to jail for not paying taxes; taxes to be used for the Mexican War

♦ His writings influenced Mohandas Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr;

Civildisobedience with nonviolence

1. Why did some women call for equal rights in the 1800’s ______

2. What goals were set at the Seneca Falls convention?

______

3. How did women win new educational opportunities?

______

4 How did American painters develop their own style of painting? ______

5. Why was the “Inner light” important to Emerson and Thoreau?

______

1 of Printer Notes 15D = 15.3 + 15.4 MAR 2017