From The Jack Miller Center <[email protected]>
Subject Declaring Rights and Sentiments
Date July 18, 2022 11:59 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Remembering the Seneca Falls Convention

View this in your browser ([link removed])
Watershed Moments in History
Women Holding Self-Evident Truths that All are Created Equal
This week marks the 174^th anniversary of the Seneca Falls Convention, the origin of the women's suffrage movement and a landmark event in our historical journey to realize the promises of the Declaration of Independence.

What, and who, made the convention such a pivotal moment in American history?

Two humiliated women walked arm-in-arm through London on a warm summer night in 1840. Mere hours earlier, these women - Lucretia Mott (left) and Elizabeth Cady Stanton (right) - faced the wrath of many of their male abolitionist counterparts who denied them from participating at all at London’s World Anti-Slavery Convention.
The Anti-Slavery Society Convention, 1840, by Benjamin Robert Haydon, depicts members of the British and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society. Mott and Stanton are featured on the right.
While some abolitionists like William Lloyd Garrison believed that female abolitionists deserved an equal chance to participate, many viewed women like Mott and Stanton as agitators. And although many women served as zealous abolitionists throughout the United States, these men believed that giving women a voice at the convention might weaken the abolitionist cause.

After all, these men argued, women like Mott and Stanton might have more ambitious aims for equality, such as being granted the right to vote!
Women Stand Up for Equality and Make History
On July 19^th, 1848, Mott and Stanton led a convention of their own eight-years later at Seneca Falls, New York. Over 200 women joined them to read a treatise drafted by Stanton.

Entitled “The Declaration of Rights and Sentiments ([link removed]) ,” the document borrowed and even modified the language of equality from the Declaration of Independence, stating “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal.”

Stanton and Mott understood that in the context of Jefferson's world (one heavily-influenced by John Locke ([link removed]) ), "all men" meant "humankind." Adding "and women," made clear the true meaning of Jefferson's words.

The treatise listed the injustices suffered by women across the United States, the most important of which was the denial of “her inalienable right to the elective franchise.”

The document demanded equality of the sexes and encouraged women to become active forces in the campaign for equal rights.
Unlike the organizers of the London convention in 1840, Mott and Stanton invited men to attend and contribute to the second day of their convention. When it came time to pass the 12 resolutions listed on the Declaration, 11 passed unanimously.

Douglass Backs Women's Equality and Right to Vote
The ninth resolution, “that it is the duty of the women of this country to secure to themselves their sacred right to the elective franchise,” met with controversy from some of the attendees, who viewed such a demand as unreasonable at best, quixotic at worst. The debate over this resolution reached its climax when none other than the African American leader Frederick Douglass sided with Stanton.
We have a sense of Douglass’ eloquent words he used in support women’s equality and suffrage in an article he wrote in his newspaper The North Star ([link removed]) two weeks later:

Standing as we do upon the watch-tower of human freedom, we cannot be deterred from an expression of our appropriation of any movement, however humble, to improve and elevate the character and condition of any members of the human family […] and if that government is only just which governs by the free consent of the governed, there can be no reason in the world for denying to woman the exercise of the elective franchise…

The resolution for securing the right to vote soon became the foundation of the women’s rights movement in the United States.
The Work for Equality Continues
While some western states, including Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, and Idaho, allowed women’s suffrage in the decades following the convention, most of the United States restricted women from voting prior to the ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920 ([link removed]) .

Women at the Seneca Falls Convention, however, helped make voting rights “self-evident” by showing all Americans how governments derive "their just powers from the consent of the governed."

Our mission at the Jack Miller Center is to educate young Americans about the freedoms given to us through our founding principles. The actions of women like Mott and Stanton represent moments in American history when the pursuit of those founding principles brought all Americans closer to realizing the vision from the Declaration that all men and women are created equal.
Click Here to Support Better History Education ([link removed])
The battle for the soul of our nation will be won or lost in our
classrooms ™ — Jack Miller

At the Jack Miller Center, that battle is our sole mission. We are the boots on the ground, working to bring the American political tradition and history back to the classroom. Please consider a tax-deductible gift ([link removed]) to JMC. Your donation, large or small, is an investment in the future of our country—for you, for your children, for your grandchildren.
If you think your friends or contacts would be interested in this article, please forward this email or share on your social media!
[link removed] Post ([link removed])
[link removed]: https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fgojmc.org%2Fseneca-falls-convention Tweet ([link removed]: https%3A%2F%2Fmailchi.mp%2Fgojmc.org%2Fseneca-falls-convention)
[link removed] Share ([link removed])
About the Jack Miller Center
The Jack Miller Center is a 501(c)(3) public charity with the mission to reinvigorate education in America's founding principles and history. We work to advance the teaching and study of America's history, its political and economic institutions, and the central principles, ideas and issues arising from the American and Western traditions—all of which continue to animate our national life.

We support professors and educators through programs, resources, fellowships and more to help them teach our nation's students.
www.jackmillercenter.org

============================================================
Follow Us!
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
** YouTube ([link removed])
** YouTube ([link removed])
** Instagram ([link removed])
** Instagram ([link removed])
The Jack Miller Center
[email protected]
484-436-2060

Our mailing address is:
3 Bala Plaza West, Suite 401, Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis