S. Constitution, and Susan B. Anthony was very upset at that.
For one thing, the women's suffrage movement had vigorously supported the abolition of slavery well prior to (and, of course, during the Civil War); and now that blacks were free, and were given the right to vote (although many blacks in America didn't really get to vote until the Voting Rights Act of 1965 guaranteed their right to cast votes) prior to the women in American having the right to vote.
For another thing, many women were already stretched to the maximum in terms of the patience over their lack of voting rights.
According to an article in www.About.com (Women's History: Susan B. Anthony), "Some of Susan B. Anthony's writings were...quite racist by today's standards." She made the point that "educated white women would be better voters than 'ignorant' black men or immigrant men." In the late 1860s, she even portrayed the vote of freemen as "threatening the safety of white women," according to the article. The man who put up money to fund Susan B. Anthony's newspaper, Revolution, was "a noted racist," the article asserts.
What role did the ideas inherent in the Declaration of Independence have in the women's rights movement? The Declaration of Sentiments (written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton) was presented to the women's rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1848. It contained several important resolutions: a man should not take a woman's property; a man should not "withhold a woman's rights"; women...
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