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The Trial of Susan B Anthony (Classics in Women's Studies.)

The Trial of Susan B Anthony (Classics in Women's Studies.)
By Susan B. Anthony, United States Circuit Court (New York : Northern District)

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On January 24, 1873, Susan B. Anthony was indicted by a grand jury for voting "knowingly, wrongfully, and unlawfully." The subsequent trial, in which Anthony was convicted of breaking the law by casting a vote, became one of the most famous trials of the nineteenth century. This was largely due to Anthony's clever stratagem of publishing a one-volume edition of the trial proceedings, then shrewdly using it as a public relations ploy for a campaign to rally women to the cause of women's suffrage.

No musty historical document, THE TRIAL OF SUSAN B. ANTHONY is alive with the drama of an exciting time, when the hard-fought gains that women enjoy today still hung in the balance. This edition of the original volume includes an introduction by Lynn Sherr, ABC News, and author of FAILURE IS IMPOSSIBLE: SUSAN B. ANTHONY IN HER OWN WORDS.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1406389 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 225 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher
"This is a living document that was put to persuasive use, and in reading it today you can share the drama that much of America followed daily. Susan B. Anthony's trial made headlines across the nation and elevated her crusade to a grander stage." -- Lynn Sherr

About the Author
American reformer Susan Brownell Anthony was born on February 15, 1820, in Adams, Massachusetts. The daughter of Quakers, Anthony taught school in New York State from 1839 to 1849. She returned home, now Rochester, New York, where she met many of the leading abolitionists at that time, including Frederick Douglass and Wendell Phillips. She joined the temperance movement, where, in 1851, she met Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a leader of the women's rights movement.

Stanton and Anthony became lifelong friends and co-workers in the struggle for women's suffrage. Both supported abolition before and during the Civil War. After Black men were given the right to vote by the Fifteenth Amendment, Anthony campaigned for the same rights for women. In 1869 she helped to organize the National Woman Suffrage Association. Anthony published a weekly women's rights journal, "The Revolution," from 1868 until 1870.

In 1872 at Rochester, New York, Anthony voted in the presidential election to test her status as a citizen. She was tried and fined $100, but refused to pay the fine.

From 1881 to 1886 Stanton and Anthony coedited the six-volume HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE. When the National Woman Suffrage Association merged with the American Woman Suffrage Association in 1890 to become the National American Woman Suffrage Association, Anthony served as its president from 1892 to 1900.

Anthony died on March 13, 1906, in Rochester, New York, fourteen years before the Nineteenth Amendment was ratified, giving women the right to vote.