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SUSAN B. ANTHONY
1872
STORY CHAPTER LINKS
1. STORY PREFACE
2. HOW DID SHE GET INTO TROUBLE?
3. EARLY TRAINING
4. STRENGTH OF CONVICTION
5. A WORTHY CANDIDATE
6. "THAT CONVENTION"
7. ATTACKS GET PERSONAL
8. SUSAN CASTS HER BALLOT
9. ...AND GETS ARRESTED
10. WHO'S THE JUDGE?!?
11. THE OUTRAGE WORSENS
12. POST-TRIAL BACKLASH
13. WHEN DID IT END?
14. USED AND RECOMMENDED SOURCES

PREFACE

Men, their rights and
nothing more
Women, their rights and
nothing less

It was a presidential election year. The Civil War was over. Ulysses S. Grant, the war hero, was President. He wanted to get re-elected, but the election of 1872 wasn't so simple for Grant.

Horace Greeley, the editor of the New York Tribune, was Grant's opponent. Greeley had lots of popular support. People liked his ideas. He was the one who coined the phrase, "Go West, young man, Go West." His newspaper had always been against slavery. He seemed to be the choice for people who wanted to expand civil rights.

Susan B. Anthony, the famous advocate for women's rights, supported Greeley. Of course, the 19th Amendment - giving women the right to vote - wouldn't be law for nearly fifty years. So what difference did it make that Susan Anthony supported Greeley?

It made a significant difference to Anthony. She voted in the 1872 presidential election. Three weeks later, on Thanksgiving Day 1872, she was arrested for exercising her right - as an American citizen - to vote. She was 52 years old.

continue

Author: Carole D. Bos, J.D.