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On July 19-20, 1848, about 300 people met for two hot
days and candlelit evenings in the Wesleyan Chapel in
Seneca Falls, New York, in the first formal women’s
rights convention ever held in the U.S. Sixty-eight
women (supported by thirty-two men who signed a separate
list “in favor of the movement”) declared:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all
men and women are created equal, that they are endowed
by their Creator with certain inalienable rights,
that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit
of happiness; that to secure these rights governments
are instituted, deriving their just powers from the
consent of the governed.
Sound familiar? It should, for these women’s
rights advocates patterned their document directly on
the U.S. Declaration of Independence.
Although the convention became best known for its demand
for women’s right to vote, the Declaration of
Sentiments covered a wide agenda, asserting that women
should have equality in every area of life: politics,
the family, education, jobs, religion, and morals. “In
view of this entire disfranchisement of one-half the
people of this country,” the signers concluded:
their social and religious degradation,-- in view
of the unjust laws above mentioned, and because women
do feel themselves aggrieved, oppressed, and fraudulently
deprived of their most sacred rights, we insist that
they have immediate admission to all the rights and
privileges which belong to them as citizens of these
United States.
As the first women’s rights convention, Seneca
Falls initiated the organized women’s rights movement
in the United States. Philosophically, the Seneca Falls
Declaration of Sentiments tied women’s rights
to the country’s natural-rights tradition, incorporating
widespread grassroots support for women’s rights
into a coherent intellectual framework that challenged
Americans everywhere to include women in the great American
democratic experiment.
Until recently, historians have told the story of Seneca
Falls primarily as part of the biography of Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, the convention’s main organizer.
But recent scholarship has placed Stanton—and
the convention—in the larger context of her own
time. In the early decades following the American Revolution,
several reformers suggested that women were equal in
intellect and abilities to men. By the 1830s, pockets
of reformers, influenced by late eighteenth-century
republican ideals and egalitarian Christian values,
argued for a woman’s right to speak out on moral
and political issues. In the 1830s and early 1840s,
these local groups spoke out both in favor of abolitionism
and legal reform, and these two movements provided the
seedbed – or even a dress rehearsal – for
the women’s rights movement of the late 1840s.
Local groups took their cues from key national leaders.
William Lloyd Garrison, who learned much from Lucretia
Mott, became a strong supporter of women’s rights.
But abolitionism did not create women’s rights
arguments; advocates of these rights may have gained
allies and learned strategies through their abolitionist
connections, but they brought their women’s rights
ideals with them into that movement. In her influential
Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition
of Woman, Sarah Grimké declared that “whatever
is morally right for a man to do, is morally
right for a woman to do.” Her sister and fellow-abolitionist,
Angelina Grimké asked, "Are we aliens because
we are women? Are we bereft of citizenship because we
are the mothers, wives, and daughters
of a mighty people?”1 The Grimké
sisters were not the only women’s rights advocates
to speak out clearly in the late 1830s and early 1840s.
Lucy Stone, in particular, began to devote much of her
lecturing to women’s rights. Abby Kelley specifically
organized women’s antislavery fairs, and the ones
held in western New York became immediate precursors
to the Seneca Falls convention.
These pioneers of women’s rights—drawn
from Quaker, Congregationalist, and Methodist backgrounds—provided
support for the emerging formal women’s rights
movement in the 1840s. In addition to highlighting the
role of these pioneers, recent research has brought
to light and elaborated on the roles of others whose
work was most important after Seneca Falls, including
Martha Wright, Sojourner Truth, Frances E.W. Harper,
Susan B. Anthony, Matilda Joslyn Gage, and others whose
work was most important after Seneca Falls.
The convention was not the first time that women’s
rights advocates legitimated their demands by an appeal
to the Declaration of Independence. Legal reformers,
too, using the Declaration of Independence as a model
for women’s rights, paved the road for the formal
women’s rights movement that emerged at Seneca
Falls. In debates about married women’s property
rights at the 1846 New York State constitutional convention,
supporters referred to the promise of the Declaration.
These women were not alone. A pamphlet, probably authored
by Judge John Fine of St. Lawrence County, explicitly
used the Declaration of Independence to argue:
THAT ALL ARE CREATED FREE AND EQUAL; THAT THEY ARE
ENDOWED BY THEIR CREATOR WITH CERTAIN UNALIENABLE
RIGHTS. This idea "is freedom's golden rule.
. . . None should ever be allowed to restrict its
universality. Women, as well as men, are entitled
to the full enjoyment of its practical blessings.
2
And, in April 1848, forty-four married women in western
New York wrote sarcastically to the New York State legislature
that:
your Declaration of Independence declares, that governments
derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.
And as women have never consented to, been represented
in, or recognized by this government, it is evident
that in justice no allegiance can be claimed from
them. . . . . Our numerous and yearly petitions for
this most desirable object having been disregarded,
we now ask your august body, to abolish all laws which
hold married women more accountable for their acts
than infants, idiots, and lunatics.3
Perhaps shamed by such rhetoric, New York State passed
its first married women’s property act in April
1848.
But it was the Seneca Falls convention, the brainchild
of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott, that brought
national attention to the issue of women’s rights.
The two women had met in London where the newly wed
Stanton and the Quaker minister Mott were attending
the World Anti-Slavery Convention. When the convention
decided to exclude all the American women delegates
on the basis of sex, Stanton and Mott decided “to
hold a convention as soon as we returned home, and form
a society to advocate the rights of women."4
Although it took eight years to put their plans into
action, the result was the Seneca Falls women’s
rights convention of 1848.
This convention, hurriedly organized and attended primarily
by people from the immediate area, touched off a major
national debate. Newspapers across the country picked
up the story. Press reaction to the convention varied
widely. One editor thought it was “a most insane
and ludicrous farce.” The Lowell Courier
feared women’s equality because “the lords
must wash the dishes, scour up, be put to the tub, handle
the broom, darn stockings.” Some editors, however,
praised the meeting. The St. Louis Daily Reveille
declared that “the flag of independence has been
hoisted for the second time on this side of the Atlantic.”
The editor of the Herkimer Freeman in upstate
New York hailed women’s rights as “a great
jubilee of the nation."
Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune,
the most influential newspaper in the nation, probably
reflected the attitude of many people. Although Greeley
clearly felt uncomfortable with the idea of equal rights
for women, he recognized the powerful logic inherent
in the Declaration of Sentiments. If Americans really
believed in the idea that “all men are created
equal,” he argued, they must endorse even the
right of women to vote:
When a sincere republican is asked to say in sober
earnest what adequate reason he can give, for refusing
the demand of women to an equal participation with
men in political rights, he must answer, None at all.
However unwise and mistaken the demand, it is but
the assertion of a natural right, and such must be
conceded.5
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, never one to be modest, called
the women’s movement the “greatest rebellion
the world has ever seen.” Historian Ellen DuBois
has argued that the women’s movement, along with
the civil rights and labor movements, formed one of
the three most significant movements for human rights
in U.S. history. The ideals expressed in the Declaration
of Sentiments—that “all men and women are
created equal”—spoke powerfully to Americans
and people around the world because they reflected universal
ideals of human equality. Such ideals belonged not only
to Elizabeth Cady Stanton or to one upstate New York
village. They belonged to Americans everywhere. Ultimately,
they belonged to the world.
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Footnotes:
1. Sarah Grimké, Letters on the Equality of
the Sexes and the Condition of Woman. Boston: Isaac
Knapp, 1838. Reprinted in Larry Ceplair, ed., The
Public Years of Sarah and Angelina Grimke, Selected Writings,
1835-1839. New York: Columbia University Press, 1989,
p. 246; Angelina Grimké, Appeal to the Women
of the Nominally Free States. Boston: Isaac Knapp,
1838, p. 19.
2. [John
Fine], “Lecture Delivered Before the Ogdensburgh
Lyceum, on the Political Rights of Women.” Ogdensburgh,
NY: Tyler and James, n.d., pp.2-3.
3. New York Assembly Documents, March 15,
1848, no. 129, pp. 1-2.
4. Proceedings of the Antislavery Convention of
American Women. New York: William S. Dorr, 1837,
p. 61.
5. Notes from the Tribune taken by Alma Lutz,
"Greeley," Alma Lutz Papers, Vassar College.
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