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thought women were like children and could not make their own decisions. Women who were married could not own property, such as a house or a business. Very few businesses would pay women to work. Anthony’s family had different beliefs about women. The Anthony’s went to a Quaker church. Quakers thought women should have the same rights as men. Both women and men could speak in the Quaker church. Both had important jobs in the church. Anthony’s aunt, Hannah Anthony Hoxie, often spoke in the church Anthony went to as a girl. As Anthony listened to her aunt, she may have decided she could also speak about what she thought was right. Speaking wasn’t easy for a young woman in the early 1800s. Many people thought women did not need an education. They thought women only needed to know how to do jobs such as cooking and washing. In Anthony’s home, girls learned the same things as boys. Anthony grew up expecting to become a strong, independent woman. Susan B. Anthony February 15, 1820 - March 13, 1906 Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Learning to Speak Out A Young Woman Justice for All! The Right to Vote Anthony’s Legacy Chapter 1 Learning to Speak Out Chapter 1 Learning to Speak Out 1. What beliefs did Susan’s family have about women and men? Susan B. Anthony lived at a time when women were not allowed to vote. A woman who even tried to vote could be arrested. What was it like to live in a world like that? Susan B. Anthony thought stopping women from voting was wrong and needed to be changed. That would mean changing the world. Could she change it? Anthony wanted women and men to be treated the same. Most people in the early 1800s disagreed. They ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 1 2. What was one thing the Anthony’s did to show their beliefs about women and men? Chapter 2 A Young Woman ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3. What religious community did Susan grow up in? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Anthony lived with her family in this red brick home in Rochester, New York 4. How were the beliefs of the Quaker church different than society’s beliefs at that time? To be an independent woman, Anthony needed a job. She was tall, with a strong voice, straight back, and a sharp mind. What kind of work could she do? In the 1800s, teaching was one of the few jobs open to women, so Anthony became a teacher. Anthony was paid much less than men who did the same work. “I’m going to do something about it in my lifetime,” she wrote in a letter to her father. When she complained, however, Anthony lost her job. Anthony got a new job as the principal of the Girls’ Department at Canajoharie, New York. Her students worked hard. They did well on their tests. After ten years of teaching there, Anthony wanted to do more. She wanted to work for justice, or fair ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 2 treatment. She saw that many people in the United States were not being treated fairly. One injustice that angered Anthony was slavery. Some states allowed slavery, but others did not. Many people felt that slavery should not be allowed anywhere. The question of whether slavery should be allowed divided people in the United States. Feelings were strong on both sides of the issue. People in the Anthony family were abolitionists. They wanted to abolish, or get rid of, slavery. Anthony quit her job and went to live with her parents in Rochester, New York. She wanted to spend all her time working against slavery. The Anthony’s house in Rochester was a meeting place for people who were fighting to end slavery. Many abolitionists lived near Rochester. They helped enslaved African Americans who had escaped from slavery. One of the most famous abolitionists in the United States, Fredrick Douglass, lived in Rochester. Douglass had escaped from slavery. He often visited the Anthony house. Douglass and many other abolitionists thought women should have the same rights as men. Anthony met many people in Rochester who shared her beliefs in equal rights. ______________________________________________________ 2. How did Anthony feel about slavery? What information in the story proves how she felt? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3. What did Anthony quit her job as a principal to become? Why? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Chapter 2 A Young Woman 1. ______________________________________________________ Why did Anthony become a teacher? 4. ______________________________________________________ Who was the famous abolitionist Susan worked with and what did they working to do? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3 her family, and she was a good writer. She stayed home and wrote speeches. Anthony did not like to write, but she was a good organizer and speaker. She traveled to meetings and gave the speeches written by Stanton. Anthony and Stanton wanted New York State to accept the right of married women to own property and businesses. They felt that changing the law was an important step toward equality. Anthony traveled all over New York in the 1850s. She slept in cold hotel rooms and traveled through blizzards to give speeches. Anthony’s hard work helped. 1860, the New York State Legislature passed a new law that allowed married women to own property. Anthony and Stanton wanted to win justice for all. That meant men and women, African Americans, and all other Americans. In 1856, Anthony started to work for the Anti-Slavery Society in New York State. Both she and Stanton traveled and made speeches against slavery. Although many women worked to end slavery, they were not allowed to become the leaders of antislavery groups. Anthony and Stanton started a group for women who wanted to work against slavery. They called it the Women’s National Loyal League. It was the first political group in the United States to be formed by women. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Chapter 3 Justice for All! Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton In March 1851, something happened that change Anthony’s life. Her friend Amelia Bloomer introduced her to Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Stanton had organized a women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, New York, in 1848. Anthony and Stanton liked each other right away. For the next 52 years, they worked together to win equal rights for women in the United States. Anthony and Stanton made a good team. Each had something the other did not. Stanton and her husband had seven children. She wanted to be home with Chapter 3 Justice for All! 1. 4 What did Anthony and Stanton do together for the next 52 years? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 2. Why did Anthony and Stanton make a good team? Use information from the chapter to help you support your answer. ______________________________________________________ Chapter 4 The Right to Vote ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3. What did they want the state of New York to do? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ In 1860, some slave states tried to leave the United States. The United States went to war with each other to keep those states in the country. This was called the Civil War. After the war ended in 1865, slavery became illegal in the United States. Anthony and abolitionists wanted to win the vote for freed slaves and women. In 1870, new laws recognized the right of freed African American men to vote. ______________________________________________________ 4. What was the name of the women’s group Susan and Elizabeth formed and what was the purpose of the group? ______________________________________________________ 5 New laws that recognized the right of African American men to vote did not let women vote, however. Anthony thought that unless women could vote, they could never have equal rights under the law. To win the vote for women, Anthony and Stanton started a new group. It was called the National Woman Suffrage Association. Suffrage means the right to vote. Stanton and Anthony were the first to sign the petition entitled “A Petition for Universal Suffrage” which gave freed slaves and women the right to vote. In 1872, Susan B. Anthony decided that although women were not allowed to vote, she was going to vote anyway. She believed that voting was her right. On November 1, she went to register to vote. After a short argument, she was allowed to sign up to vote in Rochester, New York. Four days later, on Election Day, Anthony voted for President of the United States. Nobody stopped her. On November 18, Anthony was arrested. She was accused of voting illegally. Anthony was told that she would have a trial before a judge and jury. In the months before her trial, Anthony traveled around giving a speech called, “Is it a Crime for a Citizen of the United States to Vote?” Anthony’s trial took place in June 1873. The judge would not let her speak. Anthony’s lawyer, however, did a good job convincing the jury she had not broken the law. The judge was worried. If the jury said Anthony had not broken a law, then all women in New York State would be allowed to vote. He told the jury that they had to say she had broken the law. Anthony was told to pay a fine of $100. She said, “I shall never pay a dollar of your unjust penalty.” We know a lot about how women in the United States won the right to vote because Anthony and Stanton wrote a series of books. They knew that the struggle for suffrage was important. They knew that someday women would be able to vote. They wanted to leave an accurate record of what they had done to win suffrage. They called the books “The History of Woman Suffrage”. The first volume was published in 1881. Anthony and Stanton worked together for women’s rights for over 50 years. By the 1890s, Anthony had been working for years. Her diligence did not end, however. In 1896, when she was in her seventies, Anthony traveled to California. She gave speeches along the way. In California she urged the legislature to recognize women’s rights to vote. Younger women learned from her and traveled with her. They became new leaders in the struggle for voting rights for American women. Anthony saw that people were changing their opinions. In the past, her ideas had angered some people. Now, people treated her like a hero. By 1906, four states- Wyoming, Utah, Colorado, and Idaho-had allowed women to vote. Anthony urged other women to keep up the fight. “Failure is impossible,” she said. Chapter 4 The Right to Vote 1. After the Civil War what did Anthony want for freed slaves and women? ______________________________________________________ 6 ______________________________________________________ 5. ______________________________________________________ 2. What was the new group Anthony and Stanton started and what was its purpose? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 6. ______________________________________________________ 3. 4. What is the name of the book Anthony and Stanton published so others would know the work that they did? As Anthony traveled making speeches for women’s rights, how had society’s views changed from when she first started? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ What does the word suffrage mean? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ What crime did Anthony commit and what made what she did a crime? 7. The author said Anthony worked diligently for women’s rights, why does the author say this? Be sure to use examples from the passage. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 7 Chapter 5 Anthony’s Legacy recognized the right of women to vote even before the law changed for the whole country. 1820: Adams, Massachusetts Susan B. Anthony is born. 1872: Rochester, New York Antony votes for President and is arrested. 1890: Wyoming Wyoming becomes the first state to recognize the right of women to vote. Understanding Character Traits People show diligence when they work hard over a long time to achieve a goal. Susan B. Anthony’s diligence helped end slavery and win equal rights for women. Justice means fair and equal treatment under the law. Anthony wanted everyone to have the same rights, so she worked for justice. In 1920, the law was changed to allow women in every state to vote. Anthony did not live to see that day, but her long years of work help make this happen. Today, Susan B. Anthony is honored with the Susan B. Anthony dollar and with a plaque at the National Women’s Hall of Fame, in Seneca Falls, New York. The most important reminder of her work, however, takes place every time women in the United States vote, run for office, or serve in government. These are the rights for which Anthony fought. Using those rights is the best way to keep them. Susan B. Anthony traveled all over the United States, giving speeches about women’s suffrage. In order for women to be able to vote, society’s views about women had to change and the constitution had to be changed so that women were viewed as citizens and given the right to vote just like men. She convinced many people that women should have the same rights as men. Many states Susan B. Anthony is honored. There is a statue of Anthony in Rochester, New York. In 1979, the Susan B. Anthony silver dollar was issued to honor Anthony’s work for women’s rights. 8 ______________________________________________________ 3. What two ways did the United States honor Susan B. Anthony’s work? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Chapter 5 Anthony’s Legacy 1. 2. ______________________________________________________ 4. What is Susan B. Anthony most remembered for? What does the author say is the best way for us to honor and remember her work? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 5. What states did she travel to and what did she do in each state? In order for women to vote, changes had to be made to what document? ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 9 Glossary Abolitionists – people who want to end slavery. 3rd Grade Unit 5 Susan B. Anthony Multiple Choice Assessment Convention – a formal meeting where people discuss a subject they are interested in. In the 1800s, women did not have the same rights as men. For example, women could not vote, and they were not allowed to speak to an audience with men in it. Only a small number of lowpaying jobs were available to women. In most states, a woman could not own property or keep the money she earned. To be an independent woman, Susan B. Anthony needed a job. She was tall, with a strong voice, a straight back, and a sharp mind. Teaching was one of the few jobs open to women, so Anthony became a teacher. Diligence – working hard for a long time. Independent – being free to make one’s own decisions. Justice – equal treatment under the law. Legislature – the law-making part of a government. Organizer – a person who gets others to work for a shared goal or cause. (SS3H2) 1. Susan B. Anthony was born in 1820. She never married. Susan became a teacher because teaching A had been what she always wanted to do B used her strong voice and sharp mind C was one of the few jobs open to women D gave her the same rights as men in 1800 Property – something that is owned. Quaker – a member of a religion that emphasizes equality among people. Register – to place one’s name on an official list to do something. (SS3H2) 2. Susan B. Anthony worked as a teacher and a principal for more than ten years. Then she quit her job to spend all her time as an abolitionist. This means that Susan B. Anthony A gave tests to students B worked to end slavery C opened her own business D attended meetings at church Slavery - a cruel system in which one person owns and controls another person. Suffrage – the right to vote. 10 (SS3G2) 3. Susan B. Anthony was a member of a church that widely supported women having the same rights as men. Her religious community was A Baptist B Methodist C Presbyterian D Quaker Use the Venn Diagram to answer questions #7 and #8. Susan B. Anthony Elizabeth Cady Stanton not married had no children married liked to travel had 7 children good organizer (SS3H2) 4. Slavery is a cruel system in which one person A owns another B works for another C teaches another D cares for another good speaker (SS3G2) 5. Anthony lived in Rochester, New York and met many people there who shared her belief in equal rights. She often visited with one of the most famous abolitionists living in Rochester, an escaped slave named A Amelia Bloomer B Frederick Douglass C Adams Massachusetts D Hannah Anthony Hoxie wanted to be home worked for women’s rights good writer (SS3E1) 7. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton made a good team. Each had something the other did not, but they both worked together. For example A Anthony presented speeches that Stanton wrote B Stanton took care of Anthony’s seven children C Anthony stayed home and Stanton made speeches D Stanton planned Anthony’s travels in New York (SS3 H2) 6. Susan B. Anthony fought for many years for women’s suffrage. What does the word suffrage mean? A owning land B right to vote C being a slave D temperance (SS3H2) 8. In the Venn diagram, the overlapping or middle section shows information that is true of both women. A comment that could be placed in the overlapping section of the Venn diagram is A honored on a U.S. coin B worked as school teachers C were childhood friends D wrote a series of books 11 D (SS3H2) 9. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton formed an organization to promote fair treatment for women. What did they call the group? A National Women Suffrage Association B Anti-Slavery Society in New York State C Canajoharie Academy Girls’ Department D Women’s Rights Convention, 1848 freedom of speech Use the timeline to answer question #10. 1846 Anthony taught at Canajoharie Academy. 1856, Anthony went to work for the Anti-Slavery Society in New York State. 1906, Anthony died. 1920, Women in all states received right to vote. 1896, Anthony traveled to California, giving speeches. 1870, African American Men received right to vote. 1865, Slavery ended. 1820, Susan B. Anthony was born. (SS3G2) 10. In her lifetime, Susan B. Anthony saw which of her dreams fulfilled? A fair treatment for all citizens B voting rights for women C the end of all slavery 12 (SS3H2) 11. In 1873 Susan B. Anthony was on trial in New York for committing a crime. She A spoke about rights B voted for President C helped slaves escape D bought some land Use the chart to answer question #13. States Where Women Could Not Vote Before 1920 (SS3G2) 12. Susan B. Anthony said, “There will never be complete equality until women themselves help to make laws and elect lawmakers.” She was giving a speech about suffrage. In 1920 the equality that Anthony worked for became law when changes were made to the A Mayflower Compact B United States Constitution C Emancipation Proclamation D Declaration of Independence States Where Women Could Vote Before 1920 Arizon a Idaho Monta na Oklah oma Utah Alabam a Delawa re Illinois Kentuc ky Maryla nd Mississ ippi New Hamps hire North Carolin a Rhode Island Texas Wiscon sin Californ ia Kansas Nevada Oregon Washin gton Colora do Michi gan New York South Dakot a Wyom ing Arkansas Florida Indiana Louisiana Massachu setts Missouri New Jersey North Dakota South Carolina Vermont Connect icut Georgia Iowa Maine Minnes ota Nebrask a New Mexico Ohio Tenness ee Virginia (SS3G2) 13. Many states recognized the right of women to vote even before the law changed for the whole country. Some states where women could vote before 1920 were A North Dakota, Virginia, and Wisconsin B Oklahoma, South Carolina and Ohio C Massachusetts, Minnesota, and Texas D California, Michigan, and New York 13 (SS3G2) 14. In 1979, the United States government honored Susan B. Anthony by issuing coins that have her picture on one side. The silver coin that has her picture is a A nickel B quarter C dollar D dime (SS3CG2) 15. Susan B. Anthony campaigned for almost 55 years to improve conditions for citizens, such as African Americans and women. Her hard work demonstrates the character trait known as A honesty B authority C modesty D diligence 14