LAD/Blog #12: Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments

LAD/Blog #12: Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments:


1. The democratic principles at the beginning are that all men and women are created equal with certain inalienable rights such as life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Just as these rights were stated in the Declaration of Independence, they were reiterated in the Declaration of Sentiments except this included women.
2. Grievances in the Declaration of Sentiments include that men force women to succumb to laws under which they have no control, men take away rights to property from women, men have monopolized all profitable employment, they deny women access to education and men frame the laws of divorce so that they have power. This clearly is unfair to women and needs to be changed.
3. The final resolution says that the women are being fair and that they expect this to be faced with a variety of reactions, yet hope that it will be followed by more effective efforts to make change. 
4. The Declaration of Sentiments was signed by people including Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Margaret Pryor, Richard Hunt, and Fredrick Douglass. Susan B. Anthony, however, did not sign the Declaration of Sentiments: not because she disagreed with it but because she was not at the convention.
The Declaration of Sentiments was the beginning of Women's Rights Movements. As women were granted some fundamental rights, they continually fought for the right to vote until 1920 when the 19th amendment was ratified stating the right to vote could not be denied on account of sex,

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