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Women's Rights National Historical ParkWesleyan Chapel
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Women's Rights National Historical Park
Carrie Chapman Catt
 
First class postage stamp commemorating the first women's rights convention

NPS

This stamp features two of the organizers of the 1848 First Women's Rights Convention, Stanton and Mott, plus Carrie Chapman Catt who successfully led the continued fight for the passage of the Suffrage Amendment.

Carrie Chapman Catt (1859 -1947) began her career as a national women’s rights activist when she addressed the National American Woman Suffrage Association in 1890 at their national convention in Washington D.C.. She quickly became a dedicated writer, lecturer, and recruiter for the suffrage movement. In 1892 Susan B. Anthony asked Catt to give an address to Congress on the proposed suffrage amendment. Anthony supported Catt as her successor as NAWSA president in 1900. A few years later Catt focused her energies on the International Suffrage Alliance and promoted equal suffrage rights while traveling world-wide. When she returned to the States about ten years later, she personally saw to it that President Wilson supported a suffrage amendment, and the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified on August 26, 1920. Catt then founded the League of Women Voters and served as its honorary president until she died in 1947.

 
Carrie Chapman Catt
Library of Congress
Carrie Chapman Catt
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and daughter Harriot, 1856
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
called her house in Seneca Falls "the center of the rebellion"
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Multimedia educational program
Views of the National Parks
a multimedia educational program for teachers and students of all ages
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Lucretia Mott  

Did You Know?
Did you know when the announcement for the First Women's Rights Convention was printed in the newspaper, Lucretia Mott was the only organizer named?
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Last Updated: May 21, 2009 at 15:42 EST