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Women's Rights National Historical ParkWesleyan Chapel
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Women's Rights National Historical Park
Press Kit
 
 

Seneca Falls, New York, is best known for its associations with the beginning of the women's rights movement in the United States - more than any other site in the country. Seneca Falls was the location of the First Women’s Rights Convention, held over two days in July 1848. More than 300 women and men attended the convention which marked the beginning of the organized women's rights movement. The "Declaration of Sentiments," adopted during the convention and signed by 100 attendees, provided the agenda for subsequent women's rights activity.                    

Women's Rights National Historical Park was created by Congress in 1980 to preserve and interpret the nationally significant historical and cultural sites and structures associated with the struggle for equal rights for women.

The park consists of several buildings in Seneca Falls and nearby Waterloo, New York including the Hunt Home in Waterloo where the convention was planned; the M'Clintock Home in Waterloo where the Declaration of Sentiments was written; the Wesleyan Methodist Chapel in Seneca Falls where the convention was held; and the home of Elizabeth Cady Stanton in Seneca Falls.

OUR MISSION
To preserve and interpret for the education, inspiration and benefit of present and future generations, the nationally significant historical and cultural sites, structures, and events associated with the struggle for equal rights for women, and to cooperate with national, state, and local entities to preserve the character and historic setting of such sites, structures and events.

For high resolution photographs of the park, see the photo album on this page or go to the photo gallery for more downloadable images. Photographs used from this web page must be credited to NPS. 

 

Declaration of Sentiments engraved in the waterwall.
Read a Declaration of Independence for women
Ratified by 100 signers on July 20, 1848
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Statue of Frederick Douglass in the park visitor center
Men for Women's Rights
In 1848 Frederick Douglass and many more men came in support of equality
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Two-story red brick house where Thomas and Mary Ann M'Clitnock lived.
Visit a station on the Underground Railroad!
Learn more about the M'Clintock family and their home
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Park ranger flat straw hat made by Stratton USA
Do you love our National Parks? Be a WebRanger!
The National Park Service's site for kids of all ages.
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Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her daughter Harriot, 1856.  

Did You Know?
Did you know that before Susan B. Anthony campaigned for woman's suffrage, her good friend Elizabeth Cady Stanton spearheaded the First Women's Rights Convention in America?
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Last Updated: August 19, 2009 at 12:01 EST