The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony (Volume 1 of 2) eBook

Ida Husted Harper
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 732 pages of information about The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony (Volume 1 of 2).

The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony (Volume 1 of 2) eBook

Ida Husted Harper
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 732 pages of information about The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony (Volume 1 of 2).
never belonged even to an anti-slavery society, Christian or heathen.  I am willing to take my stand with anybody on great issues or objects, but in regard to the organizations and instruments by which to attain the end, I have always let others work their way and I mine.  I think there is a touch of wildness in my blood (some of my ancestors must have nursed an Indian breast) which is impatient of the harness and so I have always worked on my own hook.  I am surprised to see how rapidly the thoughts of intelligent men and women are ameliorating on this question.  It needs only that women should have a conscience educated to this duty of suffrage, and it will be yielded.

Early in March the Legislature of Kansas submitted two amendments, one enfranchising the negroes and one the women.  State Senator Samuel N. Wood wrote Miss Anthony that an equal rights convention had been called to meet in Topeka, April 2, and urged her to send out the strongest speakers to canvass the State in behalf of the woman suffrage amendment.  This was the first time the enfranchisement of women ever had been presented for a popular vote and its advocates were most anxious that it should be carried.  Neither Miss Anthony nor Mrs. Stanton could go to Kansas at this time, so they appealed to Lucy Stone, begging her to make the campaign.  Since her marriage, twelve years before, she had been practically out of public work, insisting that she had lost her power for speaking.  Miss Anthony assured her that if she would take the platform it would come back to her, and Mr. Blackwell joined in the entreaty.  He gave up his business position to accompany his wife and they made a thorough canvass of that State during April and May.  Mr. Phillips was unwilling that any money from the Jackson fund should be used for this purpose, as he did not want the question agitated at this time, but as Miss Anthony and Lucy Stone constituted a majority of the committee, they appropriated $1,500 for it.  Even thus early in the contest the Republican managers began to show their hand.  Lucy Stone wrote from Atchison May 9: 

I should be glad to be with you tomorrow at the equal rights convention in New York and to know this minute whether Phillips has consented to take the high ground which sound policy, as well as justice and statesmanship require.  Just now there is a plot here to get the Republican party to drop the word “male,” and canvass only for the word “white.”  A call has been signed by the chairman of the Republican State Central Committee, for a meeting at Topeka on the 15th, to pledge the party to that single issue.  As soon as we saw it and the change of tone in some of the papers, we sent letters to all those whom we had found true, urging them to be at Topeka and vote for both words.  Till this action of the Republicans is settled, we can affirm nothing.  Everywhere we go, we have the largest and most enthusiastic meetings and any one of our audiences would give a majority for women; but the negroes are all against us. These men ought not to be allowed to vote before we do because they will be so much more dead weight to lift.

Again she wrote of the situation in Kansas: 

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The Life and Work of Susan B. Anthony (Volume 1 of 2) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.