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  1. Eight years later, on July 19 and 20, 1848, Mott, Stanton, Mary Ann M’Clintock, Martha Coffin Wright, and Jane Hunt acted on this idea when they organized the First Woman’s Rights Convention. Throughout her life Mott remained active in both the abolition and women’s rights movements.

  2. 1 de dic. de 2005 · For example, like Stanton and Susan B. Anthony before her, Wellman cites the birthplace of Martha Coffin Wright as Nantucket, although Martha was actually born in Boston. The overall quality of the research and its presentation, however, is excellent, and this book is likely to remain the definitive and authoritative resource on Seneca Falls and the origins of the women's rights movement for ...

  3. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. From the collections of the Library of Congress. The Seneca Falls Women’s Rights Convention is regarded as the first women’s rights convention and the beginning of the women’s rights movement. The organizers of the first women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls- Lucretia Mott, Martha Coffin Wright, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Jane Hunt, and Mary Ann M’Clintock ...

  4. The Agitators tells the story of Frances Miller Seward, Martha Coffin Wright, and Harriet Tubman, who crossed paths in Auburn, New York. ... Wickenden covers how Seward, Wright, ...

  5. Martha's second marriage was to David Wright. They had six children: Eliza "Lidy" Wright (1830 – 1911), Matthew Tallman Wright (1832 – 1854), Ellen Wright Garrison (1840 – 1931), William Pelham Wright (1842 – 1902), Francis "Frank" Wright (1844 – 1903), and Charles Edward Wright (1848 – 1849). "The Wrights lived on Genesee Street ...

  6. Martha Coffin Wright (25 de diciembre de 1806 - 1875) fue una feminista americana, abolicionista y firmante de la Declaración de Seneca Falls que fue muy amiga y partidaria de Harriet Tubman. Martha Coffin nació en Boston , Massachusetts , el día de Navidad de 1806, hija de Anna Folger y Thomas Coffin, un comerciante y excapitán de barco de Nantucket .

  7. We discuss reform in antebellum America through the life of Martha Coffin Wright, an activist in the abolition and early women’s rights movements. Consideration of her motivations for reform; the obstacles faced by these movements; their methods, successes, and failures, may offer guidelines for reformers of today.