An account of the landmark suffragist trial before the U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of New York, that brought the cause of women's voting rights to the forefront of national attention. A group of women led by Susan B. Anthony attempted to vote during the presidential election of 1872, claiming they were entitled to the Fourteenth Amendment. The presiding officials, Jones, Hall and Marsh, decided by a majority to accept their ballots. The women were soon arrested for this act and indicted for knowingly voting without having a lawful right to vote. The officials were also indicated. This volume reprints the text of the indictment and a transcript of the testimony with connecting commentary.
Instrumental American reformer Susan Brownell Anthony in 1869 cofounded the national woman suffrage association in the passage of legislation that gave rights over children, property, and wages to the married.
This prominent civil leader played a pivotal role in the 19th century movement to secure in the United States. She traveled the United States and Europe and gave seventy to a hundred speeches per year for four decades. She died in Rochester, New York in her house at 17 Madison Street, and survivors buried her body at Mount Hope cemetery.