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Lucy Stone - Civil
Rights Trailblazer
1818 - 1893
The first Massachusetts woman to earn a college degree,
she rose to prominence as a lecturer for William Lloyd Garrison's Anti-Slavery
Society. She helped form the American Equal Rights Association in 1866 which
advocated equality for women and an end to slavery.
This unity of causes was split by the 14th amendment which extended voting
rights to former slave men, but reinforced the disenfranchisement of women.
Stone believed if both could not be done at once, then justice should be
achieved by race, even if it must wait for women.
She married Henry Blackwell, brother of the pioneer doctors, Elizabeth and
Emily Blackwell, and brother-in-law of Antoinette Brown Blackwell, the first
woman ordained a minister in the United States, but she kept her own name
and he joined her in protesting against contemporary marriage laws. In keeping
with her independent spirit she was the first person in Massachusetts to
be cremated. |
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