|
An
ancestor of Lucy Stone arrived in Massachusetts in 1635, and a
grandfather was a captain in the American Revolution. She grew
up in a farm family. When sixteen, she taught school before attending
Oberlin College in Ohioa coeducational college opposed to
slavery.
When Lucy Stone was appointed an Anti-Slavery Society lecturer,
she agreed to speak for them only on weekends. This meant she
was free to lecture weekdays on womens rights. She declared,
I was a women before I was an abolitionist. I must speak
for the women.
Upon accepting Unitarianism, she was expelled from her Congregational
church.
When she married, she kept her own name: Mrs. Stone.
When she refused to pay taxes to a government in which she could
not participate, household goods were seized.
Mrs. Stone was a founder of the American Equal Rights Association,
which worked for voting rights irrespective of race and sex. Her
influence was especially effective throughout forty-seven years
of the editing of the Womans Journal by her, with
assistance from her husband, Henry Blackwell, and their daughter,
Alice Stone Blackwell.
When she died, she was the first person to be cremated in New
England.
|