The 1848 Women's Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, New York, served as the framework for the American Women's Rights and Suffrage Movements. Today women often outperform men in the voting booth with data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Current Population Survey data showing that 68.4 percent of registered women cast a ballot versus 65 percent of registered men during the 2020 presidential election.
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On July 19, 1848, the American Women's Rights and Suffrage Movements took shape at Seneca Falls, NY. Many of the nation's greatest social activists gathered for the 2-day convention to discuss issues related to the role of women in American society. The gathering culminated with the signing and publication of the Declaration of Sentiments. The declaration not only criticized the inequality between men and women in the United States, but also served as the framework for the women's rights movement in the decades to come as women rallied to claim their rights of citizenship and sought equality with men.
The "Our Roll of Honor" flyer published in honor of the 60th anniversary of the Women's Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, NY.
American women became increasingly active in the anti-slavery movement in the decades before the outbreak of the Civil War. Lucretia Mott—a Quaker minister—began including anti-slavery messages in her sermons after visiting the slave-owning state of Virginia in 1818. In 1833, Mott helped establish the Philadelphia Female Anti-Slavery Society. At about the same time, William Lloyd Garrison's American Anti-Slavery Society hosted meetings open to both men and women and encouraged all attendees to participate. Both the anti-slavery and temperance movements, which advocated the prohibition of alcohol, drew large crowds of women together. During these meetings, Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Mary Ann M'Clintock began to consider organizing a convention to discuss women's rights and social reform entirely separate from the anti-slavery and Temperance movements.
Planning for a women's rights convention gained momentum after New York's passage of a law protecting women's property rights in the spring of 1848. Lucretia Mott believed the time was ripe to advocate for stronger, nationwide safeguards of women's rights and social reform. During a visit to New York, Mott attended a tea party with Martha Coffin Wright, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Mary Ann M'Clintock at the home of Jane Hunt in Waterloo, NY, on July 9, 1848. The group decided to hold a women's rights convention as soon as possible while they were all still together in Seneca Falls, NY. Two days later, the Seneca County Courier announced a July 19–20, 1848, convention "to discuss the social, civil, and religious condition and rights of woman" at the Seneca Falls Wesleyan Chapel.
In the days leading up to the start of the nation's first women's rights convention, Stanton, Mott, M'Clintock, and others prepared a number of resolutions demanding that women be equal to men at home, school, the workplace, and in religious institutions. Drafted in M'Clintock's parlor, the women used the 1776 Declaration of Independence as a framework for the draft of their Declaration of Sentiments. A second document included a list of specific grievances, including restrictions placed on women based on "coverture" (being under the authority of a husband), denial of the vote, and unequal educational opportunities.
On July 19, 1848, hundreds of women gathered at the Seneca Falls Wesleyan Chapel where Elizabeth Cady Stanton opened the convention by declaring the right of all women "to be free as man is free, to be represented in the government which we are taxed to support, to have such disgraceful laws as give man the power to chastise and imprison his wife, to take the wages which she earns, the property which she inherits, and, in case of separation, the children of her love; laws test against such unjust laws as these that we are assembled today, and to have them, if possible, forever erased from our statute-books, deeming them as a shame and a disgrace to a Christian republic in the nineteenth century." After Lucretia Mott urged attendees to support the new movement, Stanton returned to the podium to read the Declaration of Sentiments and moderate a discussion of revisions. An evening session followed at which men were invited to attend and asked to support the fledgling movement.
Organizers opened the second day's sessions to the public, Elisha Foote, James Mott, Thomas M'Clintock, and abolitionist leader Frederick Douglass discussed the Declaration of Sentiments. Douglass' participation drew large crowds as he urged attendees to support women's rights, equality, and vote for in favor the Declaration's resolutions. Most resolutions received unanimous support, but women's suffrage faced opposition. During the second day's speeches, Stanton and Douglass argued that American women must "secure to themselves their sacred right to the elective franchise." Although the 68 women and 32 men who signed the Declaration of Sentiments on July 20, 1848, did not completely support the suffrage resolution, voting rights became the primary objective of the Women's Rights Movement for the next 7 decades until ratification of the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution on August 18, 1920.
When the convention adjourned on the evening of July 20, 1848, newspapers expressed mixed reactions to the gathering's demand for women's rights. Some editorials declared that the convention marked the beginning of a new enlightened era. Others, like the Oneida Whig, were much more critical when it questioned, "If our ladies will insist on voting and legislating, where, gentleman, will be our dinners . . .?" Despite such harsh criticisms, women's rights conventions in New York, Ohio, Indiana, and Pennsylvania soon followed. State, county, and local women's rights groups organized to lobby legislatures to grant women equality to men in the voting booth, courts, education, and workplace. In May 1869, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton founded the National Woman Suffrage Association to coordinate the national campaign to win American women the right to vote. That same year, the territory of Wyoming granted women the right to vote, and in 1870, Eliza Stewart Boyd became the first American woman to serve on a jury in Laramie, WY. Nineteen more states passed women's suffrage laws between 1870 and the August 18, 1920, ratification of the 19th amendment. Since then, women have played an increasingly important role on election day. According to historical reported voting rates data collected by the U.S. Census Bureau's Current Population Survey, more women than men voted in nearly every election since 1980. During the most recent presidential election in 2020, 68.4 percent of registered women cast a ballot versus 65 percent of registered men.
You can learn more about Seneca Falls, NY, and the Women's Suffrage movement using census data and records. For example:
Ted Aub's 1998 statue depicts the May 12, 1851, introduction of Women's Rights Activists Susan B. Anthony (left) and Elizabeth Cady Stanton (right) by Amelia Jenks Bloomer in Seneca Falls, NY.
Congress established a permanent Census Bureau in March 1902. On July 1, the agency officially opened its doors at the Emery Building located at 1st and B Streets, NW, in Washington, DC, on July 1, 1902.
In 1942, the Census Bureau moved to the newly built "Federal Office Building #3" in Suitland, MD.
Today, we share our Suitland Federal Center headquarters building with the Bureau of Economic Analysis and the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
American women could not participate in federal elections until the ratification of the 19th amendment in 1920, but they have been included in every decennial census since 1790.
An accurate count of the nation's males, females, free, and enslaved was vital to the apportionment of the U.S. House of Representatives as required by Article I, Section II of the U.S. Constitution.
The 1790 Census counted 1,556,628 Free White Females. Free Black females and females of all other races were counted among the 59,511people in the "All Other Free Persons" category. There was no separation by gender for the nation's 697,697 slaves.
More detailed data were published in 1820, and the 1850 Census collected and published even more detailed data about the nation's 11,354,216 inhabitants by sex.
For example, published data about the nation's free female inhabitants in 1850, included name, age, sex, race, profession, place of birth, marital status, and school attendance.
Data about the enslaved population included sex, age, color ("B" for Black or "M" for Mulatto), and owner's name.
By 1900, the population of the United States was 76 million including nearly 37.2 million females.
Fifty years later, the 1950 Census counted more females (75.9 million) than males (74.8 million) for the first time in the nation's history. American females have outnumbered males every census ever since.
More recently, the 2020 Census counted 331,449,281 people, including 167,256,757 females and 164,192,524 males.
The Equal Rights Party nominated Victoria Woodhull as the first female candidate for president of the United States during the 1872 presidential election. The party nominated Frederick Douglass as Woodhull's running mate, but he did not accept the nomination.
Republican Ulysses S. Grant defeated Liberal Republican Horace Greeley to win the 1872 election. The Woodhull–Douglass ticket garnered just 2,000 popular votes.
The Women's Rights Movement also made headlines during the 1872 election when police in Rochester, NY, arrested suffragist Susan B. Anthony after she and 14 other women attempted to vote. Only Anthony went to trial. She was found guilty and fined $100 in December 1872.
The Equal Rights Party nominated Belva A. Lockwood for president and Marietta L. Stow as her running mate in 1884. The ticket received approximately 5,000 votes.
Lockwood was the party's nominee again in 1888. Alfred H. Love declined the vice presidential nomination and was replaced with Charles S. Weld.
More recently, Geraldine Ferraro (1984) and Sarah Palin (2008) unsuccessfully campaigned as vice-presidential nominees. In 2016, Democratic candidate Hillary R. Clinton became the first woman to earn a presidential nomination from one of the nation's major political parties, but lost the election to Republican Donald J. Trump.
In 2020, Kamala Harris became the first woman elected to the office of Vice President of the United States.