Susan B. Anthony Biography
Social Reformer
Susan B. Anthony is remembered as a women's rights leader, but she also campaigned against slavery and in favor of temperance (the abolition of liquor). Along with Elizabeth Cady Stanton she founded the American Equal Rights Association in 1866, and she spent the better part of her life trying to win voting rights for women in the United States. In 1920, 14 years after Anthony's death, American women finally won the vote with the passage of the 19th Amendment. Congress honored Anthony in 1979 by putting her portrait on a new one-dollar coin.Extra credit: Anthony's home in Rochester, New York is now a National Historic Monument... Anthony was one of seven children... She had no children herself and never married... The last Susan B. Anthony dollar coins were minted in 1999. The Sacagawea dollar coin was introduced in 2000.
Susan B. Anthony and Sacagawea appear with Grover Cleveland and Ulysses Grant in our loop On The Money.
Blog posts mentioning Susan B. Anthony:
Four Good Links
Susan B. Anthony House
Top-notch bio and women's history links
Not For Ourselves Alone
Great resource from PBS on Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Women's History: Susan B. Anthony
The Gale Group's fine introduction to Anthony
The SBA Dollar: A Retrospective
A collector's fascinatin' history of the coin
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
Death
13 March 1906
(complications from a stroke, age 86)
Best Known As
The suffragist on the one-dollar coin



