<h2><SPAN name="Page_143"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h2>THE FIRST WOMAN'S RIGHTS CONVENTION.</h2>
<br/>
<p>In the spring of 1847 we moved to Seneca Falls.
Here we spent sixteen years of our married life, and
here our other children—two sons and two daughters—were
born.</p>
<p>Just as we were ready to leave Boston, Mr. and Mrs.
Eaton and their two children arrived from Europe, and
we decided to go together to Johnstown, Mr. Eaton
being obliged to hurry to New York on business, and
Mr. Stanton to remain still in Boston a few months.
At the last moment my nurse decided she could not
leave her friends and go so far away. Accordingly my
sister and I started, by rail, with five children and seventeen
trunks, for Albany, where we rested over night and
part of the next day. We had a very fatiguing journey,
looking after so many trunks and children, for my
sister's children persisted in standing on the platform
at every opportunity, and the younger ones would follow
their example. This kept us constantly on the
watch. We were thankful when safely landed once
more in the old homestead in Johnstown, where we
arrived at midnight. As our beloved parents had received
no warning of our coming, the whole household
was aroused to dispose of us. But now in safe harbor,
'mid familiar scenes and pleasant memories, our slumbers
were indeed refreshing. How rapidly one throws
off all care and anxiety under the parental roof, and how
<SPAN name="Page_144"></SPAN>at sea one feels, no matter what the age may be,
when
the loved ones are gone forever and the home of childhood
is but a dream of the past.</p>
<p>After a few days of rest I started, alone, for my new
home, quite happy with the responsibility of repairing
a house and putting all things in order. I was already
acquainted with many of the people and the surroundings
in Seneca Falls, as my sister, Mrs. Bayard, had
lived there several years, and I had frequently made her
long visits. We had quite a magnetic circle of reformers,
too, in central New York. At Rochester were
William Henry Channing, Frederick Douglass, the
Anthonys, Posts, Hallowells, Stebbins,—some grand
old Quaker families at Farmington,—the Sedgwicks,
Mays, Mills, and Matilda Joslyn Gage at Syracuse; Gerrit
Smith at Peterboro, and Beriah Green at Whitesboro.</p>
<p>The house we were to occupy had been closed for
some years and needed many repairs, and the grounds,
comprising five acres, were overgrown with weeds.
My father gave me a check and said, with a smile, "You
believe in woman's capacity to do and dare; now go
ahead and put your place in order." After a minute
survey of the premises and due consultation with one or
two sons of Adam, I set the carpenters, painters, paper-hangers,
and gardeners at work, built a new kitchen and
woodhouse, and in one month took possession. Having
left my children with my mother, there were no impediments
to a full display of my executive ability.
In the purchase of brick, timber, paint, etc., and
in making bargains with workmen, I was in frequent
consultation with Judge Sackett and Mr. Bascom.
The latter was a member of the Constitutional
<SPAN name="Page_145"></SPAN>Convention, then in session in Albany, and as he
used to
walk down whenever he was at home, to see how my
work progressed, we had long talks, sitting on boxes
in the midst of tools and shavings, on the status of
women. I urged him to propose an amendment to
Article II, Section 3, of the State Constitution, striking
out the word "male," which limits the suffrage to
men. But, while he fully agreed with all I had to say
on the political equality of women, he had not the courage
to make himself the laughing-stock of the convention.
Whenever I cornered him on this point, manlike
he turned the conversation to the painters and carpenters.
However, these conversations had the effect of
bringing him into the first woman's convention, where
he did us good service.</p>
<p>In Seneca Falls my life was comparatively solitary,
and the change from Boston was somewhat depressing.
There, all my immediate friends were reformers, I had
near neighbors, a new home with all the modern conveniences,
and well-trained servants. Here our residence
was on the outskirts of the town, roads very
often muddy and no sidewalks most of the way, Mr.
Stanton was frequently from home, I had poor servants,
and an increasing number of children. To keep a house
and grounds in good order, purchase every article for
daily use, keep the wardrobes of half a dozen human
beings in proper trim, take the children to dentists,
shoemakers, and different schools, or find teachers at
home, altogether made sufficient work to keep one brain
busy, as well as all the hands I could impress into the
service. Then, too, the novelty of housekeeping had
passed away, and much that was once attractive in
domestic life was now irksome. I had so many cares
<SPAN name="Page_146"></SPAN>that the company I needed for intellectual
stimulus was
a trial rather than a pleasure.</p>
<p>There was quite an Irish settlement at a short
distance, and continual complaints were coming
to me that my boys threw stones at their pigs,
cows, and the roofs of their houses. This involved
constant diplomatic relations in the settlement
of various difficulties, in which I was so successful
that, at length, they constituted me a kind of
umpire in all their own quarrels. If a drunken
husband was pounding his wife, the children would
run for me. Hastening to the scene of action, I would
take Patrick by the collar, and, much to his surprise
and shame, make him sit down and promise to behave
himself. I never had one of them offer the least resistance,
and in time they all came to regard me
as one having authority. I strengthened my influence
by cultivating good feeling. I lent the men
papers to read, and invited their children into our
grounds; giving them fruit, of which we had abundance,
and my children's old clothes, books, and toys. I was
their physician, also—with my box of homeopathic
medicines I took charge of the men, women, and children
in sickness. Thus the most amicable relations
were established, and, in any emergency, these poor
neighbors were good friends and always ready to serve
me.</p>
<p>But I found police duty rather irksome, especially
when called out dark nights to prevent drunken fathers
from disturbing their sleeping children, or to minister
to poor mothers in the pangs of maternity. Alas! alas!
who can measure the mountains of sorrow and suffering
endured in unwelcome motherhood in the abodes of
<SPAN name="Page_147"></SPAN>ignorance, poverty, and vice, where
terror-stricken
women and children are the victims of strong men
frenzied with passion and intoxicating drink?</p>
<p>Up to this time life had glided by with comparative
ease, but now the real struggle was upon me. My
duties were too numerous and varied, and none sufficiently
exhilarating or intellectual to bring into play
my higher faculties. I suffered with mental hunger,
which, like an empty stomach, is very depressing. I had
books, but no stimulating companionship. To add to
my general dissatisfaction at the change from Boston,
I found that Seneca Falls was a malarial region, and in
due time all the children were attacked with chills and
fever which, under homeopathic treatment in those
days, lasted three months. The servants were afflicted
in the same way. Cleanliness, order, the love of the
beautiful and artistic, all faded away in the struggle to
accomplish what was absolutely necessary from hour to
hour. Now I understood, as I never had before, how
women could sit down and rest in the midst of general
disorder. Housekeeping, under such conditions, was
impossible, so I packed our clothes, locked up the
house, and went to that harbor of safety, home, as I did
ever after in stress of weather.</p>
<p>I now fully understood the practical difficulties most
women had to contend with in the isolated household,
and the impossibility of woman's best development if
in contact, the chief part of her life, with servants and
children. Fourier's phalansterie community life and
co-operative households had a new significance for me.
Emerson says, "A healthy discontent is the first step
to progress." The general discontent I felt with
woman's portion as wife, mother, housekeeper, physi<SPAN name="Page_148"></SPAN>cian,
and spiritual guide, the chaotic conditions into
which everything fell without her constant supervision,
and the wearied, anxious look of the majority of
women impressed me with a strong feeling that some
active measures should be taken to remedy the wrongs
of society in general, and of women in particular. My
experience at the World's Anti-slavery Convention,
all I had read of the legal status of women, and the
oppression I saw everywhere, together swept across my
soul, intensified now by many personal experiences. It
seemed as if all the elements had conspired to impel
me to some onward step. I could not see what to do
or where to begin—my only thought was a public meeting
for protest and discussion.</p>
<p>In this tempest-tossed condition of mind I received
an invitation to spend the day with Lucretia Mott, at
Richard Hunt's, in Waterloo. There I met several
members of different families of Friends, earnest,
thoughtful women. I poured out, that day, the torrent
of my long-accumulating discontent, with such vehemence
and indignation that I stirred myself, as well
as the rest of the party, to do and dare anything. My
discontent, according to Emerson, must have been
healthy, for it moved us all to prompt action, and we
decided, then and there, to call a "Woman's Rights
Convention." We wrote the call that evening and
published it in the <i>Seneca County Courier</i> the next day,
the 14th of July, 1848, giving only five days' notice,
as the convention was to be held on the 19th and 20th.
The call was inserted without signatures,—in fact it
was a mere announcement of a meeting,—but the chief
movers and managers were Lucretia Mott, Mary Ann
McClintock, Jane Hunt, Martha C. Wright, and my<SPAN name="Page_149"></SPAN>self.
The convention, which was held two days in the
Methodist Church, was in every way a grand success.
The house was crowded at every session, the speaking
good, and a religious earnestness dignified all the proceedings.</p>
<p>These were the hasty initiative steps of "the most
momentous reform that had yet been launched on the
world—the first organized protest against the injustice
which had brooded for ages over the character and
destiny of one-half the race." No words could express
our astonishment on finding, a few days afterward, that
what seemed to us so timely, so rational, and so sacred,
should be a subject for sarcasm and ridicule to the entire
press of the nation. With our Declaration of Rights
and Resolutions for a text, it seemed as if every man
who could wield a pen prepared a homily on "woman's
sphere." All the journals from Maine to Texas
seemed to strive with each other to see which could
make our movement appear the most ridiculous. The
anti-slavery papers stood by us manfully and so did
Frederick Douglass, both in the convention and in his
paper, <i>The North Star</i>, but so pronounced was the popular
voice against us, in the parlor, press, and pulpit, that
most of the ladies who had attended the convention
and signed the declaration, one by one, withdrew their
names and influence and joined our persecutors. Our
friends gave us the cold shoulder and felt themselves
disgraced by the whole proceeding.</p>
<p>If I had had the slightest premonition of all that
was to follow that convention, I fear I should not have
had the courage to risk it, and I must confess that it
was with fear and trembling that I consented to attend
another, one month afterward, in Rochester. Fortu<SPAN name="Page_150"></SPAN>nately,
the first one seemed to have drawn all the fire,
and of the second but little was said. But we had set
the ball in motion, and now, in quick succession, conventions
were held in Ohio, Indiana, Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, and in the City of New York, and have
been kept up nearly every year since.</p>
<p>The most noteworthy of the early conventions were
those held in Massachusetts, in which such men as Garrison,
Phillips, Channing, Parker, and Emerson took
part. It was one of these that first attracted the attention
of Mrs. John Stuart Mill, and drew from her pen
that able article on "The Enfranchisement of Woman,"
in the <i>Westminster Review</i> of October, 1852.</p>
<p>The same year of the convention, the Married
Woman's Property Bill, which had given rise to some
discussion on woman's rights in New York, had passed
the legislature. This encouraged action on the part
of women, as the reflection naturally arose that, if the
men who make the laws were ready for some onward
step, surely the women themselves should express some
interest in the legislation. Ernestine L. Rose, Paulina
Wright (Davis), and I had spoken before committees
of the legislature years before, demanding equal property
rights for women. We had circulated petitions
for the Married Woman's Property Bill for many
years, and so also had the leaders of the Dutch aristocracy,
who desired to see their life-long accumulations
descend to their daughters and grandchildren rather
than pass into the hands of dissipated, thriftless sons-in-law.
Judge Hertell, Judge Fine, and Mr. Geddes of
Syracuse prepared and championed the several bills, at
different times, before the legislature. Hence the demands
made in the convention were not entirely new
<SPAN name="Page_151"></SPAN>to the reading and thinking public of New
York—the
first State to take any action on the question. As New
York was the first State to put the word "male" in
her constitution in 1778, it was fitting that she should
be first in more liberal legislation. The effect of the
convention on my own mind was most salutary. The
discussions had cleared my ideas as to the primal steps
to be taken for woman's enfranchisement, and the opportunity
of expressing myself fully and freely on a
subject I felt so deeply about was a great relief. I think
all women who attended the convention felt better for
the statement of their wrongs, believing that the first
step had been taken to right them.</p>
<p>Soon after this I was invited to speak at several
points in the neighborhood. One night, in the Quaker
Meeting House at Farmington, I invited, as usual, discussion
and questions when I had finished. We all
waited in silence for a long time; at length a middle-aged
man, with a broad-brimmed hat, arose and responded
in a sing-song tone: "All I have to say is, if a
hen can crow, let her crow," emphasizing "crow" with
an upward inflection on several notes of the gamut.
The meeting adjourned with mingled feelings of surprise
and merriment. I confess that I felt somewhat chagrined
in having what I considered my unanswerable
arguments so summarily disposed of, and the serious
impression I had made on the audience so speedily dissipated.
The good man intended no disrespect, as he
told me afterward. He simply put the whole argument
in a nutshell: "Let a woman do whatever she
can."</p>
<p>With these new duties and interests, and a broader
outlook on human life, my petty domestic annoyances
<SPAN name="Page_152"></SPAN>gradually took a subordinate place. Now I began
to
write articles for the press, letters to conventions held
in other States, and private letters to friends, to arouse
them to thought on this question.</p>
<p>The pastor of the Presbyterian Church, Mr. Bogue,
preached several sermons on Woman's Sphere, criticising
the action of the conventions in Seneca Falls and
Rochester. Elizabeth McClintock and I took notes
and answered him in the county papers. Gradually we
extended our labors and attacked our opponents in the
New York <i>Tribune</i>, whose columns were open to us in
the early days, Mr. Greeley being, at that time, one of
our most faithful champions.</p>
<p>In answering all the attacks, we were compelled to
study canon and civil law, constitutions, Bibles, science,
philosophy, and history, sacred and profane. Now my
mind, as well as my hands, was fully occupied, and instead
of mourning, as I had done, over what I had lost
in leaving Boston, I tried in every way to make the
most of life in Seneca Falls. Seeing that elaborate refreshments
prevented many social gatherings, I often
gave an evening entertainment without any. I told
the young people, whenever they wanted a little dance
or a merry time, to make our house their rallying point,
and I would light up and give them a glass of water
and some cake. In that way we had many pleasant
informal gatherings. Then, in imitation of Margaret
Fuller's Conversationals, we started one which lasted
several years. We selected a subject each week on
which we all read and thought; each, in turn, preparing
an essay ten minutes in length.</p>
<p>These were held, at different homes, Saturday of each
week. On coming together we chose a presiding offi<SPAN name="Page_153"></SPAN>cer
for the evening, who called the meeting to order,
and introduced the essayist. That finished, he asked
each member, in turn, what he or she had read or
thought on the subject, and if any had criticisms to
make on the essay. Everyone was expected to contribute
something. Much information was thus gained,
and many spicy discussions followed. All the ladies,
as well as the gentlemen, presided in turn, and so became
familiar with parliamentary rules. The evening
ended with music, dancing, and a general chat. In this
way we read and thought over a wide range of subjects
and brought together the best minds in the community.
Many young men and women who did not
belong to what was considered the first circle,—for in
every little country village there is always a small
clique that constitutes the aristocracy,—had the advantages
of a social life otherwise denied them. I think
that all who took part in this Conversation Club would
testify to its many good influences.</p>
<p>I had three quite intimate young friends in the
village who spent much of their spare time with
me, and who added much to my happiness: Frances
Hoskins, who was principal of the girls' department
in the academy, with whom I discussed
politics and religion; Mary Bascom, a good talker
on the topics of the day, and Mary Crowninshield,
who played well on the piano. As I was very fond of
music, Mary's coming was always hailed with delight.
Her mother, too, was a dear friend of mine, a woman of
rare intelligence, refinement, and conversational talent.
She was a Schuyler, and belonged to the Dutch aristocracy
in Albany. She died suddenly, after a short
illness. I was with her in the last hours and held her
<SPAN name="Page_154"></SPAN>hand until the gradually fading spark of life
went out.
Her son is Captain A.S. Crowninshield of our Navy.</p>
<p>My nearest neighbors were a very agreeable, intelligent
family of sons and daughters. But I always
felt that the men of that household were given to
domineering. As the mother was very amiable and
self-sacrificing, the daughters found it difficult to
rebel. One summer, after general house-cleaning, when
fresh paint and paper had made even the kitchen look
too dainty for the summer invasion of flies, the queens
of the household decided to move the sombre cook-stove
into a spacious woodhouse, where it maintained
its dignity one week, in the absence of the head
of the home. The mother and daughters were delighted
with the change, and wondered why they had
not made it before during the summer months. But
their pleasure was shortlived. Father and sons rose
early the first morning after his return and moved the
stove back to its old place. When the wife and daughters
came down to get their breakfast (for they did all
their own work) they were filled with grief and disappointment.
The breakfast was eaten in silence, the
women humbled with a sense of their helplessness, and
the men gratified with a sense of their power. These
men would probably all have said "home is woman's
sphere," though they took the liberty of regulating
everything in her sphere.</p>
<div style="text-align: center;"><SPAN name="img006"></SPAN><img
style="width: 400px; height: 572px;" alt="MRS. STANTON AND SON, 1854."
title="MRS. STANTON AND SON, 1854." src="image/006.jpg"></div>
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