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Susan Brownell Anthony is born in Adams, Massachusetts.
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Due to the depression of 1837, her father, Daniel is forced to declare bankruptcy. They lose their family home in Battenville, New York.
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Susan's father had taken her and her sister out of school. Susan was fairly educated, even though she was done with school.
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Susan's family make their move Rochester, New York. This is where she first was exposed to politics because her family held abolitionist gatherings. She was introduced to Fredrick Douglass, and many more key figures.
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Susan B. Anthony took a teaching job at the Canajoharie Academy.
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Susan B. Anthony attended the Anti- Slavery Convention in Syracuse, New York. She met a lot of important abolitionists, including Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
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Susan begins a petition for women's rights. She was refused to talk at several public venues
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Susan interest grew as an abolitionist, and she became an agent for the Anti-Slavery Society. She started spoke and publicized the cause for a number of years.
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Along with Elizabeth Cady Stanton, they both wrote and published the Appeal To Women Of The Republic
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Anthony voted in 1872, and was arrested for her actions. In 1873, the judge ordered the jury to find her guilty and she was fined $100.
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The first book of Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Matilda Joslin Gage, all women activists, published a book known as the History Of Women's Suffrage. This was followed by another three books.
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Susan B. Anthony began work on her autobiography in 1897. The autobiography was published in 1898.
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Susan B. Anthony meets with President Theodore Roosevelt, to discuss about making amendment for women's suffrage.
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Susan B. Anthony passed away on March 13, 1906 due to pneumonia.