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History of Our Family

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SEARS, Susan

SEARS, Susan

Female 1795 - 1882  (86 years)

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   Date  Event(s)
1798 
  • 7 Jul 1798—7 Jul 1798: United States Marine Corps is established
    The United States Marine Corps is established
1803 
  • 1803—1803: Louisiana Purchase
    Louisiana Purchase
1804 
  • 11 Jul 1804—11 Jul 1804: Alexander Hamilton shot by V.P. Aaron Burr in a duel
    Alexander Hamilton shot by V.P. Aaron Burr in a duel
1805 
  • 1805—1805: Battle of Trafalagar and Nelson's death
    Battle of Trafalagar and Nelson's death
1825 
  • 1825—1825: Rocket steam locomotive built
    Rocket steam locomotive built, marking the start of the railway age of cheap, fast land transport.
1836 
  • 1836—1836: Telegraph Invented
    Telegraph Invented
1855 
  • 1855—1855: First petrol-driven car
    Benz develops first petrol-driven car, starting the most profound technical and social revolution of the modern age.
1861 
  • 12 Apr 1861—1861: US Civil War
    US Civil War Started
1865 
  • 31 Jan 1865—31 Jan 1965: Slavery abolished
    Congress passes 13th Amendment abolishing slavery
  • 14 Apr 1865—1865: Abraham Lincoln Assassination
    Abraham Lincoln Assassination
10 1866 
  • 13 Feb 1866—13 Feb 1866: Jesse James hold up his first bank in Liberty, MO
    Jesse James hold up his first bank in Liberty, MO
11 1872 
  • 1 Nov 1872—1 Nov 1872: Susan B. Anthony casts a vote
    By 1872, the Fourteenth Amendment had been ratified. Reconstruction was under way, and many Americans found it obscene that only one gender could participate in the most basic democratic exercise. Championing the rights of women was eloquent suffragette Susan B. Anthony, who, before the war, had been an abolitionist and prohibitionist. The temperance movement radicalized Anthony, though not in the way its leadership intended. Barred by men from speaking at anti-drinking rallies, she turned her intellect and ire away from the distillers and toward a bigger target: America’s male-dominated political system. And so, on the first day of November, she and three other women talked their way into registering to vote in a barbershop in the Eighth Ward in Rochester, NY. The male registrars didn’t want to do it, but Anthony threatened to sue them personally. The ballots they cast four days later were secret, but their sympathies were not: President Grant and his Republican Party were more receptive to women’s rights than the Democrats.



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