NWHF Medallion
Search the National Women's Hall of Fame Web Site
FAQ CONTACT HOME
NWHF Medallion Women of the Hall Nominate Support Shop Visit Our History Our Mission News & Events Book of Lives & Legacies
NWHF Medallion
Women ogf the Hall
Lucy Stone
(1818 - 1893)

Quick Facts
Birth:
1818

Death:
1893

Year Inducted:
1986

Achievement In:
Humanities
 
As an orator and an editor, Lucy Stone won innumerable converts to the cause of women's rights. Growing up on the family farm, she learned the difficulties women faced. Her mother's hardships distressed her, and her father ridiculed Lucy's desire to attend college. At the age of twenty-five she entered Oberlin, a pioneering co-educational college. She supported her studies through teaching and housework until her father at last relented and gave her some assistance. Her study of Greek and Hebrew convinced her that crucial passages in the Bible (those declaring woman inferior) had been translated wrongly.

When she graduated from Oberlin in 1847, Lucy Stone became the first Massachusetts women to earn a college degree. She was a gifted public speaker, and a dedicated abolitionist. Soon she was appointed a lecturer for the American Anti-slavery Society. Her natural eloquence drew large crowds, though she often had to face hostility.

In 1850 she helped organize a women's rights convention in Worcester, Massachusetts. There at the first "national" convention Lucy Stone delivered a speech on women's rights that converted Susan B. Anthony to the cause.

When she married Henry Blackwell (brother of Elizabeth Blackwell) Lucy Stone kept her own name, thus coining the phrase "Lucy Stoner" to describe a married women who retains her maiden name.

Lucy Stone took the lead in organizing the American Woman Suffrage Association. This group, considered the most moderate wing of the women suffrage movement, conflicted with Stanton and Anthony over policy and tactics. Lucy Stone and her husband founded and edited the organization's weekly newspaper, The Woman's Journal, which was considered "the voice of the woman's movement." Lucy Stone spent her lifetime battling for women's rights and inspiring others to join her cause.

Additional Resources:
Kerr, Andrea Moore. Lucy Stone: Speaking Out for Equality. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, c1992.

Blackwell, Alice Stone. Lucy Stone, Pioneer of Woman's Rights. New York: Kraus Reprint Co., 1971.

Burnett, Constance Buel. Five for Freedom: Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, Susan B. Anthony, Carrie Chapman Catt. New York: Greenwood Press, 1968.

Lasser, Carol and Marleen Deahl Merril, editors. Friends and Sisters: Letters Between Lucy Stone and Antoinette Brown Blackwell, 1846-1893. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1987.

Wheeler, Leslie, editor. Loving Warriors: Selected Letters of Lucy Stone and Henry B. Blackwell, 1853-1893. New York: Dial Press, 1981.

Woman Suffrage in New Jersey. [An Address delivered by Lucy Stone, at a hearing before the New Jersey Legislature, 6 March 1867.] Boston: C.H. Simonds & Co., printers.



National Women's Hall of Fame    76 Fall Street   P.O. Box 335, Seneca Falls, NY 13148    Phone 315.568.8060
Photo Credits Choice One Communications
Funding for the National Women's Hall of Fame’s Website is made possible by a grant from Choice One Communications. Web site design, development and hosting also provided by Choice One Communications.