A legendary woman You most likely remember Susan B. Anthony for the strides she made for women’s rights in the United States, ...
The gravestones of Susan B. Anthony and her sister Mary in Mt. Hope Cemetery are covered in plexiglass to protect them. Each presidential election, scores of people visit the site to add their I ...
The Susan B. Anthony Museum & House first became an organization back in 1945, but the dream of becoming a place where people can cast their votes picked up after early voting came to New York in ...
5, just like it did in 1872. The country was still contending with a deep divide over the war and Reconstruction – and Susan B. Anthony wanted her voice heard. The incumbent president ...
Fast forward to 1872, when Susan B. Anthony was arrested for casting a vote in the presidential election in the United States. As a prominent suffragist, Anthony's actions were a significant ...
Sign-up for Your Vote: Text with the USA TODAY elections team. Susan B. Anthony is buried on a path near Maple Avenue inside Mount Hope Cemetery. Visitors are encouraged to park on Robinson Drive ...
Here's what to know if you plan to visit. Here's what to know if you plan to visit Susan B. Anthony's grave on Election Day Susan B. Anthony is buried on a path near Maple Avenue inside Mount Hope ...
Her destination was the same place more than 10,000 people are expected to visit on Election Day – the gravesite of Susan B. Anthony, a Rochester icon and leader in the suffragist movement.
Susan B. Anthony once said, "I will cut off this right arm of mine before I will ever work for or demand the ballot for the ...
When Americans take to the polls on Tuesday, they will be following in the footsteps of famed suffragette Susan B. Anthony, who on Nov. 5, 1872, cast an illegal ballot to make her voice heard as a ...