Martha Coffin Wright: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:American women's rights activists|Wright, Martha Coffin]]
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[[Category:Feminists|Wright, Martha Coffin]]
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[[Category:Quakers|Wright, Martha Coffin]]
[[Category:Nantucket, Massachusetts|Wright, Martha Coffin]]
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Revision as of 19:03, 14 October 2006

Martha Coffin Wright 1806 - 1875 was a feminist, and abolitionist, and signatory of the Declaration of Sentiments.

Early life

She was born in Boston, Massachusetts on December 25, 1806. She was the youngest child of Anna Folger and Thomas Coffin, a merchant and former Nantucket, Massachusetts ship captain. After the Coffin family moved to Philadelphia, Martha was educated at Quaker schools.

Marriages

Martha married Peter Pelham of Kentucky in 1824 and moved with him to a frontier fort at Tampa Bay, Florida. They had a daughter. Peter died in 1826, leaving Martha a nineteen-year-old widow with an infant child. She moved to upstate New York to teach painting and writing at a Quaker school for girls. She married a young law student named David Wright and had six more children.

Seneca Falls Convention

Martha's older sister Lucretia Coffin Mott, a prominent Quaker preacher. In July 1848, she visited Martha's home in Auburn, New York. During that visit, Martha and Lucretia met with Elizabeth Cady Stanton and two other women and decided to hold a convention in nearby Seneca Falls, New York to discuss the need for greater rights for women. The importance of the Seneca Falls Convention was recognized by Congress in 1980 with the creation of the Women's Rights National Historical Park at the site, administered by the National Park Service. The Park's Visitor Center today features a group of life-size bronze statues to honor the women and men who in 1848 initiated the organized movement for women's rights and woman suffrage. Her statue shows her, as she was then, visibly pregnant. In 2005, the park had a display about the relationship between Lucretia and Martha.

Women's rights and abolitionism

After the Seneca Falls Convention Martha Wright participated in many state and national women's rights conventions in various capacities, often serving as President. She was also active in the abolition movement. The arguments for women's rights had much in common with the arguments for abolition. With her sister Lucretia, Martha attended the founding meeting of the American Anti-Slavery Society in Philadelphia in 1833.

The Underground Railroad

Martha's home in Auburn, New York was part of the Underground Railroad where she harbored fugitive slaves. She became a close friend and supporter of Harriet Tubman.

External links