Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 1.djvu/843

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Appendix — Chapter IV.
809

4. Resolved, That the assumption of law to settle estates of men who die without wills, having widows, is an insult to woman, and ought to be regarded as such by every lover of right and equality.

5. Whereas, The husband has the legal right to hire out his wife to service, collect her wages, and appropriate it to his own exclusive and independent benefit; and,

Whereas, This has contributed to establish that hideous custom, the promise of obedience in the marriage contract, effectually, though insidiously, reducing her almost to the condition of a slave, whatever freedom she may have in these respects being granted as a privilege, not as a right; therefore,

Resolved, That we will seek the overthrow of this barbarous and unrighteous law; and conjure women no longer to promise obedience in the marriage covenant.

Resolved, That the universal doctrine of the inferiority of woman has ever caused her to distrust her own powers, and paralyzed her energies, and placed her in that degraded position from which the most strenuous and unremitting effort can alone redeem her. Only by faithful perseverance in the practical exercise of those talents, so long "wrapped in a napkin and buried under the earth," she will regain her long-lost equality with man.

Resolved, That in the persevering and independent course of Miss Blackwell, who recently attended a series of medical lectures in Geneva, and has now gone to Europe to graduate as a physician, we see a harbinger of the day when woman shall stand forth "redeemed and disenthralled," and perform those important duties which are so truly within her sphere.

Resolved, That those who believe the laboring classes of women are oppressed, ought to do all in their power to raise their wages, beginning with their own household servants.

Resolved, That it is the duty of woman, whatever her complexion, to assume, as soon as possible, her true position of equality in the social circle, the Church, and the State.

Resolved, That we tender our grateful acknowledgment to the Trustees of the Unitarian Church, who have kindly opened their doors for the use of this Convention.

Resolved, That we, the friends who are interested in this cause, gratefully accept the kind offer from the Trustees of the use of Protection Hall, to hold our meetings whenever we wish.

Signatures to the Declaration adopted at Seneca Falls.

Firmly relying upon the final triumph of the Right and the True, we do this day affix our signatures to this Declaration:

Lucretia Mott, Hannah Plant,
Harriet Cady Eaton, Lucy Jones,
Margaret Pryor, Sarah Whitney,
Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Mary H. Hallowell,
Eunice Newton Foote, Elizabeth Conklin,
Mary Ann McClintock, Sally Pitcher,
Margaret Schooley, Mary Conklin,
Martha C. Wright, Susan Quinn,
Jane C. Hunt, Mary S. Mirror,
Amy Post, Phebe King,
Catharine F. Stebbins, Julia Ann Drake,
Mary Ann Frink, Charlotte Woodward,
Lydia Mount, Martha Underhill,
Delia Matthews, Dorothy Matthews,
Catharine C. Paine, Eunice Barker,
Elizabeth W. McClintock, Sarah R. Woods,
Malvina Seymour, Lydia Gild,
Phebe Mosher, Sarah Hoffman,
Catherine Shaw, Elizabeth Leslie,
Deborah Scott, Martha Ridley,
Sarah Hallowell, Rachel D. Bonnel,
Mary McClintock, Betsy Tewksbury,
Mary Gilbert, Rhoda Palmer,