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Women's Rights National Historical ParkElizabeth Cady Stanton House
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Women's Rights National Historical Park
M'Clintock House
 
 
The M'Clintock House is a red brick residence with three equally spaced windows facing front on the second story, with two windows and the front door on the first story. Green shutters frame each window and four stone stairs mark the entry to the pail yellow front door on the right.
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M'Clintock House, site where the Declaration of Sentiments was drafted for the First Women's Rights Convention.

Richard Hunt built the two story red-brick house at 14 East Williams Street in Waterloo, New York in 1836, but never lived there. The M'Clintock family of seven moved into the house in 1836 and were its first tenants. Thomas and Mary Ann, their five children, and others made this their home for 20 years until they returned to Philadelphia. The M'Clintock family ran a local business, led the local Quaker Monthly Meeting, and were involded in almost every reform activity in Western New York. Together they ran a Drugstore and school in the commercial buildings along Main Street, they supported Anti-slavery, Temperance, and raised money to benefit the Irish famine, Hungarian Revolution, and the local poor. The M'Clintocks offered their house to fugitive slaves as a station on the Underground Railroad. How do we know the house was a station on the Underground Railroad? Learn why here.

On July 16, 1848, Mary Ann M'Clintock hosted a planning session for the First Women's Rights Convention. At this session she, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and perhaps several others drafted a document they called the Declaration of Sentiments. It was ratified on the second day of the First Woman's Rights Convention and signed by 100 men and women. Modeled on Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence, this document proclaimed that "all men and women are created equal."

Declaration of Sentiments engraved in the waterwall.
Read a Declaration of Independence for women
Ratified by 100 signers on July 20, 1848
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Statue of Frederick Douglass in the park visitor center
Men for Women's Rights
In 1848 Frederick Douglass and many more men came in support of equality
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Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Read Solitude of Self
Elizabeth Cady Stanton's most famous speech
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Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her daughter Harriot, 1856.  

Did You Know?
Did you know that before Susan B. Anthony campaigned for woman's suffrage, her good friend Elizabeth Cady Stanton spearheaded the First Women's Rights Convention in America?
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Last Updated: September 28, 2007 at 13:33 EST