Signer #56, Mary E. Vail, "Iowa Fever"

Signer #56 was widowed by the frontier.

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Signer #13, Lydia Mount, "The Widow"

Six months after the Seneca Falls Convention, Signer #13 was forced to sell the family farm.

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Signer #3: Margaret Pryor, "The Utopian"

In her lifetime, Signer #3 joined two intentional communities...with mixed results.

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Signer #54: Rebecca Race, "Mother of Twelve"

Three of Signer #54's twelve children died in the space of four days.

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Signer #38: Martha Underhill, "A Thousand Words"

The search for Signer #38 uncovered her photograph, previously forgotten.

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Signer #2: Harriet Cady Eaton, "The Rich Sister"

An elder sister of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Signer #2 amassed a fortune after the Seneca Falls Convention.

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Signer #95: Isaac Van Tassel, "The Musician"

Signer #95 witnessed some of the Civil War's grimmest battles.

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Signer #91: S.E. Woodworth, "Drosophila"

Signer #91's nephew (and stepson) was responsible for a major scientific breakthrough.

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Signer #37: Charlotte Woodward, "The Last Survivor"

The only known signer who lived to see the 19th Amendment, Signer #37 campaigned for franchise all her life.

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Signer #33: Susan Quinn, "The Teenager"

14 years and 6 months old, Signer #33 is the youngest known signer.

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