Matilda Joslyn Gage Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

Matilda Joslyn Gage Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

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This Biography is about one of the best Writer Matilda Joslyn Gage including her Height, weight,Age & Other Detail…

Biography Of Matilda Joslyn Gage
Real Name Matilda Joslyn Gage
Profession Women’s Rights Activists, Civil Rights Activists, Writers
Nick Name Matilda Electa Gag
Famous as Abolitionist, Freethinker, Author
Nationality American
Personal Life of Matilda Joslyn Gage
Born on 24 March 1826
Birthday 24th March
Died At Age 71
Sun Sign Aries
Born in Cicero
Died on 18 March 1898
Place of death Chicago
Grouping of People Feminists, Humanitarian
Family Background of Matilda Joslyn Gage
Father Hezekiah Joslyn
Spouse/Partner Henry Hill Gage
Children Maud Gage Baum, Charles Henry Gage, Helen Leslie Gage, Thomas Clarkson Gage, Julia Louise Gage
Personal Fact of Matilda Joslyn Gage

Matilda Joslyn Gage was a prominent women’s rights activist and women’s suffrage leader of the nineteenth century. She used the pen as her weapon for fighting against the subjugation of women and wrote several speeches, feminist essays and books which put emphasis on the importance of women all through history and how their role was strategically dismissed by men.

Born with a hatred for oppression, Matilda Joslyn Gage was not just concerned with the exploitation of white women but also fought relentlessly against the violence perpetuated on the African slaves, native African-American women and similar minor classes of America. She was elected as the leader of the National Woman Suffrage Association once. Gage was the contemporary of women rights activists like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.

Her significance in the women’s suffrage movement was not much acknowledged because when she formed a radical suffrage organization on her own, Anthony and Stanton removed her references from their legendary book on the history of suffrage movement. Scientific historian Margaret. W. Rossiter came up with the phrase Matilda Effect after Gage’s name.