MARY ANN SORDEN STUART
GREENWOOD, DELAWARE
Mary Ann Sorden was born
near Greenwood on a large farm of John and Sarah Owens
Pennewill Sorden, and grew
up to be one of Delaware's fiery feminists.
Her father, John Sorden was
a wealthy landowner, a Delaware State Senator, liberal
in his views of the Womans
Rights Movement and had repealed oppresssive laws against women.
The early 19th
century there were no womens rights under law. When they married
everything they possessed
became their husbands property.
In 1873 laws were passed
giving women the right to make wills, own real estate. It was
five decades later that the
19th Admendment became law and women were extended full
sufferage.
Miss Sorden married Dr.
William W. Stuart, with a fashionable society wedding. The pair had
five children. After her
husbands death in the 1870's she became active in Delaware's
Women
Sufferage movement. She was
an accomplished business woman , operating an excursion business,
chartering trains to carry
vacationers to Rehoboth Beach and Ocean City beaches.
A Wilmington News Paper
correspondent described her thus “ Mrs. Stuart dresses in black,
weighs 250 pounds, is good
natured, and can talk ten hours at the rate of 200 words a
minuute.”
Mrs Stuart was a 1870
delegate to a National Sufferage Association convention in
Washington, D. C.
and a close friend of Susan
B. Anthony.
Mrs Stuart died in the late
1880's
Source: Dick Carters 1976
History of Sussex County, Delaware Coast Press, July 1976;
Abstract September 3,
2017, Harrison H
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