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County Executive

News & Press Release

Historian’s Office and County Exec to Unveil Susan B Anthony Historic Marker

13 July 2023

Who: Putnam County Historian Jennifer Cassidy

Putnam History Museum RepresentativesPutnam County Executive Kevin Byrne

What: The Putnam County Historian’s Office and Putnam History Museum invite members of the public to join them for a special historic marker unveiling. This special event will coincide with the 175th anniversary of the Women’s Rights Convention at Seneca Falls, NY, launching the women’s suffrage movement.  This marker is dedicated to Susan B. Anthony’s early efforts advocating for women’s suffrage and equality when she spoke at the courthouse in Carmel, NY, in 1855. Although Anthony was not in attendance at the convention, it is credited as a catalyst for her strong support of the movement.

Where: Historic County Courthouse, 40 Gleneida Ave, Carmel NY

When: Wednesday, July 19th at 12:00pm

Why: Anthony came to Carmel and spoke twice on April 11th, 1855, as part of her New York State campaign for women’s suffrage. All citizens of Putnam County were invited to listen to her speeches and thoughts on a woman’s right to vote. However, at that time, there were mixed feelings regarding this topic and it would be well over half a century before the 19th Amendment, also known as the “Susan B. Anthony Amendment”, went into law in 1920.

About Susan B. Anthony (1820 – 1906)

According to the website of the National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House, located in Rochester, NY, Anthony recognized early on that without the right to vote women would keep fighting the same battles for equality over and over again. She traveled many miles, giving hundreds of speeches, gathering thousands of signatures on petitions, and organizing suffragists, to press for women’s suffrage and Putnam County is part of her heroic history.

In 1872 Susan B. Anthony forced the issue. The newly added Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution granted equal protection under the law, and defined citizens as anybody born or naturalized in the United States. The law was passed to protect freed black people in the aftermath of the Civil War. As a citizen, Susan B. Anthony decided to test the Amendment and went with her sisters and several other women to vote. After casting her ballot Susan B. Anthony  wrote, “I have been and gone and done it…positively voted…” (p.424 Life & Work)

Soon after, a federal marshal showed up at Susan B. Anthony’s door to arrest her for wrongfully and willfully voting. She insisted the marshal arrest her properly and take her to the police station. In between her arrest and her trial, Susan B. Anthony spoke in all 28 towns and villages in Monroe County, New York, asking “Is it a crime for a U.S. citizen to vote?” At Susan B. Anthony’s trial, the judge ordered she be found guilty without deliberation, and fined her $100. She refused to pay. To avoid an appeal, the judge did not throw Susan B. Anthony in jail.

In 1875, the Supreme Court of the United States decided that women were indeed citizens but that citizens do not necessarily have the right to vote. It was up to the states to decide voting requirements beyond what was written in the Constitution. Southern states instituted poll taxes and literacy tests that, in addition to the threat of lynching, effectively kept poor black people from voting until the 1960s.

It would take more than fifty years for the 19th Amendment to pass, fourteen years after Susan B. Anthony died. Widely known as the Susan B. Anthony Amendment, “the right to vote shall not be denied on account of sex,” became the law of the land in 1920.

For more information on her life and times, visit The National Susan B. Anthony Museum & House www.susanb.org.


Welcome Message

“Remember that Putnam County is home. Regardless of what may make us different as individuals, it is our respect for each-other as neighbors, our desire to step up and serve, to lend a hand, and leave this beautiful county better off than we found it. That is what makes this place so special. It is with that in mind that we as a county government are here to serve, and will always serve, with a desire to do better.” - Kevin M. Byrne | Putnam County Executive 

Contact the Executive's Office


  • Kevin M. Byrne

    County Executive

Putnam County Office Building

40 Gleneida Avenue
Carmel, New York 10512

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