Susan B. Anthony’s Home Is Now an Early Voting Site — and Women Are Showing Their Appreciation at Her Grave

Mar. 15, 2025

Gavin Neville, 72, puts an “I Voted” sticker on Susan B. Anthony’s grave on Nov. 2, 2020.Photo:AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey

Susan B Anthony gravestone

AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey

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According to the Monroe County Board of Elections, there is more early voting taking place this year than in the 2020 early voting period.The tradition of placing “I Voted” stickers on Anthony’s gravestone became a huge hit during the 2016 election whenHilary Clintonwas the first woman to be on the top of a major party ticket. That year, the gravesite saw more than 10,000 visitors. In 2020, the cemetery added plexiglass to Anthony and her sister’s gravestones to protect the marble.

Dennis Carr, vice president of the Friends of Mount Hope Cemetery, told theWashington Posthe expects the number of visitors to near 15,000.Although she never lived to see it, Anthony advocated for a woman’s right to vote. Fourteen years after her death, the 19th Amendment — which banned denying the right to vote “on account of sex” — was ratified in 1920.

In 1872, Anthony cast a vote in the nation’s presidential election. Two weeks later, a deputy federal marshal visited her home — now the museum — to arrest her.“It’s just so cool to be able to vote at the place where Susan B. Anthony was arrested for voting,” Rebecca McGinnis, a New York voter, toldThe New York Times.

source: people.com