Lucy Stone's Protest of Taxation Without
Representation
Source,
In 1857 Lucy Stone
and Henry Blackwell moved to a small farm in
Orange, N. J.
Mr. Mandeville, Tax Collector, Sir:
Enclosed I return my tax bill, without paying it.
My reason for doing so is that women suffer taxation and yet have no
representation, which is not only unjust to one half of the adult population,
but is contrary to our theory of government. For years some women have been
paying their taxes under protest but still taxes are imposed and representation
is not granted. The only course now left us is to refuse to pay the tax. We
know well what the immediate result of this refusal must be.
But we believe that when the attention of men is
called to the wide difference between their theory of government and its
practices in this particular, they cannot fail to see the mistake they now make
by imposing taxes on women, while they refuse them the right of suffrage, and
that the sense of justice which is in all good men, will lead them to correct
it. Then shall we cheerfully pay our taxes---not till then.
Respectfully,
Lucy Stone