#11: Susan B. Anthony (1820-1906)
Susan B. Anthony spent decades in the United States pushing for women’s voting rights during the 19th century. She worked alongside other reformers, traveled widely for lectures, and helped organize campaigns that challenged federal and state election laws. In 1872, she voted in Rochester, New York, and was later arrested and fined, though she refused to pay. She died in 1906, before national voting rights were achieved in 1920.

