Women's Rights National Historical Park was
established in 1980, and covers a total of
6.83 acres (27,600 m2) of land in Seneca Falls
and nearby Waterloo, New York, United States.
The park consists of four major historical
properties including the Wesleyan Methodist
Church, which was the site of the Seneca Falls
Convention, the first women's rights convention.
The Elizabeth Cady Stanton House, and the
homes of other early women's rights activists
(the M'Clintock House and the Richard Hunt
House) are also on display.
The park includes a visitor center and an
education and cultural center housing the
Suffrage Press Printshop.
== Votes For Women History Trail ==
The Votes For Women History Trail, created
as part of the federal Omnibus Public Land
Management Act of 2009, is administered by
the Department of the Interior through the
Women's Rights National Historical Park.
The Trail is an automobile route that links
sites throughout upstate New York important
to the establishment of women's suffrage.
Sites on the trail include:
Susan B. Anthony House in Rochester
Mount Hope Cemetery in Rochester
Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell Childhood
Home in Henrietta
M'Clintock House in Waterloo
The Women's Rights National Historical Park
itself
== See also ==
List of monuments and memorials to women's
suffrage
Timeline of women's suffrage
Timeline of women's suffrage in the United
States
Women's suffrage
Women's suffrage in the United States
