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Matilda Joslyn Gage Website
Right of Habeas Corput
Matilda Joslyn Gage

Ballot Box, Toledo, Ohio. November 1876.

          Mrs. Matilda Joslyn Gage in her trenchant argument on the right of Habeas Corpus, at the Protest meeting, July 4, in Philadelphia, said: - "The protection of the writ of Habeas corpus is denied married women in every State of this Union, notwithstanding the Constitution of the United States declares it shall not be suspended except when, in cases of rebellion or invasion, the public safety demands it. During our late war, although the public safety demanded its suspension in certain cases, this suspension was opposed throughout the length and breadth of the land, as an invasion of the liberties of the people. Yet the newspapers, so vigorous in their objection to its necessary suspension during the war, have never protested against its illegal, unjust and unconstitutional suspension in case of married women, who have been denied this Constitutional guarantee of freedom in every State for the hundred years our country has been in existence. Unjust imprisonment belongs to the barbaric age of force, and has been the first thing against which people have rebelled in their efforts for freedom. Runnymede was a protest against such unjust exercise of power. The horrors of the French Revolution were largely brought on by the unlimited exercise of this power by the king and the nobility.