This society shall be known by the name of the Indiana Woman's Rights Suffrage Association.
Article II
The officers of this society shall consist of a President, Vice President, Corresponding and Recording Secretaries and Treasurer, whose duties shall be such as devolve upon such stations, and they shall be elected annually.
Article III
The Secretary, further, shall be requested to report annually upon the general condition of woman and the efforts made for her elevation.
Article IV
Persons shall be appointed at each annual meeting to report upon each of the following subjects: Woman's Labor and Remuneration, Woman's Legal Condition; Woman's Social Position, and Woman's education.
Article V
This society shall meet annually at such time and place as shall hereafter be determined upon.
Article VI
This society does advise the organization of District societies throughout the State.
Article VII
The constitution may be altered or amended at any regular meeting of the society.
The meeting started off by elected a President, Vice President, and Secretary. Hannah Hiatt was the first President, Amanda Way was the first Vice President, and Henry Hiatt was the first secretary. Hannah Hiatt requested that the new Vice President make the opening address of the meeting. During that speech, Amanda M. Way stated that the "object of the meeting, and declaring that unless women demand their rights politically, socially and financially, they will continue in the future as in the past, to be classed with negroes, criminals, insane person, idiots, and infants." Henry B. Wright, who was a great antislavery lecturer, was called for and made a radical, striving speech, after which the convention closed until the next day.
Evening Session
Hannah Hiatt called the convention to order. After preliminary business was discussed, Hiatt introduced H. C. Wright. Wright showed the injustice in property laws, inequality of wages, and the insulting cruelty of shutting the doors of the high school and colleges against women.
Amanda Way started the meeting by reading a letter from Dr. May F. Thomas of North Manchester and Elizabeth Matchett of Goshen. They read all of the resolutions for the amendments and after some discussion, there were all adopted. The members of the convention took the position that all class legislation is unjust and that all who are governed by laws should help make those laws. H. C. Wright gave another speech.
Afternoon Session
There were speeches given by Joel P. Garris, M. R. Hiatt, H. C. Wright, Henry Hiatt, and others. The members of the association decided to hold another convention in a year. They selected Richmond as the place.
These people signed the Constitution, or made speeches at the meetings
H. C. Wright
* Wright made many influential speeches during the first few meetings. He made a "thrilling speech based upon the Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal.' He showed how men had made the laws so that women were little better than slaves, the husband not only owning all the property but the children and the wife too."