Jane Elizabeth Jones (March 13, 1813 – January 13, 1896) was an American suffragist and abolitionist and member of the early women's rights movement.
[1] Jones was known for her abolitionist views and traveled throughout New England, Pennsylvania, and Ohio as a lecturer in support of Garrisonian abolitionism.
[1] In 1845, she traveled to Salem, Ohio with fellow abolitionist lecturer, Abby Kelley.
[3] In 1861, Jones successfully lobbied with Frances Dana Barker Gage and Hannah Tracy Cutler for Ohio law to grant limited property rights to married women.
[4] In The Young Abolitionist; or Conversations on Slavery, Jones uses the form of a children's book to speak to women's political voices.