The idea of the First Women's Rights Convention was placed in the heads of Elizabeth Cady Stanton in 1840 when she atteneded the World Anti-Slavery Convention in London. In July of 1848 a social visit brought together Mott, Stanton, Wright, Mary Ann McMlintock, and Jane Hunt. They discussed the new Married Women's Property Rights Act. Before their causal meeting was over, the women decided to call for a convention "to discuss the social, civil, and religious condition and rights of women." Stanton took the task of drawing up the Declaration of Sentiments, she said that "all men and women had been created equal." She also drafted 11 resolutions, making the argument that women has a natural right to equality in all spheres; in the resolutions she stated that it was the duty of women to secure their right to vote. The convention was to take place on July 19 and 20 at the Wesleyan Methodist Church in Seneca Falls. The convention was only publicized in a few small places, they did not want on overwhelmingly amount of people. A crowd of about 300 people, including 40 men, came from 5 miles round. All of the resolutions were passed except for woman suffrage. By the end of the convention, 100 women and men signed the Seneca Falls Declaration. Stanton got the Declaration of Seneca Falls printed in the New York Herald after many did not understand, it would also get many women thinking more like Stanton. After a long fought battle, rights to women came.