* Catherine Beecher believed that women should focus on improving their own domestic skills and education, and that they should not seek to enter the male-dominated world of politics or business. She argued that women's true power lay in their ability to influence men through their domestic roles, and that they should use this power to promote moral reform and social progress.
* Angelina Grimké, on the other hand, believed that women should be treated as equal to men, and that they should have the same opportunities for education, employment, and political participation. She argued that women's domestic skills were not their only source of power, and that they should not be limited to the private sphere. She called for women to unite and fight for their rights, using whatever means necessary, including public speaking and political activism.
Beecher and Grimké's disagreement was part of a larger debate among women's rights activists in the 19th century. Some activists, like Beecher, believed that women's rights could be best achieved through gradual reform and education, while others, like Grimké, believed that women needed to take more radical action, such as demanding the vote and engaging in civil disobedience.
Ultimately, it was the more radical approach of activists like Grimké that led to the passage of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1920, which granted women the right to vote.