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In page Laura Clay:

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Clay's parents divorced in 1878, leaving her mother Mary Jane Warfield Clay homeless after she had managed White Hall for 45 years. After the divorce, Clay became aware of the equities between married men and women and their property rights.[1] This inequality galvanized Clay's older sisters, Mary and Sarah "Sallie" Clay Bennett to join the women's rights movement, as did Laura and her younger sister, Annie (later Mrs. Dabney Crenshaw, a co-founder of the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia).[citation needed]