I was doing some research for a story about racism in the feminist movement and in reading more about Susan B. Anthony, I was reminded of the fact that Anthony grew up in Quaker household that valued social equality. By the time she was 17, she began collecting anti-slavery petitions, eventually numbering 400,000. In 1856, she became the New York state agent for the American Anti-Slavery Society.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Susan_B._Anthony
"Anthony expressed a vision of a racially integrated society that was radical for a time when abolitionists were debating the question of what was to become of the slaves after they were freed, and when people like Abraham Lincoln were calling for African Americans to be shipped to newly established colonies in Africa. In a speech in 1861, Anthony said, "Let us open to the colored man all our schools ... Let us admit him into all our mechanic shops, stores, offices, and lucrative business avocations ... let him rent such pew in the church, and occupy such seat in the theatre ... Extend to him all the rights of Citizenship."[60]
So no, Anthony wasn't remotely a racist by Civil War era standards. It seems rather unlikely that her close friend and collaborator Elizabeth Cady Stanton was either — since she was also an ardent abolitionsist. That doesn't mean that there was or is no racism in the history of feminism - there very clearly is and was, but demonizing these two women for things that they demonstrably did not do doesn't seem like a very "woke" stance to me. Part of a just society is only holding people accountable for things that they've actually done. Smearing their names because that serves some punitive purpose is counter to an actually just society.