It was here that she planned the First Woman's Rights Convention. Stanton also wrote the Declaration of Sentiments, a book that talked about women's suffrage as well as many other civil rights issues (4). Then, in 1861, when the civil war began, Stanton threw herself into the fray and started the National Women’s Loyal League, a group of abolitionists that collecting signatures and spoke out to end slavery. After the civil war ended and slaves were freed, she returned to the fight for women's rights. She wrote essays, debated, and fought, for women's right to divorce and the right to self-sovereignty, meaning a woman's ability avoid to become pregnant. However, some of her views pitted her against other feminists. For example, Stanton, unlike almost all people of her time, was against any form of organized religion. She believed that the bible suppressed woman and even when so far as to write her own “Women's Bible.” This put her in opposition to the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (another group of women's rights activists), and Susan B. Anthony, a Friend of Stanton that had alongside her since they met, back at the First Woman's Rights Convention. Because of this she soon became unpopular, and untimely it leads to her lack of fame