Roles Of Women In The 1920s Essay

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In the 1920’s women’s place in society changed greatly. They changed the way they acted and dressed but most importantly gained the right to vote. Women realized that they had the right to take a stand for what they believed in and could take part in politics. This was a result of all the work they did in the war. The 1920’s changed many things for women such as, their rights, the way they acted, and how they were treated. There were many women who wanted to make a change in how women were treated. The Campaign for Women’s Voting Rights started in 1840 and ended in 1920 after the 19th Amendment was ratified. Along the way many women called suffragettes helped. Some of them were Susan B. Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Carrie Chapman Catt, Alice Paul, and Lucy Burns. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton started the National Woman’s Suffrage Association (NWSA) which opposed the 15th Amendment because it excluded women. When Carrie Chapman Catt became the head of the NWSA she hired speakers and planned rallies just to help what she wanted most, women’s voting rights. Alice Paul and Lucy burns …show more content…

The vote was at a 48-48 tie and Tennessee still needed to vote. “Suffragists traveled across Tennessee making speeches from a train called the ‘Tennessee Suffrage Special’ (Rossi page 30). When the time came for the vote only one vote was needed to win. The lawmakers wore colored roses to show what they were voting for, everyone against the 19th Amendment wore red and everyone for the amendment wore yellow. The last lawmaker, Harry Burn, wore a red rose, but to the suffragists surprise he voted for the amendment. On August 26, 1920, the 19th Amendment was ratified. “The cries, applause, and shouts of anger and jubilation were so loud that it was heard for blocks around the Capital” (Mountjoy page 111). The long wait was over and American women finally had the right to

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