The Women’s Suffrage Movement

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Starting in 1776 with a letter from Abigail Adams to her husband, the movement for Women’s suffrage lasted a superfluous amount of time. Mrs. Adam’s request for the President to “remember the ladies” set in motion a whole movement that would revolutionize the United States of America. A movement that set forth rights that the women of today take for granted. The women’s suffrage movement began in the mid-nineteenth century. Women began discussing the problems they faced in society and the different ways they wanted to change their lives. The Civil War and World War I also had an enormous effect upon the movement. During both of these wars, women felt a new sense of independence and strength. During this time, the women had to step in to take the place of men in factories, mills, and the like. Once the men had returned from war and kicked women back into their old positions, the women were furious. However, not all who fought for women’s suffrage had experienced being the “lesser sex” in a working world. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, who became a major advocate for the women’s movement, learned her lesson by listening to the complaints of women in her father’s office. When explaining it to her father, she stated, “They who have sympathy and imagination to make the sorrows of others their own, can readily learn all the hard lessons of life from the experiences of others.” In 1848, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and other female leaders had the first women’s convention in Seneca Falls, New York, The convention , although the first official convention to be held, did not house new ideas. In 1846, two years before the convention, several women in the state of New York had already petitioned for women’s suffrage. The main idea and creed of t... ... middle of paper ... ...tures/resource/cph.3a05771/ Congress, Library of (1869) The Age of Brass. Retrieved from http://loc.gov/pictures/resource/cph.3b49804/ Congress, Library of (1869) The Age of Iron. Retrieved from http://loc.gov/pictures/resource/cph.3b49805/ Juliana L (2009), 89 Years Ago Today, American Women Win the Right To Vote. Retrieved from http://www.blogfordemocracy.org/Women_suffragists_picketing_in_front_of_the_White_house.jpg Stanton, Elizabeth; Anthony, Susan; Gage, Matilda; Harper, Ida (1922) History Of Women’s Suffrage: 1900-1920, Volume V Literary Digest, The (December 20, 1913) The President and The Suffragists Vol XLVII -No. 25. retrieved from http://www.oldmagazinearticles.com/pdf/Anna_Howard_Shaw.pdf Literary Digest, The (May 13, 1922) The First Of The Flappers Retrieved from http://www.oldmagazinearticles.com/pdf/SUFFRAGE%20cady.pdf

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