Compare And Contrast The Civil Rights Movement Vs Women's Rights

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The Civil Rights Movement vs. The Women’s Rights Since the beginning of time the white man has always been considered the superior race, anyone that did not fit that profile was considered something to be owned. Dating back to the 1800’s both the Women’s Rights Movement and the Civil Right’s Movement began and had to cross many similar bridges to get closer to the true meaning of “freedom”. Still to this day over 200 years later, both movements are still fighting to find and achieve the true meaning of freedom. In the 1800s women’s rights were non-existent, their only reason for being was to, mother a child, help out with the church, and take care of the home life. Women were viewed as a piece of their husband’s property, they had no say in …show more content…

Washington’s plan had backfired and the black community was hated more than ever causing kayos for the black community. Across the country, there was a huge spike in lynching and outright cruelty towards anyone of color. W.E.B. Du Bois emerged as the new Civil Rights leader saying that Washington’s plan was a fail all along because the “white man” blamed a whole race for a crime a group committed. Du Bois who had also been a well-educated scholar from Harvard fought for the right to be one hundred percent equal, he saw WWI as the opportune time to do so. “Du Bois called on blacks to ‘close ranks’ and enlist in the army, even though the military subjected them to pervasive discrimination.”(pg.135) He believed that if the white community could see that they were willing to fight alongside them for the country, it would unite them in war and on the home front. When the African American soldiers returned home, they were not welcomed with equality, but with the same discrimination, lynching, and unjust they fought against. “ We return. We return from fighting. We return fighting.” (pg.137) Du Bois, just having been disappointed with his failed attempt at “closing ranks”, he knew the fight for equal rights was far from over and in many ways worse than before the war. In order to try and continue this fight, in August of 1909 W.E.B. Du Bois founded the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). At the same time the Women’s Suffrage Movement was taken over by the daughter of Elizabeth C. Stanton, Harriet Stanton Blatch, she created the Women’s Political Union (WPU). The WPU protested and promoted the election of Jeannette Rankin in 1916, who was the first woman elected into the House of Representatives ("Woman Suffrage: History And Time Line). Finally believing that women had some power and enough voting rights in several states the WPU took the Suffrage Bill back to Congress where is was turned down three more times. Finally in 1919 the

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