The Women Suffrage Movement

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Despite the dogged efforts of Elizabeth Stanton and Susan B. Anthony the feminist movement was unsuccessful during the nineteenth century in acquiring the right of women to cast their votes in federal elections. However, their luck would markedly change during the Progressive era when riding a wave of reform the women's movement was rewarded by the nineteenth amendment which crowned a series of reform inspired amendments to the Constitution of the United States of America. During the progressive era, the women’s movement changed by the passing of the nineteenth amendment. It allowed the citizens of the United States, that no citizen could be denied the right to vote due to their sexual orientation. The passing of this amendment had made many of the women believe that equality had come around. Not all women believed that this amendment changed anything at all they believed that there had to be much more done so women could truly become equal. As many of them had been campaigning for much more they had so much they believed they had to work for. They believed that it wasn’t enough and an equal rights amendment had to be passed in order for all to be truly equal. The group that tried to pass the equal rights amendment was the National Women’s Party (NWP). Although the NWP worked very hard to gain this amendment, they were not as successful as they thought they would be. Since NWP wasn’t successful there were many things that had been done by other groups. The Women Suffrage Movement had made an appearance in the women’s suffrage movement. During the civil war there was a new group that appeared. The group was known as the American Equal Rights Association (AERA). Their fight for equal rights had made them change the name of th... ... middle of paper ... ...re most women of that time were getting “back alley abortions” Sanger saw a solution to these unplanned pregnancies. Sangers theory was that in order for women to be on a more equal footing in society they should be given the right to decide whether they should bear a child or not. Margret Sanger’s social revolution changed the lives of women across the nation and changed the views of the use of contraception. These social revolutions had a major impact on society and the American culture. They undoubtedly changed the way that people in America were seen and treated. Whether it dealt with the regulation of “Big Businesses” or women being seen as equals in society this was definitely a time in America that revolutionized America. There was no other time in America that had such an impact on the American culture like the social revolutions of the twentieth century.

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