Women Suffrage Movement: The Women's Suffrage Movement

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Woman’s Suffrage The women’s suffrage movement was women’s struggle to achieve the same equal rights as men. They fought for over 72 years to have the right to vote. This movement became international; it went all the way to Europe. Suffragist wanted change and they wanted it fast. Women played a large role in reform movements like temperance and settlement houses. They fought hard to pass many other laws before getting the right to vote. The movement consisted of both success and failures and without Elizabeth Stanton and Susan Anthony; the women’s suffrage movement would not have been created and would not have led to the 19th amendment. The women’s suffrage movement started around …show more content…

Anthony had an impact in the women’s suffrage movements and was one of the founders and creators of the National Women’s Suffrage Association in 1869. She was born on February 15, 1820, B. Anthony and her family were Quakers, a religious activist group that believed that women and men should be treated as equals. She inherited this belief from her father as Ward states in his book “Susan inherited from her father a host of Quaker qualities; humility, austerity, egalitarianism; along with a deep distrust of orthodoxy” (Ward 23). They believed in equality for all women and men. However, since girls were not allowed at school her father homeschooled his children and other girls at home and later she would become a teacher. Nevertheless, she stopped teaching because found out the mean were being paid more than she was. Therefore, she tried to get en equal pay but they would not allow it. As a result. B. Anthony started working for the temperance movement. This movement consisted of reducing alcohol sales because it was destroying homes. Later on when there was a meeting and B. Anthony wanted to speak the men said she was not allowed to speak and this angered her. At this time, she though the women’s rights convention was silly and she scoffed at it, but when she saw how they were treating her she decided to join the women’s rights movement. That was the moment when B. Anthony met with Stanton and asked her help to change this law. This was the beginning of a beautiful …show more content…

In 1869, Cady Stanton and B. Anthony formed the Nation Women Suffrage Association group. “They focused on voting rights for women. They thought African American Men, as well as women, should get the right to vote at the same time” (Isecke 17). One set back they had was trying to approach the Supreme Court to stating that by the 14th Amendment they had the right to vote, the leaders made three approaches, therefore women argued they were citizens and should be allowed to vote. However, the Supreme Court did not change their minds on women not having the right to vote. Therefore, since they saw that the Supreme Court would not change their minds they went state by state to try to fight the right to vote. As a result, Wyoming became the first state to grant women’s suffrage, they were allowed to vote in that state. Slowly they started changing things but still would not get the right to vote, it would take years still so they could vote. Forty years after the first women’s rights movement convention in 1848, they created the first international council of women in 1888. Women from all over the world came to this conference; they wanted to work together so every country passes a law so women have equal rights as men and would be allowed to vote. However, “The ICW did not work out the way Cady Stanton and Anthony had hoped. Women in other countries failed to start or keep their

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