Women Suffrage

1260 Words3 Pages

Women Suffrage

Women’s rights in America have always been a major issue throughout history.

Women’s rights have been closely linked with human rights throughout . This violation of

Women’s rights is apparent in the fight for suffrage in the late 1800’s-early 1900’s . It can

be said that the government denying the vote to women is a human right offense because

the right to vote is a natural right that comes with citizenship. To deny a certain group

based on race, age, or gender is deny them of their basic rights and therefore taking the

stance that they are second-class citizens if they are citizens at all. . The fight for suffrage

was a human rights struggle for more than just the right to vote. They were also striving

for a right to equal treatment as men politically. Women wanted to be recognized as being

a political force able to change the country if they so chose.

Suffrage can be documented as starting as far back as 1776, with Abigail Adams.

She wrote to her husband John, who was attending the Continental Congress, asking that

he and the other men “remember the ladies” In response, the Declaration is worded as “all

men are created equal:” Although this was seen by the men as a joke between husband

and wife, it was a blatant refusal of women as citizens of the country.

In he 1800’s women’s rights were furthered by the Married Woman’s Property

Act which was passed by Maryland in 1839. This law gave women the right to retain

personal property even within marriage. Now, the husband could not come into control of

the women’s property and sell it when married. This law was important because it

recognized the fact that women had the right to personal property even if there was a man

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... rape, and savagery with in

marriages. Husbands of women in the movement if they were not supportive would often

use spousal abuse and inter-marital rape to force the women to drop out of the protest.

This was an effective method of diminishing the movements numbers.

Finally, all the campaigning paid off. In the summer of 1919 the nineteenth

amendment passes both the house and the senate. After a few more years of campaigning,

on August 26 the Nineteenth Amendment was adopted after the thirty-six states ratify it.

The struggle for suffrage was an important one because it showed that through

peaceful protest one can obtain political power. Perhaps it was only because they were

women that they were not put down by the government, but in any event they

accomplished an important feat that took precedent for the women’s movement for

centuries to come.

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