Women's Role Of Women In The Early 1600s

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Even from the early 1600’s gender and race has always been an issue in the United States. Today it seems like not much has changed when it comes to race. Although, we have come very far in equal rights for women and abolishing slavery since the early 1600’s. Here you can see what the women’s role was in the 1600’s, how slaves even came about in the United States, the women’s role in the American Revolutionary War, the slave’s role in the American Revolutionary War, the Women’s Suffrage Movement, and the 13th Amendment abolish slavery.
In the early 1600’s when the British found the New World, which is now present day United States. Women and African Americans did not have much say in how this New World would be governed. Both men and women
The women made organizations to help with the war. In 1766, the “Sons of Liberty” and the “Daughter’s of Liberty” started popping up around the country, When the American’s started to boycotting the British clothing, the Daughter’s of Liberty started making clothing for the Americans. When the Boston Tea Party happened, everyone started to boycott tea, these women went on to form anti-tea leagues. In January 1770, 538 Boston women signed an agreement, vowing not to drink tea as long as it was taxed. These women would also make clothing and other materials that were needed for the soldiers, so the women got together to spin and sew new uniforms during the American Revolution. After the war was over, the government began to write laws and the Constitution, the women began to focus on changing the common law of male authority. Abigail Adams wrote a letter to her husband, who was in the on the Continental Congress. The letter asked for Congress to “Remember the Ladies” when writing the Constitution. Her husband told her that the ladies would be taken care of, but the common law would not be
When the Civil War began, the men went out to fight the war, which left the women in charge of the house, the shops, and farms. When the men returned, they did not think too kindly on the fact that a woman has been doing his job, this was the beginning of the women’s suffrage movement. The women 's suffrage movement was a fight to get the right to equal pay for equal work, and the right to vote. Not all women agreed with this movement, and many men did not agree with it at all. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony started the National Women’s Suffrage Association in 1869. Their many focus during the movement was the right to vote, they believed if they have to right to vote; they could use it to gain other interests, like equal pay and legal equality. The Democratic Party saw this movement as a corruption, if the women got equal rights, then the black women would follow. After a fight for almost a century, the nineteenth amendment was added to the constitution in May of 1919, which gave the women a right to

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