Women's Suffrage In Canada Essay

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Women’s suffrage (or franchise) is the right for women to vote in political elections; campaigns for this right usually included a plead for the right to run for public office. The women’s suffrage movement was a decades-long movement intended to address justice that was to be made and to improve the lives of Canadians. Women in Canada met huge difficulties as they fought for basic human rights, including suffrage. Suffrage represented justice in politics, hopes for improvements in education, healthcare and employment as well as an end to violence against women and children. By the mid-19th century, full citizenship was legally limited to men; by the end of the century, laws across the country mandated near-universal, White male citizenship at the federal and provincial level, unfairily excluded female …show more content…

By 1900, propertied women had won some voting rights — including the right to vote and to stand for office in some municipal council, library and school board elections. They next went on to win the right to vote in provincial elections. The first provincial victory occurred in Manitoba on 28 January 1916. In 1940, Québec was the last province to concede the vote.Provincially, women were given the vote in 1916 in the four western provinces, in 1917 in Ontario, in 1918 in Nova Scotia, in 1919 in New Brunswick, in 1922 in Prince Edward Island, and in 1940 in Quebec. Ontario became the fifth province to grant women the right to vote on 12 April 1917, after more than half a century of activism by suffragists.On 28 January 1916, Manitoba women became the first in Canada to win both the right to vote and to hold provincial office. Manitoba was followed by Saskatchewan on March, 14 and Alberta on April, 19 1916. The entire country of Canada officially allowed all women of any race to vote in 1940 (Quebec was the last province to join in allowing the right to

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