The Women's Rights Movement

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The Women’s Rights Movement that officially started at Seneca Falls in 1848 continued on to build women’s equality for decades to follow and positively impacted women’s roles in society to this day. The Women’s Right Movement officially started at a convention in 1848, but was at its strongest point in the 1900s. This entire movement was started by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony. These two women created the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA), which pushed its efforts toward changing federal laws to include women in the fifteenth amendment. The Women’s Rights Movement slowed its momentum in the 1880s because the NWSA had trouble getting funds to persuade male politicians to support the organization. The turning point came …show more content…

This successful phase of the Women’s Rights Movement set insight for the ability for a woman to hold a position of power in the national political office. Even with the right to vote independently, women’s choices still shadowed in the footsteps of the men in their families which made it all the more difficult for women to sustain power in a political party. “Not only did they face institutional prejudices but nearly three quarters of the first generation were dependent of their husbands or fathers for positions.” However, even with this pattern, the new women in Congress paved the way for the century-long fight to expand women’s roles in the …show more content…

Over these twenty years, women made large advances especially in the workforce and the military. Shortly after WWII started, men were being sent overseas and away from the job positions they originally held. This created a demand for workers and an opportunity for women to work a job outside of the home front. Women not only took over for the men in factories, but they also played a role in the military. For the first time ever, women were being paid for working a man’s job. With a need for nurses and pilots in the military, women were able to take these roles and change warfare in society forever. In the span of these same twenty years, women were appointed to more powerful positions on political committees. These committees had say in important matters such as agricultural issues and issues within the military. Some women even became national figures who spoke out for their committees and parties. The idea that women’s jobs were taking care of the family was long overcome by the women who took stand in the workforce. Without the women in the workforce during the war, the United States probably would not have won the war. After the war, it was suggested that women should be eligible for future drafts. Those who joined the Women’s Airforce Service Pilots (WASPs) flew planes from the factories to military bases. Some were killed in combat or captured as prisoners of war. Over sixteen hundred female

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