Women's Suffrage Movement

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Women’s SuffrageTopic: Women’s SuffrageQuestion: What is the significance of the Women’s Suffrage Movement?Thesis:The Women’s Suffrage Movement is significant in many ways, it opened up many opportunities for women to aim for success and equality. Women’s suffrage led to women being being treated fairly equally among men as well. It all started with the first convention which was held in Seneca Falls, New York, among the group of people were abolitionist activists and a couple of men. Many argued and believed that all women deserve the right to vote. On July 1980, Wyoming becomes the first state to allow women suffrage. In 1900 Colorado, Idaho, and Utah also joined Wyoming in allowing women to vote. Although many seeked for the right to vote, …show more content…

Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton introduced the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1862. This organization mainly focused on acquiring an amendment that allows women to vote, as well as creating campaigns for the vote. Stanton served as the president of the organization while Anthony started off as one of the members of the executive of the committee and eventually becoming the vice president. After The National Woman Suffrage Association and the American Woman Suffrage Association combined together to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association, many had a different approach. The new generation of suffragists argued that women needed the same rights that men had because they are different from men and no longer arguing that women needed it because men and women were “created equally”. The American Woman Suffrage Association was also another organization formed during this time. Lucy Stone, Julia Ward Howe, and Josephine Ruffin came together to form this organization and its purpose was to obtain suffrage for black men with the 14th and 15th Amendments. They were also focused on winning women’s right state-by state. …show more content…

Congress was introduced a constitutional amendment in 1878 that preserved woman suffrage amendment for all of the elections. While Theodore Roosevelt ran for president as a third-party candidate, his party became the first to adopt a plank that supports a constitutional amendment. By January of 1918, fifteen states had already extended votings rights for women, and the amendment was finally supported by both of the parties and the president. The amendment was barely passed with only two-thirds of support in the House of Representatives but failed miserably in the U.S. Senate. There was a second attempt in 1919 with the majority - 304-89 in the House of Representatives on May 21 and 56-25 in the Senate on June 4. Tennessee became the 36th state to ratify the amendment on August 18,1920, by just one vote. The Nineteenth Amendment was finally passed by the the secretary of state as part of the Constitution of the United states.

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