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Votes for Women

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Sojourner Truth. A former slave who took up the cause for women's rights. ... In the same year, Sojourner Truth attempts to vote, but she is denied a ballot. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Votes for Women


1
  • Votes for Women
  • The Path to Womens Suffrage
  • By Leigh Unterspan

2
  • In 1776 Abigail Adams wrote to her husband, John
    Adams, who was working on the Declaration of
    Independence.
  • She asked that he remember the ladies.
  • The Declaration said that all men are created
    equal.

Abigail Adams
3
Lucretia Mott
  • In 1837 she organized the first convention of the
    National Female Anti-Slavery Society.
  • Earlier Mott had been denied membership in
    anti-slavery societies because she was a woman.

4
Women go to college
  • In 1833, Oberlin College became the first
    coeducational college in the US.
  • In 1837, Mount Holyoke College was founded, the
    first four year college for women only.
  • Vassar (1837), Wellesley (1875) and Smith (1875)
    Colleges followed, which were all colleges
    created for women only.

5
July 19-20, 1848
  • The first womens rights convention in the US is
    held in Seneca Falls, New York.
  • Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were the
    primary organizers.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton
6
First womens rights convention
  • Signed a Declaration of Sentiments and
    Resolutions that outlined the main goals for the
    womens rights movement.
  • This is a copy of the names of the original
    signers of the declaration.

7
Sojourner Truth
  • A former slave who took up the cause for womens
    rights.
  • In 1851 she delivered her famous Aint I A
    Woman speech at a womens convention.

8
  • American Democracy has interpreted the
    Declaration of Independence in the interest of
    slavery, restricting suffrage and citizenship to
    a white male minority. The black man is still
    denied the right of citizenship, even in the
    nominally free States.Half our population are
    disfranchised on the grounds of sex and though
    compelled to obey the law and taxed to support
    the government, they have no voice in the
    legislation of the country.
  • --Sojourner Truth
  • At a meeting of the
  • Equal Rights Association
  • 1867

9
Civil War1861-1865
  • The war interrupted womens suffrage activities
    as women worked for various war causes.
  • Their work, however, helped them to develop
    organizational and other skills that would help
    them in their suffrage work later.

10
American Equal Rights Association
  • Formed in 1866 by Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
  • This was an organization for white and black
    women and men dedicated to universal suffrage.

Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony
11
Fourteenth Amendment
  • Passed in 1868
  • Protected all citizens from unjust state laws.
  • Defined the terms citizens and voters as male.

12
Womens groups split
  • In 1869, the womens rights movement split into
    two groups because of disagreements.
  • Stanton and Anthony formed the more radical
    National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA).

Stanton and Anthony
13
Womens groups split
  • Lucy Stone, Henry Blackwell and Julia Ward Howe
    formed the more conservative American Woman
    Suffrage Association (AWSA).

Julia Ward Howe
14
  • If all political power is inherent in the
    people, why have women, who are more than half
    the population of the United States, no political
    existence? Is it because they are not people?
  • --Lucy Stone
  • In an address to the
  • New Jersey legislature
  • 1867

15
Wyoming
  • In 1890 becomes a state with a womans suffrage
    provision intact.
  • First state to grant suffrage to women

16
Women on the move
  • The AWSA begins publishing the Womans Journal in
    1870, a publication dedicated to womens rights.
  • Several women attempt to use the Fourteenth
    Amendment to vote between 1870 and 1875, but all
    are unsuccessful.

17
Women on the move
  • In 1872, Susan B. Anthony is arrested for
    attempting to vote in a presidential election.
  • In the same year, Sojourner Truth attempts to
    vote, but she is denied a ballot.

18
Anthonys trial
  • "Yes, your honor," seethed Anthony, "I have many
    things to say My natural rights, my civil
    rights, my political rights, my judicial rights,
    are all alike ignored. Robbed of the fundamental
    privilege of citizenship, I am degraded from the
    status of a citizen to that of a subject and not
    only myself individually, but all of my sex, are,
    by your honor's verdict, doomed to political
    subjection under this, so-called, form of
    government."

19
Womans Suffrage Amendment
  • Introduced to Congress in 1878.
  • When it is finally passed in 1919, the wording is
    unchanged.

20
Belva Ann Lockwood
  • In 1879, Belva Ann Lockwood finally secures for
    women the right to practice law before the
    Supreme Court.
  • In 1884, she runs for president on the National
    Equal Rights Party ticket. She wins 4,149 votes
    in six states.

Belva Ann Lockwood
21
Women Unite
  • NWSA and AWSA reunite in 1890 as the National
    American Woman Suffrage Association, with
    Elizabeth Cady Stanton as head.

22
Hull House
  • Founded by Jane Addams and Ellen Gates Starr in
    1890.
  • A settlement housing project in Chicago
  • Within one year, 100 settlement houses exist in
    the US, largely operated by women.
  • Many women become involved in social work and
    become an important voice in American politics.

23
Womans Bible
  • Written by Elizabeth Cady Stanton in 1895
  • Criticized the treatment of women in the Old
    Testament
  • An example of Stantons more radical views that
    caused NAWSA to separate itself from her

A draft of the Bible
24
Roosevelt adoptswomens suffrage platform
  • In 1912 Teddy Roosevelts Progressive party
    becomes the first national political party to
    adopt a womens suffrage plank.

25
19th Amendment
  • Adopted in 1920, this amendment gives women the
    right to vote.
  • NAWSA ceases to exist because its mission has
    been accomplished, but members form the League of
    Women Voters.

26
PhotoGallery
27
A womans scrapbook about suffrage activities
28
A suffrage parade in 1913
29
A suffrage march in New York City, 1913
30
An album cover from the period
31
Woman Suffrage Headquarters, 1912
32
A picket line in 1917
33
Two suffragists
34
Credits
  • All photos in this presentation are courtesy of
    the American Memory collections
  • of the Library of Congress.
  • The song A Womans Tongue Will Run Forevermore
    was recorded in 1940. It is also part of the
    American Memory collections of the Library of
    Congress.
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