Second Class Citizens! Political- No Voting Rights / No Government Office Economic-Not valued in...

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Problems Second Class Citizens! Political- No Voting Rights / No Government Office Economic- Not valued in the work place (Restrictions) Male Monetary Rights Marriage Social- Victorian Woman! Republican Motherhood

Transcript of Second Class Citizens! Political- No Voting Rights / No Government Office Economic-Not valued in...

Problems Second Class Citizens!

Political- No Voting Rights / No Government Office

Economic- Not valued in the work place (Restrictions)

Male Monetary RightsMarriage

Social- Victorian Woman!Republican Motherhood

Social

Some believed women were too frail to handle the turmoil of polling places on Election Day.

Some believed voting would interfere with a woman’s duties at home or destroy families.

Some claimed that women did not have the education or experience to be competent voters.

Others believed that most women did not want to vote, and that it was unfair for suffragists to force the vote on unwilling women.

Churches and clergy members preached that marriage was a sacred bond and the entire family was represented by the husband’s vote.

Economic

The liquor industry feared that giving the women the vote would lead to Prohibition.

As women became active in other reform movements, such as food and drug safety and child labor, business owners feared women would vote for regulations that would drive up costs.

Woman Abolition Movement 1840s -1865• After the Civil War, suffragists, who had supported abolition, called for

granting women the vote but were told that they should wait.• Many were angered that the Fifteenth Amendment granted voting rights

to African American men but not to women.

Angelina and Sarah Grimke: Abolitionist Sisters

Lydia Maria Child

Lucretia Mott (who made her home a station on the Underground Railroad)

Sojourner Truth

Harriet Tubman

1865 The 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution officially abolished

1868 The 14th Amendment is one of the post-Civil War amendments, also known as the Reconstruction Amendments that was first intended to secure rights for former slaves. It includes the Due Process , Equal Protection Clauses and broad definition of national citizenship. It requires the states to provide equal protection under the law to all persons not just to citizens.

1870 The 15th Amendment provides that governments in the United States may not prevent a citizen from voting because of his race, color or previous condition of servitude.

WOMEN????

Women Temperance Movement 1893 - 1920

• Progressive women also fought in the Prohibition movement, which called for a ban on making, selling, and distributing alcoholic beverages.

• Reformers thought alcohol was responsible for crime, poverty, and violence.

• Two major national organizations led the crusade against alcohol.– The Anti-Saloon League– The Women’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), headed by

Frances Willard, which was a powerful force for both temperance and women’s rights

• Evangelists like Billy Sunday and Carry Nation preached against alcohol, and Nation smashed up saloons with a hatchet while holding a Bible.

Congress eventually proposed the Eighteenth Amendment in 1917, prohibiting the manufacture, sale, and distribution of alcohol. It was ratified in 1919.

1. Rise of the Women’s Suffrage Movement

AWSA 1869

• American Woman Suffrage Association, with Henry Ward Beecher as President

• Susan B. Anthony!!

• Focused solely on winning the vote state-by-state and aligned itself with the Republican Party

• Women began to see success in the West, as in 1869 the Wyoming Territory granted women the vote, followed by the Utah Territory a year later and five more western states not long after.

Susan B. Anthony

Suffrage Movement Split

Susan B. Anthony Tests the Law• Susan B. Anthony wrote pamphlets, made speeches, and testified before every

Congress from 1869 to 1906 in support of women’s rights.

• In 1872 she and three of her sisters registered to vote, voted for a congressional representative in Rochester, New York, and were arrested two weeks later.

• Before her trial, Anthony spoke passionately about women’s voting rights, but the judge refused to let her testify on her own behalf and fined her $100.

• Anthony didn’t pay the fine, hoping to be arrested so she could be tried through the courts, but the judge did not imprison her.

• In 1873 the Supreme Court ruled that even though women were citizens, that did not automatically grant them voting rights, but that it was up to the states to grant or withhold that right.

NWSA 1869 (1890)National Woman Suffrage

Association, founded by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony.

Campaigned for a constitutional amendment letting women vote

Dealt with other women’s issues like labor and social reform and supported Victoria Woodhull, the first woman presidential candidate

2. Rise of the Women’s Suffrage Movement 1890s merge!

SUCCESS ? • National American Woman Suffrage Assoc. Merger

--Split agenda from 1869-1890s– National problem!- women need to be active.– Wanted a Constitutional amendment … eek!

• WWI factorWomen work in factories!

• 19th Amendment / Wilson “Thank You”– Women’s suffrage 1920

• 18th Amendment / Temperance Movement