РефератыИностранный языкWoWomens Rights Essay Research Paper The Women

Womens Rights Essay Research Paper The Women

Womens Rights Essay, Research Paper


The Women’s suffrage movement in the


United States


The suffragist movement in the United States was an outgrowth of the


general women’s rights movement that officially began with the Seneca


Falls Convention of 1848. Several leading figures in the antislavery


movement had also begun to question the political and economic


subjugation of women in a society that claimed to be a democracy.


Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, Martha C, Wright, and Mary Ann


McClintock issued a call for a convention concerning the rights of


women. That convention met in Seneca Falls, New York on 19-20 July


1848.


The convention adopted a “Declaration of Principles,” deliberately


modeled on the Declaration of Independence, which stated, “We hold


these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created


equal. . . .” In addition to the Declaration of Principles, the Seneca


Convention also asserted that women should have the right to preach,


to be educated, to teach, and to earn a living. The delegates passed a


resolution stating that “it is the sacred duty of the women of this


country to secure to themselves their sacred right to the elective


franchise.” With these words the struggle began in earnest to win full


voting rights for women in the United States.


The most influential leaders of the women’s rights movement in the


second half of the nineteenth century were Elizabeth Cady Stanton and


Susan B. Anthony. But the united struggle for women’s voting rights


broke into two factions following the Civil War. Led by Anthony and


Stanton, those who believed that they should seek an amendment to


the U.S. Constitution formed the National Woman Suffrage Association in


May of 1869. Later that same year, the American Woman Suffrage


Association was formed by those who believed the most effective


strategy would be to pressure state legislatures to amend state


constitutions. The leaders of this group were Lucy Stone and Julia Ward


Howe.


The two organizations merged in 1890, as the National American Woman


Suffrage Association (NAWSA), with the intention of simultaneously


pursuing both strategies. Elizabeth Cady Stanton became the first


president of the new organization (1890-1892), followed by Susan B.


Anthony (1892-1900), Carrie Chapman Catt (1900-1904), Anna Howard


Shaw (1904-1915), and then Catt again (1915-1920). In 1920, when


NAWSA was dissolved after achieving its goal of women’s suffrage, it


was replaced by the National league of Women Voters-established in


Chicago in 1920 to educate women about how to use the newly won


vote. In time the National League of Women Voters became the League


of Women Voters, which currently operates under that same name.


When the National League of Women Voters was first established, Carrie


Chapman Catt was elected as its honorary president.


The efforts of the women’s suffrage organizations met with determined


resistance. By seeking a voice in politics, women were challenging the


conventional belief that women’s proper sphere of influence was


domestic, while men properly dominated the public sphere, including the


political process. Even many women deplored the effort to extend the


vote to women. In 1911, Josephine Dodge, the wife of a leading New


York capitalist, formed the National Association Opposed to Woman


Suffrage. Like many other anti-suffragists, Dodge advised women to


influence policy from behind the scenes, through their influence on men.


By involving themselves in politics, she insisted, women would undermine


their moral and spiritual role, as well as create chaos by meddling in


matters that were beyond their understanding.


The first partial suffrage was achieved when some states allowed


widows to vote in school board elections, which many people considered


to be a reasonable extension of a woman’s concern for issues having to


do with home and family.


The first extension of full voting rights to women came in 1869, in the


Wyoming Territory. When Wyoming entered the Union as a state in


1890, it was also the first state to provide for women’s suffrage in its


constitution. In 1893, Colorado extended the franchise to women,


followed by Utah and Idaho in 1896. Fourteen years later, in 1910, the


state of Washington also enfranchised women. One by one over the


next eight years, states began to grant voting rights to women:


California (1911); Arizona, Kansas, and Oregon (1912); the Alaska


Territory (1913); Montana and Nevada (1914); New York (1917);


Michigan, Oklahoma, and South Dakota (1918).


In Illinois women won the right to participate at the federal level by


voting in presidential elections (1913). Nebraska, North Dakota, and


Rhode Island followed (1917), then Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Minnesota,


Missouri, Ohio, Tennessee, and Wisconsin (1919).


This piecemeal pattern of suffrage achieved to varying degrees, state


>

by state, was a slow and uncertain process. The leaders of the


suffragist movement understood that even as they pursued such


state-by-state tactics, they must also push for full suffrage at the


national level, which could only be achieved through an amendment to


the U.S. Constitution. Just such an amendment, called the “Anthony


Amendment,” was introduced in the Senate in 1878, but was defeated


by a vote of 34 to 16. The Amendment read, “The right of citizens of


the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United


States or by any state on account of sex.” The same amendment was


reintroduced in each succeeding Congress, but made no progress until


1914, when NAWSA presented Congress with a petition signed by more


than half a million people. The amendment was defeated in the Senate


by a close vote of 35 to 34 in 1914, and in the House the next year by a


vote of 204 to 174. Though both votes fell short of the necessary


two-thirds majority, they were much closer than past votes had been.


In an attempt to rally national support for the Anthony Amendment,


Alice Paul organized a huge parade down Pennsylvania Avenue on the


day before President Woodrow Wilson’s first inauguration. But the


peaceful parade degenerated into a riot when thousands of hostile male


spectators broke into the ranks of the marchers and tried to block their


passage. Essentially, the women had to fight their way down


Pennsylvania Avenue, with the help of men who supported the women’s


suffrage movement. Troops had to be called in to restore order, and


hundreds of people were hospitalized.


Later in 1913 Alice Paul organized the Congressional Union, later called


the Woman’s Party, to lobby Congress on behalf of a constitutional


amendment granting the vote to women. Paul modeled her organization


after the more militant suffragists in Great Britain. The Woman’s Party


directly confronted those in power with the discrepancy between


America’s supposed ideals and the reality that more than half of its adult


citizens were not enfranchised. In 1917 the Woman’s Party embarrassed


President Wilson by picketing the White House around the clock. When


many of the demonstrators were arrested and jailed, they went on a


hunger strike and were force-fed.


In both cases-the 1913 parade and the brutal force-feeding of jailed


women in 1917-the abuse suffered by respectable middle-class women


outraged public sympathy and elicited sympathy for the suffragist


cause. Such sympathy was reinforced by a shift in the tactics used by


some of the movement’s leaders. They began to argue for women’s


suffrage within the framework of traditional views about women’s proper


role in society. Rather than focusing on issues of justice or equal rights,


they argued instead that women would bring their moral superiority and


maternal instincts into the often brutal arena of politics. Thus the image


of the suffrage movement began to be softened for public consumption.


Suffragists were no longer seen merely as radicals who wished to disrupt


the natural social order, but rather as agents for extending female


benevolence outward from the family to society as a whole.


This image was also helped by the fact that in the 1890s the suffragists


had allied with the Women’s Christian Union (WCTU). Although the


WCTU’s main objective was to enact restrictive liquor laws, the group


also agitated for social reform on many other fronts. The WCTU came to


support the cause of women’s suffrage on the grounds that without the


vote women lacked the power to protect home and family and to defend


morality.


The active participation of women in the nation’s war effort from 1917


to 1918 also helped to win support for a constitutional amendment


enfranchising women. By a vote of 274 to 136 the amendment was


passed by the House on 10 January 1918. On 4 June 1918, it was


passed in the Senate by a vote of 66 to 30. On 18 August 1920


Tennessee became the thirty-sixth state to ratify the amendment, and


it officially became part of the U.S. Constitution on 26 August 1920, as


the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution.


Although women had finally won full voting rights, they did not really


begin to have access to most political offices until well into the 19702,


and even today, at the start of a new millennium, women are found in


political office at a rate far lower than one would expect from a group


that represents one-half of the nation’s population. Furthermore,


women’s access to the highest and most powerful political offices is still


severely limited, both by prejudice and by the shortage of female


office-holders at all levels, for it is from the ranks of such lower-level


office-holders that the candidates for the highest offices are recruited.


While many other nations have accepted the leadership of women, the


United States is still unlikely to accept the idea of a woman as


president-at least for now.

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