7-3 Historical Analysis Essay Progress Check 3 PDF

Title 7-3 Historical Analysis Essay Progress Check 3
Author Brittany Young
Course Applied History
Institution Southern New Hampshire University
Pages 3
File Size 49.7 KB
File Type PDF
Total Downloads 108
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7-3 Historical Analysis Essay Progress Check 3.docx...


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Historical Analysis Essay Progress Check 3

7-3 Historical Analysis Essay Progress Check 3 HIS 200: Applied History Southern New Hampshire University June 17, 2021

Historical Analysis Essay Progress Check 3 In the late 1800s the fight for women’s rights began. The 19th amendment was an important fight for equal rights to vote. Prior to 1920 women in the United States had little to no right to vote or much of anything. Women have always been told that they have certain tasks and roles that were different from men. Over the years those women became suppressed and not listened to. Women finally had enough and started to speak up and fight to have the same rights as men. The women’s suffrage movement took decades to finally come to an end. Beginning in the 1800s women felt that they had more to offer than just being mothers and not having the right to anything. In 1848 a group of women and men gathered in Seneca Falls, New York to talk about women’s rights in the US. Elizabeth Candy Stanton and Lucretia Mott where big influencers during this period and really helped gather everyone they could to discuss these matters. In the 1850s once the Civil War began the women’s rights movement took a halt but almost immediately after the ware ended these women believed that it was their time to start the movement again. In 1869 Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Candy Stanton formed the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA). This group was formed to fight for an amendment that would create a universal suffrage within the US Constitution. In 1910 some states within the US started to allow women to vote. The start of World War I helped advance this argument because women started to work on behalf of the war and they pointed it out showing that they care about their country just as much as the men do. On August 18, 1929 the 19th Amendment was officially ratified and women were able to vote. This was the start to all of women’s rights in the US. An immediate consequence of the equal rights movement in American society was when violet protesting would start occurring. Law enforcement often used riot gear while escorting children to and from school. Fights would break out in the schools as well as outside of school

Historical Analysis Essay Progress Check 3 grounds. A long term consequence of this movement is that many white Americans would start to move out of neighborhoods that had blacks and mixed individuals. Many places in America today still have areas like that where individuals don’t feel comfortable living around people that aren’t the same race as them. Women has a long hard fight for their right to vote. The US Congress had refused their right to vote at first and during Minor vs. Happersett Congress had ruled that women did not have the right, constitutionally to vote. Once the 19th Amendment was ratified it wasn’t great at first. There were a lot of violent protests and men still didn’t treat women as equal counterparts. Women are still fighting for their win rights in today’s world. We have changed a lot but there is still a lot to go....


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