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Susan B. Anthony & Elizabeth Cady Stanton (seated)

Susan B. Anthony & Elizabeth Cady Stanton (seated). Anti-Suffrage. Vote NO on Woman Suffrage. You do not need a ballot to clean out your sink spout. Why vote for pure food laws, when your husband does that, while you can purify your Ice-box with saleratus water

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Susan B. Anthony & Elizabeth Cady Stanton (seated)

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  1. Susan B. Anthony & Elizabeth Cady Stanton (seated)

  2. Anti-Suffrage

  3. Vote NO on Woman Suffrage • You do not need a ballot to clean out your sink spout. • Why vote for pure food laws, when your husband does that, while you can purify your Ice-box with saleratus water • BECAUSE 90% of the women either do not want it, or do not care. • BECAUSE it means competition of women with men instead of co-operation. • BECAUSE 80% of the women eligible to vote are married and can only double or annul their husband’s votes. • BECAUSE it can be of no benefit commensurate with the additional expense involved. • BECAUSE in some States more voting women than voting men will place the Government under petticoat rule. • BECAUSE it is unwise to risk the good we already have for the evil which may occur

  4. NYC Parade: 6 May 1912

  5. NYC Parade (1913)

  6. 1914 Chicago Parade

  7. Suffrage parade on Michigan Avenue, 7 June 1916

  8. College day in the picket line line (February 1917)

  9. “Election Day!”

  10. Passage of the 19th Amendment • Passed in 1919 • “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.”

  11. Women's Voting Rights • Possibly the biggest change in the political landscape of the 20th century has been the enfranchisement of women. When the century began, only one small country (New Zealand) allowed women to vote, but now, only one small country (Kuwait) does not allow women to vote.

  12. The Twenties Woman Essential Questions: How did social rules change in the 1920s? How was the Flapper personified in the 1920s? How did the Flappers’ values differ from the values of mainstream women in the 1920s? How was the workplace changing in the 1920s? How was the family dynamic changing in the 1920s?

  13. Spring 1986 vs. Spring 201125 years later “History teaches everything including the future” Lamartine

  14. The Chernobyl disaster was a nuclear accident that occurred on April 26, 1986 at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power plant in Ukraine. Considered to be the worst nuclear accident in history. 


  15. 25 years later: Earthquake hits Japan and results in a Nuclear Meltdown

  16. April 15, 1986 Gaddafi -Libya Bombed

  17. October 10, 1986 7.5 Earthquake hits San Salvador, El Salvador2011; • Libya is bombedDoes history come in cyclical waves or is it just coincidence

  18. Changing Social Ideas • Attitudes about marriage started to changed • Middle class men and women began to view marriage as equal partnership • Years before World War I, men only “courted” women they intended to marry • During the 1920s causal dating was acceptable • Flapper was more an image of a rebellious youth than a reality • Flapper image did not reflect the attitudes and values of many

  19. Changing Family • Social and economic changes reshaped the family • Social and technological innovations simplified household labor and family life • Stores stocked ready made clothing, sliced bread, and canned foods • Services for elderly & public health clinics emerged • Marriages were increasingly based on romantic love • Children spent most of their days in school • Not in factories or the farm

  20. Changing Workplace • Booming economy opened new work opportunities for women • Offices, factories, stores, and professions • Men replaced the jobs women were holding during World War I • Educated women entered fields like teachers, nurses, and librarians • Business required huge amounts of clerical work like typists, filings clerks, and secretaries • 1930, 10 million women were earning wages

  21. The Rules Change • New social attitudes changed rules of society: • Experiences of World War I • Attraction of the big cities • In the rebellious pleasure-loving atmosphere of the twenties women began to assert their independence • Women rejected values of the 19th century • They demanded the same freedom as men

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