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Women’s Suffrage

Women’s Suffrage. Women’s Suffrage in New Jersey, 1776–1807. New Jersey Constitution of 1776 allowed women with property to vote Widows and unmarried women could vote Ended by a legislative act in 1807. New Jersey and northeastern states, 1799. The “Cult of True Womanhood”.

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Women’s Suffrage

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  1. Women’s Suffrage

  2. Women’s Suffrage in New Jersey, 1776–1807 New Jersey Constitution of 1776 allowed women with property to vote Widows and unmarried women could vote Ended by a legislative act in 1807 New Jersey and northeastern states, 1799

  3. The “Cult of True Womanhood” “True” women regarded as religious, pious, chaste, domestic, submissive Domestic work seen as a divine calling Married women lacked legal standing Women’s suffrage did not have widespread appeal Illustration depicting many of the ideals of the “cult of true womanhood”

  4. 14th Amendment: “equal protection” for all citizens, but mainly for “male citizens” 15th Amendment: allowed all male citizens to vote, regardless of race or former servitude; excluded women Created a rift in the women's rights movement The 14th and 15th Amendments In this 1866 cartoon, the woman, “Columbia,” represents America; the baby represents the newly passed 14th Amendment

  5. The NWSA and the AWSA • NWSA opposed the 15th Amendment and wanted a constitutional amendment for universal suffrage; also divorce and other rights for women • AWSA favored the 15th Amendment and called for a state-by-state campaign toward universal suffrage, focusing only on women’s suffrage • Rivals for 20 years

  6. Constitutional Amendment and State Referendums • NWSA proposed a constitutional amendment every year beginning in 1869 • Unsuccessful attempt in Congress • Turned to state-by-state campaign • State referendums largely unsuccessful

  7. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton • Antislavery and temperance activists before the Civil War • Lifelong friends • Opposed the 15th Amendment • Co-founded NWSA • Anthony organized merger between NWSA and AWSA and tried to reach out to moderates and conservatives in the movement • Stanton was more radical Stanton (seated) and Anthony

  8. The Establishment of NAWSA • NWSA and AWSA merged to form NAWSA • Felt they were more likely to succeed at suffrage if they merged • Susan B. Anthony was first president; took a more realistic and moderate path • Stanton alienated because she remained more radical NAWSA officers, 1892

  9. Questions for Discussion Why was the 15th Amendment so divisive for the women’s movement? Why did Susan B. Anthony face criticism from some other women’s rights advocates? If you had been a women’s rights advocate in the 19th century, do you think you would have thought it was more promising to work toward a constitutional amendment or on a state-by-state passage of women’s suffrage laws? Why?

  10. Women’s Suffrage in Wyoming • Women’s suffrage granted to Wyoming Territory residents over 21 in 1869 • Unclear why women’s suffrage succeeded first in Wyoming • Eastern women’s rights advocate sand journalists visited the territory • Retained women’s suffrage into statehood despite controversy Women voters in Wyoming

  11. Women in the Progressive Era • Female leaders of progressive causes • Jane Addams • Increasingly active women’s clubs and organizations • Spread enthusiasm for women’s suffrage Jane Addams

  12. Turn-of-the-Century Voices Against Women’s Suffrage • Voices against women’s suffrage grew louder • Helen Kendrick Johnson: democracy depended on separate roles • Lyman Abbott: women didn’t want to vote because it was men’s responsibility • Women were too physically frail; they would get tired just walking to the polling station

  13. New Leaders in the Early 20th Century • Elizabeth Cady Stanton died in 1902; Susan B. Anthony died in 1906 • Carrie Chapman Catt • Alice Paul • Congressional Union for Woman Suffrage • National Woman’s Party Carrie Chapman Catt Alice Paul

  14. National American Woman Suffrage Association • Carrie Chapman Catt led NASAW and she believed in: • Careful state-by-state strategy • Support President Wilson even if he doesn’t outright support suffrage (because Democrats were a safer bet than Republicans) • Act ladylike! Don’t embarrass the movement

  15. National Woman’s Party • Alice Paul led the NWP and believed in more aggressive strategies: • Focused on passing a Constitutional Amendment • Picked up un-ladylike strategies from British suffragists (e.g., heckling politicians, picketing) • Refused to support President Wilson if he wouldn’t support woman suffrage • NWP members were arrested for picketing in front of the White House; they were put in jail, went on a hunger strike and were force-fed

  16. President Woodrow Wilson and World War I • Inauguration created a rift in the women’s suffrage movement • Carrie Chapman Catt supported Wilson • Alice Paul protested against him • “Silent Sentinels” • Arrests and torture • Alice Paul’s hunger strike

  17. The 19th Amendment • Public support for women’s suffrage grew in response to prison abuses and Alice Paul’s hunger strike • 19th Amendment failed in Congress the first time around • National Woman’s Party campaigned for pro-suffrage candidates • 19th Amendment passed in 1919 and ratified in 1920 • Tennessee was the 36th state to ratify and it passed by only 1 vote

  18. Reaction to the 19th Amendment • Many women were excited to vote, but some were afraid • 19th Amendment emboldened many women • Flapper era

  19. The Election of 1920 • James M. Cox vs. Warren G. Harding • Both parties courted the female vote • Harding supported women’s suffrage in the Senate and was popular with women; landslide victory • No “radical” changes to politics or voting patterns after 19th Amendment Warren G. Harding and his wife Florence

  20. Questions for Discussion Why do you think many people at the turn of the century still opposed women’s suffrage? Why did President Wilson change his mind about women’s suffrage and decide to support the 19th Amendment? Did women have a significant effect on the election of 1920? Why or why not?

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