women’s rights-everything you wanted to know…

47
WOMEN’S RIGHTS- WOMEN’S RIGHTS- everything you wanted everything you wanted to know… to know…

Upload: nonnie

Post on 13-Jan-2016

27 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…. Changes in American life during the Industrial Revolution. Division between work and home. The “cult of true womanhood” portrayed the ideal woman as “pious, pure, domestic, and submissive.”. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

WOMEN’S RIGHTS-WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to everything you wanted to

know…know…

Page 2: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Changes in American life Changes in American life during the Industrial during the Industrial

RevolutionRevolution

Division between work and homeDivision between work and home

Page 3: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The “cult of true womanhood”

portrayed the ideal woman as “pious, pure, domestic,

and submissive.”

Page 5: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Mary Wollstonecraft, Frances Wright, and Margaret Fuller believed that giving women an equal education to that of men would do more to improve women’s position in society than voting rights.

Page 6: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The Temperance Crusade

Page 7: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The radical abolition movement had the greatest impact on women’s rights.

Page 8: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Women in the abolition movement recognized parallels between the

legal condition of slaves and that of women.

Page 9: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Angelina and Sarah Grimké

The Grimké sisters, nationally prominent abolitionists, connected the inequalities of women, both white and black, with slavery.

Page 10: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott met in 1848 to organize a convention to promote “the social, civil, and religious rights of women.”

Page 11: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The Seneca Falls Women’s Rights Convention, 1848

Page 12: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The first signatures on the

Declaration of Sentiments.

“. . . The history of mankind is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations on the part of man toward woman, having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over her. . . . He has never permitted her to exercise her inalienable right to the elective franchise. He has compelled her to submit to laws, in the formation of which she has no voice. . .”

Elizabeth Cady Stanton,

The Declaration of Sentiments

Page 13: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The 14th Amendment to the Constitution added “male” to its definition of eligible

voters—women would need another amendment explicitly granting them the

franchise.

Page 14: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The demand for woman suffrage presented a vision of independent women that

seemed to threaten social structures.

Page 15: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The Seneca Falls Convention was the “birthplace of the women’s rights

movement.”

Page 16: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

1848: New York passed a Married Woman’s Property Act—other states followed.

But calls for divorce reform were less successful.

Two new demands:

Page 17: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

War, and the Reconstruction that followed, split the Women’s Rights movement.

Page 18: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Impact of Reconstruction:Impact of Reconstruction:

Radical Republicans demanded black Radical Republicans demanded black male suffrage—but not universal male suffrage—but not universal suffrage for all adults.suffrage for all adults.

To enfranchise women, black and To enfranchise women, black and white, would give the vote to large white, would give the vote to large numbers of white Southern women, numbers of white Southern women, who would probably vote who would probably vote Democratic.Democratic.

Page 19: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

This image made the point that, in being denied the vote, respectable, accomplished women were reduced to the level of the disenfranchised outcasts of society.

Both Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were furious that Congress had given the vote to black men but denied it to women.

Page 20: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Black male suffrage v. Black male suffrage v. Universal adult suffrageUniversal adult suffrage

National Woman Suffrage Association National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA)(NWSA) Founded by Anthony and StantonFounded by Anthony and Stanton The more radical woman's suffrage group. The more radical woman's suffrage group. Accepted only women and opposed the Fifteenth Accepted only women and opposed the Fifteenth

Amendment since it only enfranchised African-Amendment since it only enfranchised African-American men. American men.

American Woman Suffrage Association American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA)(AWSA) More moderate in its views than the NWSA. More moderate in its views than the NWSA. Allowed men to join and rallied behind the Allowed men to join and rallied behind the

Fifteenth Amendment as a step in the right Fifteenth Amendment as a step in the right direction toward greater civil rights for women.direction toward greater civil rights for women.

Leaders of the AWSA included Julia Ward Howe Leaders of the AWSA included Julia Ward Howe and Lucy Stone.and Lucy Stone.

Page 21: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

When the two groups reunited in 1890, the new National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) followed the direction set by Anthony and Stanton.

Page 22: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Blanche Ames, Two Good Votes Are Better Than One, Woman’s Journal (October, 1915)

A New Argument A New Argument for Woman for Woman

SuffrageSuffrage

The nation The nation needed women needed women voters because of voters because of their special moral their special moral leadership.leadership.

Page 23: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

A New Argument for Woman A New Argument for Woman SuffrageSuffrage

Female voters could Female voters could “sweep out the “sweep out the scoundrels”scoundrels”

Female voters could Female voters could ensure that reforms ensure that reforms in child labor, in child labor, temperance, and temperance, and women’s work women’s work would occur.would occur.

Only a woman who Only a woman who was truly a citizen was truly a citizen could teach could teach citizenship to her citizenship to her children.children.

Page 24: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Women voting in Wyoming, 1869

The initial success of the post-Civil War suffrage movement came on the frontier.

Page 25: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…
Page 26: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Why the West?Why the West?

Special frontier conditions?—the Special frontier conditions?—the Turner thesis.Turner thesis.

Women’s vote would offset votes of Women’s vote would offset votes of black men?black men?

Women’s vote would attract women Women’s vote would attract women settlers to the West?settlers to the West?

Page 27: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Emmeline Wells and other Mormon suffragists in Utah.

The second Western territory to grant women the vote was Utah, in 1870.

Page 28: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

A close correlation exists A close correlation exists between the success of woman between the success of woman suffrage and states where men suffrage and states where men

voted in large numbers for voted in large numbers for Populist, Progressive, or Populist, Progressive, or

Socialist party candidates.Socialist party candidates. Colorado (1893)Colorado (1893) Idaho (1896)Idaho (1896) Washington (1910)Washington (1910) California (1911)California (1911) Kansas (1912)Kansas (1912) Oregon (1912)Oregon (1912)

Arizona (1912)Arizona (1912) Montana (1914)Montana (1914) Nevada (1917)Nevada (1917) North Dakota North Dakota

(1917)(1917) Nebraska (1917)Nebraska (1917)

Page 29: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

After 1890, increasing competition among political parties made women’s suffrage a

hot political issue.

Page 30: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Carrie Lane Chapman Catt (1859-1947), women's suffrage leader

Between 1900 and 1920, the woman suffrage movement modernized, adopting new tactics of lobbying, advertising, and grass-roots organizing under the leadership of Carrie Chapman Catt.

Page 31: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

1913: Illinois became the first state east of the Mississippi to grant women the vote.

Page 32: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Growing opposition fostered a sense of impatience among women who had waited over 50 years since the Seneca Falls Convention for the vote.

Page 33: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Alice Paul (1885-1977), women's suffrage leader

Alice Paul and Lucy Burns gave a new direction to the women’s rights movement.

In 1913, Paul and Burns organized the National Woman’s Party (NWP), adopted the radical tactics of the British suffragettes, and campaigned for the first Equal Rights Amendment.

Page 34: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

"The Stomach Tube""The sensation is most painful," reported a victim in 1909. "The drums of the ears seem to be bursting and there is a horrible pain in the throat and breast. The tube is pushed down twenty inches; [it] must go below the breastbone." The prisoners were generally fed a solution of milk and eggs.

Page 35: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The Woman’s Party was one of the first groups in the United States to employ the techniques of classic non-violent protest.

Page 36: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

The actions of the NWP made the NAWSA seem moderate and reasonable by comparison.

Page 37: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

In 1916, neither party endorsed woman suffrage in its platform, but both parties called on the states to give women the vote.

Page 38: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Jan. 10, 1917: The NWP began to picket the White House.

Page 39: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

World War I interrupted the campaign for woman suffrage.

Page 40: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Women’s war work allowed them to claim the right of patriotic citizenship.

Page 41: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Carrie Chapman Catt and President Wilson

In 1918, in the midst of the war, the House of Representatives passed the federal suffrage amendment, but the Senate voted it down.

Page 42: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Finally, on Aug. 20, 1920, the 19th Amendment became part of the United States Constitution when Tennessee

became the 36th state to ratify it.

Page 43: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

Just as the 19th century women’s rights movement began with women’s experiences in the temperance and abolition movements, the modern woman’s right movement began with women’s involvement in the civil rights protests of the 1950s and 60s.

Page 44: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

In 1964, “sex” was added to race, creed, color, and national origin as a prohibited reason for discrimination in employment (Title VII).

Civil Rights Act of 1964

Page 45: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

In 1972, Congress included Title IX in the Higher Education Act, providing, “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving federal assistance.”

Page 46: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…

On March 22, 1972, Congress approved the Equal Rights Amendment.

Page 47: WOMEN’S RIGHTS-everything you wanted to know…