Welcome to the class! Happy Birthday, I hope you enjoy your special day! Congratulations on being a Cancer survivor! Comparatively, “women” was my second choice, similar to African Americans, making great strides in history now, just not in the mid-late 1800’s, when men outnumbered women 10 to 1. However, in the mid to late 1800’s women did not count towards the progress of history, though proved to be essential in the field of industry. Nevertheless, women began to demand voting rights in the late 1800’s, in addition to Frances Willard’s example of political evolution, the organization of the "Woman’s Christian Temperance Union" formed in 1873 to curb the abuse of alcohol endorsed the women’s right to vote. Therefore, I agree that
For most of history, we have lived in a patriarchal society, where men have been the rulers and the leaders. Women in general have always been second in society, especially women of color. During the colonization area, women were going to the new homeland to start a new life for them and their families. The gender norms of the time were to be the husband was the bread winner and went out and the women stayed home and took care of the children. Throughout this colonization time, certain women were challenging their status quo and paving the way for more women to have more rights in society.
For decade women have been discriminated by society, all around the world. In many countries women are still treated as the inferior sex. “daily life for women in the early 1800s in Europe(Britain), was that of many obligations and few choices. Some even compare the conditions of women in time as a form of slavery.” (Smith, Kelley. "
The Women’s Era spanned from 1890 to 1920, it was a progressive movement that allowed economic and political independence for women. Women began to be more publicly active and were able to step into the social sphere. By 1900 five million women were working for wages, in the beginning, they were young unmarried women working in domestic fields, however, well-educated women were beginning to work in a professional position and better paying jobs. Twenty years later eight million were working and it was no longer unmarried women, married women were working as well and they were able to move out of domestic jobs into office jobs or telephone operators. An important group called The Women’s Christian Temperance Union formed in 1974 and they demanded the prohibition of alcohol and for economic and political reform that included the right to vote.
In the book “First Generations Women in Colonial America” by Carol Berkin explains to us how women back then were treated differently from now. They experienced awful situations. Carol explains that back then men thought that’s their wives were considered as their land. Men believed that once they married a woman that they could do anything to them and treat them the way they wanted. Men had no respect to women.
Women's issues suddenly became so prominent in American culture because things were changing. People were forming new opinions and women saw an opportunity. In the 1800's transcendentalism came into the picture. Transcendentalism was an intellectual movement led by Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau (Henretta, G-13). They believed that they needed to examine individuality and self reliance closely.
During the late 1800s, women made it clear that they wanted their equal rights. Women had no power compared to what men had. If women started looking like they had power, it was said that they started to look more masculine. Women began to fight back and attempt to reform the government. In this political cartoon, the artist shows his view of life before and after women were able to vote.
In the late 1800’s, women had a very small role in american politics. Only a small percentage of wealthy white men were allowed to vote and every other race and gender were not allowed. The question of Women’s suffrage was highly controversial due to the fact that many believed that women were inferior. The belief was that by giving women the right to vote, it would take away from their roles as wives and mothers.
White women were in short supply, but high demand, in eighteenth century South Carolina. Women were “ill-equipped” to complete the work farm life required of them, so they migrated to the South in smaller numbers than their male counterparts. The women who did reside in South Carolina were highly sought after by the men, though. Young marriages, re-marriages, and inbreeding, thus, were not uncommon. It was important for women to marry young in hopes of producing farm hands and it was important for them to remarry, what with the astonishingly high mortality rates, to secure the future of the farm or plantation.
The 1920s was a crazy decade for Americans. More people were now living in rural areas instead of the country side, the wealth of the country doubled, and many were buying the same things due to better advertising, but the most exciting thing was the new lifestyle changes that were happening to women. Societies view of a woman would completely change during this amazing decade. Women were now able to vote, try new fashion styles, listen to more unique music, and experience a new social freedom. The most drastic change was women’s lives in politics.
Women are seen as objects only meant from men’s use. Men a scared of intelligent women because it is not something they can control. By limiting their education men have the power to make women less than humans. Women have to deal with the cruel behavior of their husbands or in some cases their masters if they are a slave. Women in the mid-nineteenth century were thought of as a lesser human being but not as bad as slaves were because of our size and sex.
Thus, it is necessary to conclude that women have always played an important role in the development of history. History that involves women has been developed throughout the centuries, constantly changing its goals and forms, increasing the popularity movement of the American women in the late 1800’s. Women were discriminated for many things for a very long time, it wasn’t until the late 1800’s that women actually started to gain very few rights. The late 1800’s is very important time for women as it gets the movement started for Women’s Suffrage, and ultimately the late 1800’s starts to open the way for equality for women and
From 1815 to 1850, many issues occurred including the racial prejudice of African Americans and unfairness towards women. Starting at the beginning of this time period, African Americans were either born into, or later sold into slavery. On the other hand, women were treated unfairly because they had much less rights than men had. For example, women were deprived of their natural rights and were unable to vote, work in the fields, or own property. The U.S. did not fulfill the ideals of the Declaration of Independence for all people by 1850 because, slavery was still going on and women's rights were not fully accepted into the society.
In the Gilded Age, women morphed from domestic slaves to emergent clerical workers; however, the long-standing stigma about what was meant to be a true woman held back progressive thinkers. Women felt this oppression through societal structure, religious beliefs, and unequal treatment under law. By definition, the true woman was one that was an angel for domestic paradise. They cooked, cleaned, took care of the children, and were at their husband's beckon call every waking moment. In the emerging progressive age, the first modern feminists, called the new women, were the upper and middle class women who extended greater influence in politics, economy, and other life far beyond the domestic sphere.
A historian by the name of Ed Ayers once said “The exploitative natures of women’s work throughout history has been enormous.” I believe that this statement is true because after looking at history it shows that there were so many things that they had to overcome to get to the rights that they have today. Women during the 1700’s and 1800’s were challenged with expressing themselves in a social system that refused to grant women the right to express their views. Many events during these centuries which included things such as social and political movements that increased attention to women's issues like education reform. By the end of the 1800’s women were finally able to speak out against the injustices aimed at them.
In 19th century Europe, society was split into two parts: the private and public space. Men tended to reside in the public space, while women ruled the private. The two spaces were near opposites in what was acceptable in each, from objects, to activities, to topics of conversation. For the women who presided over private space, they would frequently stay in the parlor room.