The 19th Amendment is the right of citizens of the Unites states to vote and shall not be denied or abridged by the United states or by a state on account of sex. Ratified on August 18,1920, the 19th Amendment granted American women the right to vote. This right being known as women's suffrage. During this time, women did not share the same rights as men and the women’s voices were not valued. In 1848 the movement for women’s rights launched on a national level with a convention in Seneca Falls, New York, organized by abolitionists Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott. Following the convention, the demand for the right to vote became the centerpiece of the women’s rights movement. Stanton, Mott, Susan B. Anthony, and many other activists, formed organizations that raised public …show more content…
This pro 15th Amendment faction formed a group called the American Woman Suffrage Association and fought for the franchise on a state by state basis. As the animosity faded, the two groups merged in 1890, forming the National American Woman Suffrage Association. By this time, the suffragist's approach had changed. Instead of arguing that women deserved the same rights and responsibilities as men, the new generation of the activists argued that women deserved to vote because they were not the same as men. Women could make their domesticity into a political virtue, using the franchise to create a more purer, more moral, “maternal commonwealth.” The argument resulting in the serving of many political agendas. Temperance advocates, wanted women to have the right to vote because they thought it would mobilize an enormous bloc on behalf of their cause, and that many white middle class white people were swayed once again by the argument that the franchisement of white women would “ensure immediate and durable white supremacy, honestly