How Did Carrie Chapman Catt Get The Right To Vote In The 1920s

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The main factor of why women got the right to vote in 1920 was the work of Carrie Chapman Catt. The support for the women's suffrage movement had greatly decreased and lost a lot of the women working towards their right to vote. Catt worked hard to restart the movement, without her there would have not been the spark to reignite the fight for women's suffrage. President Wilsons support provided a respected figure that supported the cause, civil disobedience provided a lot of attention to the movement, and the work of women in World War I showed many people that women were very respectable and could work like men. All these factors contributed to the allowance of women to vote in 1920, the most important factor being the work of Carrie Chapman …show more content…

Carrie Chapman Catt worked very hard to restart the women's suffrage movement after it slowed when the movement was not as successful as the women had hoped. Without Carrie Chapman Catt's hard work to restart the movement people would not have gotten involved again, not motivating the people who helped with the other factors. Carrie Chapman Catt worked peacefully spreading awareness and creating goals and plans for the movement. In 1916 she created the "Winning Plan", her goal was to campaign at state and then federal levels, eventually moving world wide. This inspired many people and helped provide a motivation and goal for the women's rights movement. Her plan lead her to send a letter to President Wilson, helping influence him to publicly support the movement. She also encouraged many women to work during World War I, her work of influencing many women to work helped the perception of hard working women all over the country. Carrie Chapman Catt's work restarted the movement, motivating others to help, which was shown through acts of civil disobedience, allowed President Wilson to see the work women were putting in after being inspired by Catt, and she inspired many to work during the war. Without Carrie Chapman Catt the other factors could not have taken …show more content…

Women during the war became nurses, cost guards, sold war bonds, telephone operators, anything that needed to be done. When the men left for war the women stepped into to every role. Women's hard work showed that they were not as fragile as men believed and they were capable of everything a man could do. A large part of America's success in the war is attributed to the work of women. The work of women also helped convince President Wilson to support women's rights. If women had not of worked during the war men would have continued to believe women were not capable of what they were. But their hard work and dedication put women on an equal level of intelligence and strength as men. This convinced many men women deserved the right to vote. Thought women's work during the war showed their capabilities, it still took them another two years to gain their right to vote, showing this reason did not ultimately win them their rights. Without Carrie Chapman Catt's work inspiring women, many would not have worked during the war, not allowing men to see their