Interestingly enough, women's suffrage in the United States was first brought up at the Seneca Falls convention in 1848 where it was considered to be “too extreme” (“One Woman, One Vote”). The Women's Rights Movement was a movement where people fought for women's rights to vote taking place in the United States. This idea was first brought up at the Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 by Susan B. Anthony, where the idea was ridiculed. A few years later, the movement started and women attempted to get voting rights state by state, until in 1920 when the 19th Amendment was passed. The Women's Rights Movement achieved suffrage through publicity, civil disobedience, and strong leadership. The women’s rights movement obtained suffrage through civil disobedience. During the Women's Rights Movement, Alice Paul and her fellow suffragists picketed the White House while reading out things that …show more content…
One final way that women's suffrage was achieved was through publicity. The Women's Rights Movement achieved women's suffrage through publicity. At the start of the Women's Rights Movement, Susan B Anthony was a very large figure that was leading the Women's Rights Movement at the time when women were thought lesser to men, and was the one to kick the entire movement off and gained much publicity off of it. One piece of evidence to support this is when election time came around and Susan B Anthony went to go vote with a couple other women and she sort of scared the guy into letting them vote, however later she is arrested by marshals showing how highly they regarded this event, eventually the word got out about Susan voting and people either took her side or took the government's side. Finally, court was held and Susan could not testify or even defend herself, this outraged some people and eventually made the women's rights movement a bigger deal than ever before (“One Woman One