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How Did The 19th Amendment Contribute To Women's Rights

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Throughout history, the United States of America has adopted many amendments in the Constitution. Some specific amendments affect the right to vote for citizens in America. The fifteenth amendment and the nineteenth amendment both benefit the rights of citizens involving voting. In fact, the fifteenth amendment allows African American men to vote. Furthermore, the nineteenth amendment grants the right to vote to American women. While the 15th amendment and the 19th amendment both contribute to the importance of voting, they each took awhile to achieve a spot in the Constitution. Before the establishment of the fifteenth amendment, race and color affected mens voting rights. Slavery was officially abolished in the 1860’s; however, African Americans …show more content…

Two abolitionists began to organize one of the first movements, “ It was not until 1848 that 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”(History19). This movement consisted of over 300 women and some men, who were former African-American slaves. They made a statement in Seneca Falls, New York and most of the Seneca delegates agreed that women deserved their own political identities. After this convention, the press mocked women and the delegates that agreed. Naturally, some women would give up after this, but they came back …show more content…

This amendment took many years to officially become in the constitution, “The movement had slowly won voting rights in individual states beginning with Wyoming in 1890. By 1919, 15 of the 48 states — primarily in the West — had full suffrage, while most others had limited suffrage, like only allowing women to vote in presidential elections”(NY Times). Women fought long and hard for their right to vote; being called a citizen and not being able to vote is unnecessary. Luckily, the amendment was being ratified fully in all the states, “Forty-one years later, it was passed by both houses of Congress on June 4, 1919, and sent to the states for ratification”(NY Times). This long movement was slowly taken place state by state and was successful in the end. Even though the struggle to ratify the nineteenth amendment took near a century, it was still an

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