research -First draft-Lucy Burns Lucy Burns was a women suffragette, who was tremendously important to the history of women. In her time women and men werent equal, women stayed at home and did not have a say. Inspired by her father Lucy Burns joined to the Women's Social and Political Union. However, Paul and her disagreed with Women's Social and Political Union speed and way of fighting for women's right, together with Alice Paul they created the National Women’s Party in order to to take more actions. her work ultimately lead to the passage of the 19th Amendment which gave women the right to vote. At Burns times and even before most women did not go to school, most women did not know how to write or even read. Women would of stayed at home and clean the house or watch the children. Any money that was made by a woman became the property of her husband once she was married. If a husband and wife get divorced, everything that she ever owned will be taken away from her including her children. Burns’s father believed in educating children of …show more content…
Lucy’s legacies was to change women opinion on themselves and to encourage them to continue fighting for rights. Lucy ratification the Nineteenth Amendment on August 26, 1920. Lucy got what she fought for. “I don't want to do anything more. I think we have done all this for women and was have sacrificed everything we possessed for them, and now let them fight for it. Now I am not going to fight anymore”. Lucy did everything she can, and know she pass the power to our hands. In 1914, dissatisfied with the direction and leadership of the NAWSA Lucy Burns and Alice Paul led a Group of women out of the NAWSA and formed a new organization; the Congressional Union(CU) . Lucy and Alice wanted to give women the right to vote and the wanted to do it fast, the NAWSA and Lucy and Alice had different opinion so they took action to their