Right To Vote In The 1900's

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Since the beginning of the United States, the right to vote has been forever changing. Society has come a long way from when only white men, who owned land, could vote to today where any citizen over the age of 18 can cast a vote on Election Day. The right to vote has been a challenge for some and has caused many issue throughout history. Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton stormed the streets of New York attempting to attain the right to vote in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s. They risked everything to be able to have an impact on who would get elected. During the Civil Rights Era, African Americans fought against inequality and harsh tests. Decade after decade contained fights for voting rights. Although America has come a long …show more content…

Martin Luther King Jr., but the 1900’s also saw the women’s suffrage movement. On May 6th, 1912, there was a suffrage parade in New York City. This was the first time a parade like this had been held, and it was a great development for the suffrage movement for women’s suffrage in the United States. This parade divided many women between whether to continue the fight for suffrage or to just give up. Many women chose to give up and left the movement while others embraced the parade as a way to publicize their cause. They wanted everyone to view women as citizens who should have these equal rights and should not be relegated to the home. It was not only wealthy white women who participated; many women of different ethnic and socio-economic background joined the march. Although it was covered in the media and at times very negative, it helped spread the cause and the women’s message. Many of these marches began taking place throughout the rest of the year and into the next year (“U.S. Voting Rights …show more content…

Nor do they have a well formulated opinion before going into the polls. This is called being an irrational voter; whereas, a rational voter is one who votes after deciding the personal benefits that outweigh the costs. More voters are becoming irrational due to the internet and vast amount of sources available to people to get information whether it is reliable or not. The more areas there are to attain information, the harder it becomes to obtain accurate information. Now with the internet, there are infinite avenues for information, true or false, to find its way into the minds of the voter base