Introductory Paragraph: The Funnel Introduction “Men, their rights, and nothing more; women, their rights, and nothing less,” acknowledged by Susan B Anthony (brainyquote, page 1). Unlike the Declaration of Independence talked about the quality of men, but it left women out. The quote of Susan B. Anthony is adding women in society to have a say in their rights. Equality means to have the same rights as one another and having it based on gender could be what tipped off Susan from the start. To have a part in our country’s decisions is one of the goals yet to be established later on. She wanted to do something the rest were incapable of doing or scared to try. Not Susan B. Anthony she was scared of much what she was scared about what not …show more content…
Women would take advantage of these opportunities and strive for greatness, not only to paint their own picture, but to build society into something enormous. “During WW1, women began to run family businesses, trained as nurses, planted gardens to feed their families and neighbors, worked in factories, and preformed many other duties to keep the country going” (Hossell, Karen P: The nineteenth Amendment Women Get the Vote , page 20). When men came back to see that women were running their jobs they were heated, they didn’t like this idea. Some of them saw that they can do what they did and they should be rewarded for helping the country stay on track. “By the end of the war more than 30,000 women had served their country were, in part, what convinced President Woodrow Wilson that women should be given the right to vote” (Hossell, Karen P: The Nineteenth Amendment Women Get the Vote, page 20). Women finally were beginning to see themselves as fighters. They were feminist and many people began to support feminism not right away, but with time more and more people began to join the rumble. After this there was more feminist propaganda going around. More women were standing themselves and yet some men allied. Even though some men despised the idea of women having the same equality as them, women were catching up. These women who started it all began to make history. The Seneca Fall was a satisfying beginning to the Women’s Rights