For many years, women were not granted the right to vote. Wom-en were thought to only be good at being wives and mothers. However women started to believe they should be treated equal-ly to men and be allowed to vote. While trying to pass the right to vote for women, they had to go through many challeng-es. With the help of many strong female leaders, the four-teenth amendment was eventually passed. Susan B. Anthony was a women who, at first, did not think anything of women gaining their right to vote. She was not amused by the convention of 1848 in Seneca Falls. Anthony seemed to find these demands funny because of how outrageous they were. Although, she was interested in what Elizabeth Cady Stanton had to say. Hearing what she had to say helped Anthony netter understand that this would help women gain all other rights (Severn 66). After meeting Stanton and visiting her many times, the two became close friends. Anthony began work-ing Stanton for the next fifty years. She mostly helped deliv-er the …show more content…
Marilley was a women who wanted to view move-ment strategies. This would possibly get women their right to vote. She believed there were three arguments that made up in-dividual rights. The three arguments were freedom through equality, the right to a life free from fear of violence, and the freedom to develop one’s individual talents through equal opportunities (Goodwin 1). Marilley thought that men and women did not have mutual benefits. Party politicians would bring in new party members, although there was no indication that women would be included in their institutional power (Goodwin 2). Women were okay gaining an individual right that allowed them to make their own political decisions. Historians have said it was due to a lack of vision after 1920. Although Marilley thinks it was something that “justified women’s multiple agen-das and affirmed multi-faced political aims without imposing one model of citizenship or policy platform on women” (Goodwin