Women's Equality In The 1920s

1366 Words6 Pages

Women’s struggle for equality has always been and is still is a difficult battle. Even though women gained the right to vote in the 1920, their battle of equality with men still continues to our present time. The women who started the suffrage movement were daring, and they stood for what they believed in. In the nineteenth century, people always thought that men and women should be in different places. The ideal woman in that century was supposed to be submissive and supposed to obey and serves the men who were around her. Later on, other women started forming and organizing organizations to help women with their needs and some of these organizations were made to make protest to give women their rights. Despite the fact that, women had their …show more content…

Even though women worked in the same factories as men, they were still separated from each other. This indicates how men really despised women and thought that women had no intelligence. Women who supported the suffrage movement started to educate the public about the strengths of a woman, and the suffragist protested and petitioned against and the Congress to ratify amendments that gives women their rights. Even though the single story about women’s right has changed drastically since the suffrage movement, women still struggle daily in equality with men in our present time. In our present time, women are able to vote, work as the same position as men, and have personal …show more content…

The struggle for the right to vote began in 1848 in Seneca Falls, N.Y., during the first movement for women’s rights convention. Elizabeth Cady Stanton proposed her Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, which stated that women wanted the right to vote and to attend college, the right to own property, to legally divorce, to gain custody of their children, and to work in any position they desire. When the nineteenth amendment was ratified, all women had the right to redeem their rights for the first time legally, like men, and deserved all their responsibilities as a human being. “He has made her, if married, in the eye of the law, civilly dead” (Stanton 655). Stanton’s argument for this quote is that “civilly dead” refers to the fact that, when a woman gets married, her rights were automatically stripped from her by her husband, leaving her as only a human being with no rights or opinions. “He has compelled her to submit to laws, in the formation of which she had no voice” (Stanton 655). Others argue that, upon marriage, the man and the wife are one person under the law. Therefore, “civilly dead” is a brutal example to describe women’s situations once they are married. “He has endeavored, in every way that he could, to destroy her confidence in her own powers, to lessen her self-respect, and to make her willing to lead a dependent and abject life” (Stanton 656). In many countries,