Women's Rights In The 1800s

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Lucky for the youngest generations alive today, they have grown and matured in an age of equality that was unimaginable a century ago. Though there is always progress to be made, it is undeniable the revolutionary social and political changes that have been made in American life since its beginning. While a woman nearly won the presidency in the previous presidential election, one hundred years ago, a woman could not even vote. But thanks to the brave women in the nineteenth and twentieth century, women are now allotted to not only vote for the president, but so much more that came after. Most people know women’s suffrage was a more recent event, but the work that led up to the amendment is anything but. In the 1800s brave women who challenged their positions in life were harshly rebuked for abandoning their “proper place”, that being in the house raising the children and keeping the house tidy. Women began to advocate for their …show more content…

Now women had begun to say they were complementary to men instead of incompatible, as men could cope with material problems from experience in the business world and women with human problems from experience in the home. Addams said women could not preserve the home and stay good mothers if they could not vote and have political involvement to say what the needed to keep a stable household. This statement neutralized the opposition’s claim that feminists wanted to destroy the home, and ultimately the movement started to gain more and more support and respect. In 1914, the General Federation of Women’s Club endorsed the suffrage campaign and thus marked the first time the movement had strong support among women themselves. In the 1900s before suffrage, the women's movement was hooked to other groups in the progressive alliance, the common variable being they thought ability for women to vote was essential for a better