Strangely enough, even women had to fight for equal rights. Women’s fight for equal rights was nothing compared to African Americans or even Asian Americans. Women did not go through the hate and ridicule that these other two groups went through. Despite not being targeted, women were still not treated equally. Similar to African Americans, women were not allowed to vote and had to fight for their right to vote. Women just wanted to be seen and treated equally to the “superior” men. They wanted to be able what they wanted not what their husbands or what society told them to do. The beginning of the women’s civil rights movement could be placed in 1874 when the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union (WCTU) was founded. The WCTU was founded by women who were sick of having alcoholic, abusive husbands or fathers and wanted to outlaw alcohol (Warren “Yellow Journalism and Popular Politics”). In Frances E. Willards’, Woman and Temperance, the WTCU is described as believing that men’s brain and blood have been tainted and ruined by years of alcohol and nicotine (Cobbs and Blum 127). …show more content…
In 1890, another group for women’s rights was formed, the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA); their main objective was voting rights for women. In 1920, the 19th amendment was passed, granting women the right to vote, almost 30 years after the formation of NAWSA. Since women were seen as inferior to men, women were not even allowed to play sports. Men believed they would be “damaged” if they played sports. They were only allowed to be dancers or spectators. This changed in 1893 when the first women’s 6 on 6 basketball game was developed (Warren “Progressivism and the Age of Reform”). In 1972 President Richard Nixon signed Title IX, which provided the opportunity for women to play sports in college (Warren “Stonewall, Woodstock, and the Silent