Women's Rights In The 1960s

876 Words4 Pages

in the Senate by two votes. Another year passed before Congress took up the measure again.” (19th Amendment) Social feminist had hopes for higher ambitions, wanted to change the way women were treated. Social feminist were alternatives to socialist movement, and liberal individualism. “It would be unfair, in fact, to reproach the pioneers of second-wave feminism for lacking a wider vision and a higher ambition. ‘Unlike now, we didn’t want a piece of the pie. We wanted to change the pie,’ activist Alice Wolfson says in a recent documentary that chronicles the movement for women’s rights in the 1960s and the early 1970s. Social feminism has initially set out to elaborate such a new vision as an alternative to the two large strands of progressive …show more content…

For months multiple women were arrested and were then jailed. When other women heard about the women in D.C. getting arrested and put in jail, women started coming to D.C. to show their support. When women were arrested it didn’t matter their social status, anyone who was there was arrested. “The arrests and jailings continued for months, but did little to discourage the women. Inspired by their courage, other women poured into Washington to replace the ones who were arrested, only to be arrested and jailed themselves as still more women came to replace them. Ultimately hundreds of women-women from all walks of life, all social levels, most states- came to help. At first the women were imprisoned in an abandoned, dilapidated jail in D.C. or in nearby Occoquan workhouse. No one was spared, young or old, mill workers and aristocrats alike were arrested.” (Sobieski, …show more content…

Anthony helped women in the United States get their right to vote. She stood up for what she believed in and even got herself arrested for trying to vote. Anti-suffragist believed that women should not be able to vote because they are not as highly educated or know much about politics. Although at first, President Wilson did support women’s suffrage, in the end he was a supporter. Women who went to D.C. to protest ended up in jail. It didn’t matter what social class someone was in, if they were protesting they were going to jail. While in jail, many women started hunger strikes, which lead to them being beat up in the jail and being force fed. The 19th Amendment was ratified so women, finally had the same equal rights as men, including to