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Women’s Movements The Path to Suffrage. Anti-Slavery Movement  1833 Female Anti- Slavery Society  Sarah and Angelina Grimke  Investigation of slave.

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Presentation on theme: "Women’s Movements The Path to Suffrage. Anti-Slavery Movement  1833 Female Anti- Slavery Society  Sarah and Angelina Grimke  Investigation of slave."— Presentation transcript:

1 Women’s Movements The Path to Suffrage

2 Anti-Slavery Movement  1833 Female Anti- Slavery Society  Sarah and Angelina Grimke  Investigation of slave rights led to discussions of women’s rights  Published letters concerning the condition of women

3 Women’s Rights Convention at Seneca Falls, N.Y.  1848 organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucretia Mott, and Lucy Stone  Gender roles becoming very different in the 19 th century  The convention a call for equal rights  Began the modern women right’s movement

4 Civil War Amendments  Women felt betrayed at being excluded from the amendments passed following the Civil War  Suzan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton campaigned against the 14 th Amendment for not including females in the right to vote  Wanted 15 th also to refer to women’s suffrage

5 19 th Century Societal Issues  Abolition-many women involved in this movement prior to Civil War  “Separate Spheres” societal condition developed in 19 th century  Education –schools did not admit women upper level education women involved in abolition an exception  Marriage-many women involved in Progressive Movement were not married

6 Organizations  Two women’s organizations merged in 1890 into the National American Woman Suffrage Association  African-American women formed the National Association of Colored Women in 1896 before the NAACP was organized in 1910  Women’s Christian Temperance Union organized many women in the fight against alcohol consumption

7 Problems faced by Women’s Groups  Leadership  Membership  Demographics  Internal divisions  Popular appeal

8 State Suffrage  Western states begin to allow women to vote  1890 – 19 states allowed women to vote on school boards  1912- 9 western states offered suffrage  1917 – New York, Michigan, Oklahoma, and South Dakota offered suffrage to women

9 Two More Bright Spots on the Map Harry Osborn, Maryland Suffrage News, November,1914

10 Judge, September 1912

11 “Tearing Off the Bonds” Judge Magazine, Oct. 1912 http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAsuffrage.htm

12 Judge, May, 1913

13 Women’s Groups Involved in Political Issues  Progressive activities  World War I - assistance to the war effort  NAWSA led by Carrie Chapman Catt relied on letter writing and a propaganda campaign organized through many women’s clubs  During World War I Alice Paul a more radical leader form the National Women’s Party

14 Legacy following Ratification  Alice Paul and the Equal Rights Amendment – National Women’s Party foundation for feminist movement of the 1960s  Carrie Chapman Catt and theLeague of Women’s Voters – more traditional women


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