The Suffrage Movement.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Advertisements

The Abolitionist and Suffrage Movements …and the work of three women.
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is?
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement right to vote = suffrage = enfranchisement.
1 Do Now: 3 min What do you see here? Around what year do you think this photograph was taken? How do you think the public responded?
right to vote = suffrage = enfranchisement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Reform What is reform? Changes made to improve something Why did America need reform? –Slavery –Industrialization –Changing society.
The Struggle for Equality. Path to Abolishing Slavery The Constitutional Convention would have failed without a compromise on slavery. Counted slaves.
The American Woman Suffrage Movement right to vote = suffrage = enfranchisement.
Women’s Suffrage Adapted from: sheg.stanford.edu/.../Background%20on%20Woman%20Suffrage.ppt amhist.ist.unomaha.edu/module_files/Womens%20Suffrage.ppt.
In the 1800s and 1900s people fought for the rights we have today. Those people are called reformers. Many reforms occurred during this time. Reformer.
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage 1. When the United States Constitution was written, only white men had the right to vote. Women were not allowed to vote under the law.
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is? How do you think the public responded?
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Women's Rights
The American Woman Suffrage Movement Right to vote: Suffrage = Enfranchisement = Franchise.
The 19th Amendment.
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
US History 12/1/2016 Announcements: Test Tuesday (Study Guides Due)
The American Women’s Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
The Abolitionist and Suffrage Movements …and the work of three women.
The American Women’s Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is?
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
What is Manifest Destiny?
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is?
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
How did Women get their voices heard and create Change?
Women’s Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is?
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is?
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Women’s Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Women’s Suffrage Movement
1/13 Learning Target I can explain how women got suffrage, and why it was controversial.
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is?
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Do Now What do you see here?
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is?
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Do Now: What do you see here? What year do you think this is?
Women’s Suffrage Movement
The American Woman Suffrage Movement
Women’s Suffrage Movement
Presentation transcript:

The Suffrage Movement

population, and industry. In the early 1800s, the United States of America grew in size, population, and industry.

People also wanted AMERICA to grow in GREATNESS. At this time, the freedoms and rights promised in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Amendments were not given to all Americans.

Slavery is the opposite of liberty! Slavery was legal in the land of the free. Slavery is the opposite of liberty!

There were people who wanted to ABOLISH, or END, slavery There were people who wanted to ABOLISH, or END, slavery. They were called abolitionists. They worked for the Abolitionist Movement.

Do women have rights? Women were NOT ALLOWED to VOTE in the United States.

suffrage. Women’s Suffrage Movement the right to vote. The right is called suffrage. The Women’s Suffrage Movement worked to GIVE women the right to vote.

Anti-suffragists Those who opposed extending the right to vote to women were called anti-suffragists. Many anti’s were women. Political cartoon mocking anti’s: “O Save Us, Senators, from Ourselves!”

Beliefs of Anti-Suffragists Women were high-strung, irrational, and emotional Women were not smart or educated enough Women should stay at home Women were too physically frail; they would get tired just walking to the polling station Women would become masculine if they voted

In this presentation we will meet two women who fought for women to have the right to vote. Suffragists

A teacher

"We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal...“ 1848 Seneca Falls Declaration Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a teacher who believed women should have the same voting rights as men. She was a writer who used words to protest what was wrong with America and how it could become better. Elizabeth Cady Stanton became “the face” of the Women’s Suffrage Movement.

Florence Kelley

Florence Kelley was an American social and political reformer Florence Kelley was an American social and political reformer. Her work against sweatshops and for the minimum wage, eight-hour workdays, and children's rights is widely regarded today.

These women and other men and women across the country worked long and hard to convince the government and the people of the United States that the laws should be changed.

One thing that had to be done, was to let the people of each state vote on the idea.

Finally after years of hard work, the 19th Amendment was added to the Constitution of the United States in August of 1920.

Amendment XIX The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex.