Progressive Women. College Oberlin College OH- First to allow women to attend –By 1870- 20% was women.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Women of the Progressive Era
Advertisements

Women and Public Life The Main Idea
Second Class Citizens!  Political- No Voting Rights / No Government Office  Economic-Not valued in the work place (Restrictions) Male Monetary Rights.
CH WOMEN AND PUBLIC LIFE
The Progressive Era ( ) Chapter 22, Section 3
Objectives Describe how women won the right to vote.
Chapter 15, Section 3 The Rights of Women p
Unit 4 Notes 3 19th Century Reforms.
The Progressive Movement Alcohol was a problem across the United States, but the people were fighting for its reform Wesley Wu and Bailey Donovan.
Section 2: Women and the Public Life
Women During the Progressive Era
WOMEN IN PUBLIC LIFE. INTRODUCTION Women during the Progressive Era actively campaigned for reforms in education, children’s welfare, temperance, and.
Bellringer: EOCT Review Questions
Warm Up: How do you think that upper and middle class white women reacted to the passage of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution?
Chapter 22- Progressives and Reformers
Women and Public Life Women during the Progressive Era actively campaigned for reforms in education, children’s welfare, and suffrage.
Women Win New Rights Chapter # 7 section #2. New Roles for Women New inventions & factory goods helped give middleclass women more free time away from.
Standard 15, element D Describe the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, establishing Prohibition, and the Nineteenth Amendment, establishing women’s suffrage.
The Rights of Women and Minorities Ch. 6 Section 3 p
The Progressive Era Chapter 6, section 1.
WOMEN IN PUBLIC LIFE CHAPTER 9-2. WOMEN IN THE WORKFORCE By the late 19 th century many upper & middle class women had the means & time to devote to social.
Women Suffrage Mr. Williams 10 th Grade U.S. History.
Roots of Progressivism. The Progressive Era The period from about 1890 to 1920 when many believed a solution to social problems in the nation lay in a.
Women’s Rights.
What is your reaction? sCtFohttp:// sCtFo How does it make you feel to hear these things?
American History Chapter 16-2 Women & Public Life.
THE PROGRESSIVE MOVEMENT UNIT 3. PROGRESSIVISM UNIT 3.1 Progressivism Muckrakers Reforming Cities Reforming Society - NAACP Reforming the Workplace Reforming.
WOMEN AND PROGRESSIVES SEC PAGES Define: Suffragist –19 th Amendment - Prohibition – 18 th Amendment Identify: Jane Addams – Mother Cabrini.
Chapter 8 The Northeast Section 5 The Women’s Movement CSS - 8.6, 8.6.6,
The Main Idea Women during the Progressive Era actively campaigned for reforms in education, children’s welfare, temperance, and suffrage. Reading Focus.
Women and Progressives Chapter 21, Section 2 Pgs
Chapter 22, Section 4: Women Win Reforms Main Idea: During the Progressive Era, many women fought for reforms and campaigned to win the right to vote.
What do you think this cartoon means?.  In early 1900s, many women were no longer content to play a limited role in society  Growing number of middle-class.
Women Win New Rights New Roles for Women Chapter 21-3.
Chapter 6 The Progressives. Section 1 Progressivism.
Chapter 22, Lesson 2 Women & Progressives. New Roles Less need for kids, families got smaller Time for college (40% of students in 1910) Professionals.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Women's Rights 1865–1920.
The Rights of Women Chapter 19 Section 3. Women Win the Vote Seneca Falls Convention 1848 The start of the organized women’s rights movement National.
A movement in the late 19 th and early 20 th centuries to reform social problems created by Industrialization. Goal: Gov’t should take a more active role.
Chapter 19, Section 3 “The Rights of Women”. Vocabulary Terms 1.Carrie Chapman Catt- (pg. 657) 2.suffragist- (pg. 657) 3.Alice Paul- (pg. 658) 4.Frances.
Women Win Reforms At this point, women can’t vote or hold political office & few break “the mold” of gender roles in society – What “gender roles” do you.
Progressive Era Changes Prohibition Many progressives felt that alcoholism was becoming a big problem in the country Some called for Prohibition – ban.
Warm-Up During the early twentieth century (1900’s), many children as young as 5 or 6 years old were working all day every day, some working on very dangerous.
Women in Public Life Chapter 6 Section 2.
Reforming Society By: History King Jimenez. Dorthea Dix- was a teacher & humanitarian reformer Dix didn't believe that mentally ill people should be put.
4e: Negative effects of industrialization
The Women’s Rights Movement
Chapter 17 The Progressive Era ( ) Section 2
What problems existed in the Gilded Age?
Woman’s Suffrage and Prohibition
The Progressive Era is from
Women’s Suffrage Topic 3.2.
New Opportunities for Women
Chapter 16 Section 2 The Progressives Riddlebarger
GET YOUR NOTES OUT FROM YESTERDAY, SO WE CAN FINISH THEM
Do now What were 3 negative effects of Industrialization?
Women of the Progressive Era
United States History Unit 2, Chapter 6, Section 2
Movement for Women’s Rights
Chapter 8 The Northeast Section 5 The Women’s Movement
Women and Public Life Chapter 16 Section 2
Women of the Progressive Era
Chapter 14 Section 3.
The Women's Suffrage Movement
Reform The Spirit of Reform improvement or change for the better
Women during the Progressive Movement
African-Americans Temperance Movement Women’s Suffrage
Chapter 17 The Progressive Era ( ) Section 2
Women's Rights 1865–1920.
Chapter 22, Section 4: Women Win Reforms
Presentation transcript:

Progressive Women

College Oberlin College OH- First to allow women to attend –By % was women

Skills learned at college put to use in social reform movements

Jobs Women entering work force in record numbers –In “caring professions” Reasons for lower pay –Women working were single and supported by dad –Men had to support a family

Job Opportunities Female: –Artists –Journalists –Magazines –Typists –Nurses –Secretaries –Teachers

Impacts of Jobs and Education Women started to see the world differently and the roles they played in the community and society.

Women became backbone of Progressive movement

Prohibition!!!!!

Ban on making, selling, and distribution of alcohol Believed that alcohol was often responsible for crime, poverty, and violence against women and children.

Woman’s Christian Temperance Union Headed by Frances Willard Campaigned for alcohol temperance Protestant churches take up cause Saloons source of sin

Carry Nation Smashed up saloons with a hatchet in KS Fiery speeches Huge following

18 th Amendment Ratified 1919 Prohibited sale, manufacturing, and distribution of alcohol IMPACT: Rise of organized crime Muscle Cars Automatic guns Bootleggers and Moonshine

National Association of Colored Women Not welcomed in reform movement –Started own Worked for the same rights

Suffrage Seneca Falls Convention- 72 yrs till right to vote Susan B. Anthony- –Leader in Suffrage movement –Forms National Women’s Suffrage Movement WY 1 st to allow women to vote

Anthony in court Arrested for voting Found guilty and fined $100 –Was not allowed to testify –Refused to pay in hopes of appeal –Judge doesn’t force to pay

Reasons Against Women Voting Interferes w/women duties at home Liquor feared temperance movement Businesses feared regulations Marriage was a sacred bond and the MAN represented the family Not smart enough No experience

National Women’s Suffrage Association In 1890 NWSA merges with NWSA Headed by Elizabeth Cady Stanton In 1920 women gain right to VOTE!!! Anthony and Stanton both passed away before then.