(Doc 2) Also, as have been mentioned before, women were long longing for their rights. After 144 years after Abigail Adams’ letter, the United States amended the voting rights of women. “The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied by any state on account of sex.” (Doc 8) Lastly, the Indians were given false hope from the Northwest Ordinance.…
Megan Shu Shu 1 Ms. Thurtle English 1AS November 7, 2014 Susan B. Anthony’s Fight for Women’s Rights Susan B. Anthony stood at the door of the voting room, taking a look at the inside of the room. The room was grey, small, there were no windows, and only one way out. The room was full of people concentrating on filling out their ballots. As she walked in, everyone took a moment and looked at her strangely, wondering what a women was doing voting. She had prepared to vote a long time ago and she was to do so.…
Women did not have the same rights as men for a long time and it was unfair to all the women. One way that the women did not have the same rights was that women did not have the right of speech. The women were not allowed to speak freely like men. The freedom of speech was a denied right for women in places like courts or conventions. (Document 1)…
For the longest time in our history, women were there to try and help different groups achieve their own freedoms and liberties. Women’s freedoms and liberties were always put aside to help others achieve their freedoms and liberties. When people earned their freedoms and liberties, they normally never went back and tried to help women gain their liberties. Women were tired of helping everyone else get freedoms when they did not have their own freedoms. They wanted to experience the America they helped shape.…
As women protest across the nation, American government add the Nineteenth Amendment to give women voting rights. This illustrate a government for the people. The government is willing to do whatever it can to fulfill the need of its citizens. The women would probably attack men if there was not an adjustment to the Constitution. Women work as hard as men, so they should have the same rights.…
The American Revolution was also known as the American War of Independence. It began in the year 1775, and it was over by the year 1783. The war began when the tension started increasing between the civilians of the 13 North American colonies and the government. After the French and Indian War 1754 to 1763, King George III lost a large amount of money because he needed to purchase arms and goods for his armies in the war. Due to this, King George III was in debt and began taxing citizens in order to pay off the debt.…
The fight for women’s rights began in 1848 with the first Women’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls, New York (Footnote). After being prohibited to enter a convention in London on world slavery because, they were women. There was a discussion about whether or not female delegates should partake in the convention. After that debate, Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton decided to create their own convention to discuss the rights that women should have. This started because at the convention, the women were segregated from the male speakers and were lucky enough that the men would speak on the behalf (FOOTNOTE).…
Women's Rights are Still an Issue in our Society Today According to the article (1851) Sojourner Truth “Ain't I a Woman?” By Sojourner Truth, “Look at me! Look at my arm!…
Women were not allowed to work and college was not possible. In Voices of Freedom, Judith Sargent Murray has an article called On the Equality of the Sexes, an article she wrote for a college she could not attend because of her sex. Although amendments were made to the constitution, freedom was not given to all and it is still apparent in our day to day…
Abigail Adams also stated that women deserved more freedom than they had, and that women are determined to start a rebellion for their rights (Doc 7). She wanted her husband to change the women rights. Amendment 19 of the United States Constitution written in 1920 says “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 (Doc 8).” After the war women had more jobs and responsibilities in the voting…
The ideals that followed as an outcome of the American Revolution allowed for an attitude of equality for all. Finally winning independence from Great Britain was a historical event that was so relevant to the American identity, and will continue to hold prominence in the rest of human existence. Throughout the American Revolution, the national identity greatly shifted back and forth in order to build off the foundation of freedom. The Founding Fathers thought they were doing just that, but instead they created a nation that favored a small amount of the population; white, property owning males. Establishing a nation that would allow equality for all was the underlying goal within the American Revolution.…
Never the less they were given a smaller wage than men. As well as being accepted in the work force they wanted the right to own property. Also women wanted the right to have equal educational purposes as men as this was key to allow them to have a greater measure of independence and autonomy. They wanted rights and to be acknowledge in this country just as the Declaration of…
At the time, women did not have basic rights until women’s rights advocates began working in the 1840s, and the Equal Rights Amendment was introduced in 1923. Even though this happened, women representation in the government or in political bodies was and still is barely anything. This is mainly because of two reasons. Firstly there is no gender quota in the original constitution or in any amendment. This means that the constitution did not make it necessary to have equal women representation in government because women did not have many rights and were considered to be accountable to their husbands.…
Women had roles in society that were far more inferior to that of the male population. The Woodcut of a Patriot Woman (Document A) shows that women had an increasingly larger role in the society. Before the Revolution, women were the “behind the scenes” member of the family, but with the dawn of the revolution at hand, women stepped up to more prominent and political roles in their family. In particular, women like Abigail Adams and Lucy Knox were the driving force for women’s rights progression, to project her ideals to the general public. According to Molly Wallace, in her valedictory speech (Document J), women should not be denied the most general rights that people have just because they are women, and that woman can contribute to society just as much as a man can.…
The 19th amendment, Title VII, Title IX, Roe v. Wade; while all of these are ratifications that the United States has implemented throughout its short history to transform itself into a nation whose ideals fall upon equality, there was a time when they did not exist and inequality was rampant among gender, race, and social class. It has taken hundreds of years to reach the societal equality we have today and it is all thanks to the first steps that were taken by women and slaves in the late 18th century. One of the earliest advocates that pushed for gender equality in America was Judith Sargent Murray with her essay, “On the Equality of the Sexes”, which was published in 1779. Within her essay, Murray brings the issues of intellectual and spiritual…