Constitutional convention

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    Changes in Gender Roles Changes in Social Structure The United States • Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) fought for women’s rights to vote, obtain professional jobs, participation in public affairs, and formal education in the Seneca Falls convention in New York 1848 • During WWII women entered the work force to replace men who went off to fight and kept their jobs after the war • The Nineteenth Amendment allowed suffrage regardless of sex • African slaves were liberated 1865 in the conclusion…

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    Analysis on Iron Jawed Angels Movies and books are only ways to save stories from past. Iron jawed angels, directed by Katja von garnier, is a American Historical movie that is filmed on 2004. Movie is based on true story about American suffragists movements that happened during early 20th centuries. Movie starts from beginning of young suffragists and goes on to tell how they finally got amendment for women's right to vote. Alice Paul , starred by Hilary Swank, and Lucy Burns, starred by France…

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    In the 1800’s women did not have nearly as many rights as men. To name a few inequalities, women did not have the right to vote, own property, divorce their husbands, and countless others that diminished them as a population. This of course, was fuel for the women’s rights movement. So many women and men took part in this movement, but three women in particular were able to change the course of history. These commendable women truly made a difference. And dbcksbckjbthey were Emma Willard,…

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    The Fight For Women’s Rights Elizabeth Cady Stanton was not like most women of her time. She had a vision of women holding the same rights as their male counterparts. This paper will explore her uncommon ideas and the impact they have had on our society. Elizabeth Cady Stanton was born in 1815 to a family with 11 children. Her father, Daniel Cady, was a federal attorney and eventually a Supreme Court justice. He exposed young Elizabeth to the intricate workings of law. She was fascinated by her…

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    Susan B. Anthony once asked, "Are you going to cater to the whims and prejudices of people who have no intelligent knowledge of what they condemn?" While the answer is seemingly obvious, few individuals have dared to oppose established laws and stand up for their unorthodox beliefs. Raised in an era in which women lacked many basic rights and were considered inferior to men, Susan B. Anthony challenged America’s deeply ingrained social norms of male dominance and advocated for major reform. On…

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    Susan B Anthony Argument

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    Lucy Stone, and Ida B. Wells, the 19th amendment would not have been ratified. Susan B. Anthony, saw that it was wrong for women to not have the same rights as men. When Anthony was thirty two years old, she went to her first woman's rights convention in Syracuse. Once Susan left she declared "that the right which woman needed above every other, the one indeed which would secure to her all the others, was the right of suffrage.” After that she spent the rest of her life fighting for the…

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    Depict an image of America back in the mid 1800's being treated unequally and your voice not being heard. This is same scenario happened to a woman and leader named Susan B Anthony. Susan B. Anthony is a woman that was arrested in 1872, because she went to vote illegally by being a woman. Susan B. Anthony was an activist during 1872. Anthony believed that regardless of gender or race, you as an American citizen should have the right to vote. After Anthony’s arrest, she gave a speech about her…

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    prominent ideas in the 18th and early 19th centuries that encouraged women to stay home and perform menial tasks. This notion of separate spheres between men and women began to be contested as the 19th century progressed. Beginning with the Seneca Falls convention in 1848 and continuing throughout the Gilded Age, society’s views on women were challenged. Culminating with the Progressive Era, women gained various political rights, most notably gaining the right to vote. Despite experiencing a…

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    This is my follow-up to week 1, and 2, number four, Ladies' Suffrage. Nineteen-twelve was when Theodore Roosevelt turned out for ladies' suffrage and turned into the considerable champion of ladies' rights. What's more, I think one about the minimum saw, yet more vital viewpoints, of Theodore Roosevelt is that he was the colossal male women's activist of his period as far as the essential office holders and lawmakers. However, that backtracks to the start. In 1902, Roosevelt requested the Equity…

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    Reformers Project During this period there were many issues throughout the United States. With that being said there were people known as reformers who created movements that leaned toward fixing these problems. One of these reformers in particular was Susan B Anthony, which was one of which that shined light on the issue of gender equality and/or women suffrage. Susan B Anthony was born on February 15th, 1820 in a Quaker family. A family in which was committed to social equality. In…

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