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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This essay examines the history of women's suffrage in the United States, from 1877 on. Targeted in this paper are the efforts of state grass-roots organizations, schisms between the suffrage movements, and the long battle to gain the 19th amendment. Bibliography lists 4 sources (Turabian Style).
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTsuffra.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the card or pulling the lever. To most women, there never was a time when they couldnt vote. However, the right of women to vote has been guaranteed by the
Federal Constitution for less than 100 years. And getting the amendment ratified for womens suffrage was a long, drawn-out and difficult affair, one that has shaped Americas history.
This paper offers a brief overview of the history of womens suffrage since the late 1877, and describes some of the struggles undertaken so
that women could eventually be assured of gaining the vote. The need for suffrage The first womens rights convention took place July,
1848 in Seneca Falls, NY1. Among the issues discussed were the need for equitable laws, equal educational and job opportunities - and the right to vote2. However, it would be
more than 70 long years before women received the right to vote through a new amendment to the constitution. The suffrage movement
was initially developed in the context of antebellum reform; when the efforts of women such as Sarah Grimke, Abby Kelly and Lucy Stone were barred from assisting in other reform
movements, such as slavery and temperance3. Following the Civil War, womens rights leaders hoped to receive universal suffrage, and were extremely disappointed when the 14th and 15th Amendments to the
Federal Constitution extended suffrage to only black men4. Suffrage was needed to encourage government to offer women the right to vote, mainly
because of the role of women in society, which was basically, as of the late 17th century, little more than chattel5. It was only as women began flocking to the
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