American history and the history of the “Old West” have often been portrayed as a story of white, Anglo-Saxon, Protestant men. Despite this, there are many other groups that have left a significant impact on society then and even today. These groups have made valuable contributions to the development and settlement of the West. Throughout history, both Women and African-Americans have gone through hardship, oppression, and many other struggles; however, both of these groups fought back against oppression and reformed history for the better. For instance, women left their mark on history by advocating for policy changes and reform. They often pushed the boundaries of traditional gender roles and expectations. Through this push for reform, women …show more content…
More specifically, women played a huge role in American history as well as the history of the “Old West.” An example of the significant impact women had on history is their advocacy for policy changes and reform, which frequently challenged traditional gender roles and expectations. This persistent push for change eventually led to a landmark achievement: the right to vote. The West is considered to be the first home for women’s suffrage in the United States (Zócalo Public Square). According to Gilder Lehrman, “the West offered women unprecedented opportunities to do what so many men did: to reinvent themselves. Even the Homestead Act provided for single women to claim land of their own, and thousands of women did just that” (Gilder Lehrman). Women used the united State’s expansion of the west to their advantage; they began to push for reform that allowed them to claim …show more content…
It took many years, but eventually, women got the right to vote in the United States. To understand how women got the right to vote, it is important to understand when the movement began. After the civil war, there were “all sorts of reform groups were proliferating across the United States—temperance leagues, religious movements, moral-reform societies, anti-slavery organizations—and in many of these, women played a prominent role” (Women’s Suffrage). Women had already had a significant impact on other movements. The fight for women’s suffrage ended with a victory for women across the nation when they received the right to vote from the nineteenth amendment (Women’s
This angered many women, causing them to begin to hold conventions and rallies to gain suffrage. Many women began to “throw themselves into rebuilding their communities and families” because of their lack of rights and political abilities (Nashville Public Television). Many women actually believed that women should not gain the right to vote and were against the suffrage movement because they blamed women for how things ended up with their businesses. After these rallies were held people started to believe that women having political power wouldn't be that bad. Eventually in 1920 the 19th amendment stated “the right to vote could not be denied on the account of sex” (Anderson, “1920’s”).
Their legacy continues to inspire social and political movements today, but there is still much work to be done to achieve true gender equality in all aspects of
The different settlers in America had continued to down women as a gender, and make males more superior. As Perdue continues, she addresses how the power that Cherokee women held had began to plummet the more they were involved with Europeans. However, today there are still Cherokee women that stand strong, hold positions of power, and even are still respected as if it was the 18th
This is the time where women fought for their right to vote. In this book, women’s suffrage is explained in numerous ways. Stalcup and other authors talk about the how women’s suffrage started, what went on during the women’s suffrage movement and the effect of the women’s suffrage movement. Women couldn’t do many things such as voting, sitting on a jury, or run for political office. These things could only be done by men, which was unfair to American women.
The 19th amendment to the constitution granted american women the right to vote. When they gave women the right to vote it ended almost a century of protesting. “ The 19th amendment gave the women the right to vote on August 18, 1920” (.history.com). This shows that woman's place in the home was not very well respected in the eyes of the men in the early 1900s. It shows how even though women were people they were not treated as equals in this sense.
Surprisingly, Native American women had more freedom than the white women in the Chesapeake, Middle Colonies, or New England region. Some Native American women were given rights such as controlling land, political power, marriage and divorce in choice. There were matrilineal kinship system, in fact, marriage was not the most top rite of passage for them. The author covers around the 1600s- 1800s century time period while focusing on mainly white women but also women of color.
However, it was not until 1920 when the Nineteenth Amendment was passed that all women actually got the right to vote.(5) This means it took over a century, 129 years to be exact for women to gain all equal rights when they were actively trying to gain
The battle for women's suffrage was a protracted and challenging one that lasted for many years and involved innumerable activists, sympathizers, and advocates. The political movement known as "women's suffrage" sought to guarantee voting rights and political representation for women. This article will look at the background and significance of women's suffrage, the struggles and setbacks that women overcame in the pursuit of equality, and the movement's influence on contemporary society. This essay's central claim is that the women's suffrage campaign was a turning point in history that opened the door for more gender equality and political representation as well as guaranteed women's right to vote.
Women’s role in history has always been incredibly complicated. In majority of cultures around the world, women are most commonly recognized as being compliant to the will of men. However, this recognition is drastically changing along with today’s rapid transformation of technology and other beliefs compared to several generations ago. Women are now holding jobs in prestigious political offices, medical fields, and engineering backgrounds. Of course, there are countless stories of courageous women who defied expectations and challenged the views that defined what a woman is suppose to be rather than accept who she is.
The Trail of Tears and the California Gold Rush were two noteworthy events in history that resulted in the movement large amounts of people to a new part of the country. These migrants left their home territories, both forced and unforced, to settle in a location. Perdue argues that the power shift women experienced before the Cherokee removal defined their roles and shaped female gender during the Trail of Tears. By analyzing the California Gold Rush, Hurtado discusses how a woman’s race and class defined her gender. These authors introduce the conversation about how these significant migratory events in history impacted the lives of 19th century women.
The movement started as a convention in 1848 in Seneca Falls, New York. The convention discussed the rights of women, and decided women needed to have a political identity. On August 26, 1920 the 19th amendment was added to the constitution, which said no one should be denied the right to vote based on sex. After 72 years of protests, rallies and marches, women were finally guaranteed the right to vote (The fight for women’s suffrage 2009 & The 19th amendment n.d).
The contrasts between the American West and East in the nineteenth century range from a new start to the adventure of the living in the Wild West. The east had become overcrowded and did not allow much opportunity for people of lesser wealth. “In 1893, the historian Frederick Jackson Turner gave a celebrated lecture, “The Significance of the Frontier in American History,” in which he argued that on the western frontier the distinctive qualities of American culture were forged: individual freedom, political democracy, and economic mobility. The West, he added, acted as a “safety
In document 2, There is a passage shown about owning land. The quote states, “for the benefit of widows and single women over twenty-one years of age, that they are as much entitled to homesteads as men”. This passage is telling us what extent people went to, to get people to buy the land/ move west, they wanted to draw people in. Document 2 links to my claim, I know this because, since the federal government was promoting the expansion they also had to give an ideal promotion of land as well meaning offering women land and better opportunities. They stated how the land was cheap and that they could keep it, and how they were able to work and keep their money.
From the earliest of times in society, females have had to consistently fight for equality in society. The mistreatment of women often included violence, abuse, financial inequalities, harassment, voting inequalities, and many more inequalities that men have not had to face compared to females. These unacceptable actions that are often seen as “normal” in society are a grim reminder of what women endured and still have to endure today. Many women never had a platform to fight for change and call out injustice in fear of their safety, shame from others, and the threat of breaking “social norms”. However, many influential women risked many things for the basic rights that men have been enjoying for centuries.
And their traditional roles included staying home, rearing children and looking after their families. Women were not granted the right to vote until August 18th 1920 (The 19th Amendment, n.d.). The 19th Amendment to the U.S Constitution granted American women the right to vote—a right known as woman suffrage. This was only less than a hundred years ago, while men have been given that right since the beginning