Women have always worked at home, minding the children and cooking for their husband while finding time to make clothes for their family. In the nineteenth century, women got the chance to do things they did at home for money. Women got to spread their wings a little and teach or sew clothes or write for money. They did have trouble getting the right to do so. With the women suffrage movement and the United States needing to do things instead of slaves, women got their independence.
While some women wanted to stay home with their family, they would send their young daughters off to textile mills to make money for their family. The young ladies would make money, helping the family and/or saving money for when they got married. The textiles were the ladies would worked were cramped with other ladies and machines that they had to operate twelve hours a day, every day except for Sundays for little money. In February 1834, the ladies had enough of the low wages and protested “to exact the higher rates
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In five years, over four thousand groups of women had become a part of the groups. The number of woman’s rights conventions were almost two dozen before 1860. In those groups, there was a lady named Paula Wright Davis who was very vocal about men letting “women open a store, learn any of the lighter mechanical trades, study for a Profession” like a man can. She wanted men to see women as equal. Davis and other women, like Elizabeth Cady Stanton, did get rights “in protecting married women’s rights to their own money and property in New York” the same year a two dozen conventions were held (Roark). At one of the conventions, Elizabeth Stanton gave a speech called the Declaration of Sentiments that became what women would look to as their go to material. In the speech Stanton said “all men and women are created equal”, it became what the women’s rights movement based their movement on
Women had to be housewives and raise children. In the late 1700’s women started to work and leave the house. 10.) Was inspired by the Enlightenment ideals. Superiority of republican self-government helped in the creation of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense.
In the “Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions” (1848) a speech given by Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a leader in the “American women’s rights movement”, she states that “All men and women are created equal ” (98). She conveys this message by alluding to the Declaration of Independence, she says the rights of men, but yet again makes it so it’s men and women for the same rights, she also uses repetition of saying “he” just like Jefferson used “he”, but Stanton is referring to the American men’s abuses towards women, for example, “he has taken from her all right in property, … He has made her, morally, an irresponsible being” (99). She tells us this speech in order to open our eyes and see how the way they were living wasn’t
Women’s rights activists gave their movement the title “the women movement”. These women wanted to expand their professions out of the house and into higher paying jobs. They spread their belief that women’s unique homemaking traits would make society more humanized. Women’s clubs through the late nineteenth century began taking a stand on public affairs. These reformers started working more outside of the house in jobs such as consumer protection and housing improvement.
They saw the parallels in each movement and saw that many were the same. So they decided to create a movement just for the woman so men could not get in there way. It was 8 years Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott would carry out their agreement to hold their own convention on woman’s rights, At the Seneca Falls Convention Adopted a “Declaration of Sentiments”- modeled on the “Declaration of Independence”, woman’s right’s, equal education, equal treatment, and the right to vote were what 68 woman and 32 men agreed to and signed in this Declaration. Frederick Douglass was among the signers.
The roar of the 1920s set new perspectives on youth and culture into motion: the right of a woman to control her own body and her choices. With Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s help, women were able to speak up and be themselves as flappers, suffragettes, or working women. As the 1900s marched on, women urged for more and more rights. From the early creation of bloomers by Amelia Bloomer to the beginnings of the feminist movement, women’s rights were shaped in Stanton’s brave image. As women found more freedom to advocate for themselves and their bodies, the debate eventually shifted to controversial topics such as abortion.
However, when thought of, most people remember her contributions to the women’s rights movement. She, and other feminists such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, began to realize that there were numerous similarities between slaves and women. Both were fighting to get away from the male-dominated culture and beliefs. In 1848, these women began a convention in Seneca Falls, regarding women’s rights(Brinkley 330). They believed that women should be able to vote, basing their argument on the clause “all men and women are created equal”.
In the mid-1800s, many Americans had concerns about the issues occurring and the impact they made on the United States. To put an end to these numerous issues, many Americans decided to form groups, organizations, and also individuals. They would come up with a variety of strategies to make a change. One of the many issues was women rights. In the mid-1800s, women had a hard time being a woman back then.
Stanton believed that a public protest of women’s right was the next step to get equality for women’s legal position. By this belief, Stanton tried to make a draft of “Declaration of Right and Sentiments”, which she modeled after the “Declaration of Independence”. In this declaration, Stanton demanded moral, economic and political equality for women. With her friends, Stanton was able to hold the first women’s right convention on 19-20 July 1848 at Stanton house in Seneca Falls, New York. That is why; the convention is called Seneca Falls Convention.
The Antebellum Period that lasted roughly from 1825–1850 is an era known for its many reform movements and major transformations in American society. Prior to the popularity of reform movements in American society was the 1828 election in which Andrew Jackson became the seventh president. Jackson professed himself the “champion of the common man,” where the “common man” meant white men. Nevertheless, his presidency caused the development of a more popular mass democracy, or Jacksonian Democracy as it is commonly referred to. The westward expansion that occurred during Jackson’s presidency lead to a shift in America’s economical makeup from a mercantile/market economy to capitalism.
Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott meet at a National Anti-Slavery Convention, which influenced them to hold a Women’s Rights Convention. In 1848 they held a national women’s rights convention, known as the Seneca Falls Convention. At the convention Elizabeth Cady Stanton created the “Declaration of Sentiments”. Proposed in the Declaration was “that all men and women are created equal”. Over 300 men and women gathered at Seneca Falls for the convention and unanimously voted for women to have the right to have equal rights as men.
Men should have absolute rule over society. This was the mindset back when women's rights activists were considered rare and unorthodox. In A Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions, Elizabeth Cady Stanton rejects the status quo and finds solutions to the overbearing problems she sees within society. A concept that has greatly been dreamt over throughout history has been challenged, by a woman. Elizabeth Cady Stanton exerts repetition, allusion, and pathos to express her opinions in favor of increasing women's rights.
Women in this time were expected to be the ones to take care of their children so even if there was an opportunity to get a job the wife normally couldn’t since most wives were stay-at-home wives. The husbands are normally seen as the man of the house and this was especially true in the late 1800s. They were known to be the ones who were in control of everything and the women had to listen to them because that was expected of them. So when their husbands didn’t allow them to obtain a job the wives had no choice but to listen to them. The husband preferred for their wives to take care of their child since there was nobody else that could take care of them and that was a norm for women.
Fortunately, due to the tireless work of decades of activist’s, laws have changed, amendments added to the constitution, and rights granted to those who were previously unjustly denied. One of these victories for women’s rights occurred when women were granted the right
The life of Women in the late 1800s. Life for women in the 1800s began to change as they pushed for more rights and equality. Still, men were seen as better than women, this way of thinking pushed women to break out from the limitations imposed on their sex. In the early 1800s women had virtually no rights and ultimately were not seen as people but they rather seen as items of possession, it wasn’t until the late 1800s that women started to gain more rights. The Civil War actually opened opportunities for women to gain more rights, because with many of the men gone to war women were left with the responsibilities that men usually fulfilled during that time period.
After the Civil War, women were willing to gain the same rights and opportunities as men. The war gave women the chance to be independent, to live for themselves. Women’s anger, passion, and voice to protest about what they were feeling was the reason of making the ratification of the 19th amendment, which consisted of giving women the right to vote. One of the largest advancement of that era was the women’s movement for the suffrage, which gave them the reason to start earning