...Women’s Right Movement in the U.S: Timeline of Events (1960-1969) 1960 | The Food and Drug Administration approve birth control pills. | 1961 | White women earn 60 cents for every dollar earned by men, a decline since the 1950s. Women of color earn 42 cents for every dollar. | 1964 | Title VII of the Civil Rights Act prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of race and sex. | 1969 | California is the first state to adopt a ’’no fault’’ divorce law, allowing couples to divorce by mutual consent. By 1985, all U.S. states have adopted similar laws | The long journey to achieving women rights has been taking place for many years. Since the beginning of time, staggering changes have taken place for women in society. These are changes in the government, religion, politics and employment. These changes did not just happen by themselves; they resulted from the hard work of many dedicated women who refused to give up. These major changes in women’s rights begin approximately 165 years ago. Although there have been many major events in the women’s movement, below is a timeline of four major events that I believe to significant. These events are all interrelated in the sense that they helped to liberate women and provided them with the opportunity to make choices about their futures and their destinies. In other words, they liberate women who had traditionally been trapped into predetermined social roles of motherhood and housewives to make choices for...
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...The Nineteenth Amendment allowed the right for women to vote in America. This occurred due to an extensive period on the war for women’s rights. Women’s rights to vote completely changed the culture of America because it linked the population of women together and took the U.S. by storm, although some may say it didn’t affect culture because not many people were injured in the war for women’s rights, it is still one of the most culturally changing event in history. The women that started the fight for the right to vote in the United States of America were Anne Hutchington and Abigail Adams. Anne settled in Massachusetts with her family in 1634 and started to raise the issue of women’s rights in her colony. After gaining many followers she was banished from...
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...“Men, their rights, and nothing more; women, their rights, and nothing less”, stated Susan B. Anthony, a women’s rights activist and founder of the New York State’s Women’s Rights Committee. This claim encompasses a tumultuous time where women struggled for a voice in a country that counted them as second rate citizens. That would change, when two women devoted their lives to the fight for women’s suffrage which would begin a journey to equality that women are still embarking on today. Starting in 1848 women have been struggling for equal rights, the struggle has been a continuous issue, even up to modern day. Women were successful in creating equal rights in most aspects but, women still lack equality today. The fight for equal rights...
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...is a U.S women’s soccer player who strongly believes that everyone should be treated equally no matter what gender they belong to. After being on the women's team for 12 years, she has experienced gender inequality in every way, and she will continue do whatever she can to fight for women’s rights, so that young girls around the world won’t have to experience the hardships of being mistreated. First of all, Carli lloyd stated, “It had everything to do with what’s right and what’s fair, and with upholding a fundamental American concept: equal pay for equal play. Even if you are female.” Evidently, Carli is right about the unfair wage gap between the men and women’s team, especially since Carli and her teammates, play just as much and just as hard as the men soccer team players. There shouldn’t be a wage gap especially if men and women are doing the same job just as well. Secondly, Lloyd also claimed, “The top five players on the men’s team make an average of $406,000 each year from these games. The top five women are guaranteed only $72,000 each year.” There is a 334,000 dollar wage gap between the two...
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...Jennifer Duban Mrs. Blatchley Social Studies 20 Feb. 2024 The Women’s Rights Movement The howling wind whips through your hair and the frigid rain is pouring on your face, but still, you stand. The jeering crowd is violent with its taunts and jeers, but still, you stay. Your feet ache with seemingly endless pain, and you feel weak and could collapse, but still, you push onward. You are fighting for your rights, and the suffrage for you, your friends, and your children. You cannot stop now (Van Garnier). This was the daily experience of women suffragists during the Women’s Rights Movement while they were picketing the White House. From 1840 to 1920, women fought for their suffrage, rights, and equality of 20,00,000 women. Pioneers such as Elizabeth...
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...Timeline of Women’s Rights Starting in the late 1700’s states started to write legislation to remove the right of a women to vote. This first started with the State of New York with Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and New Jersey closing folling suiit. Then in 1848 women collected together in Seneca Falls, New York in what would be the first influential women’s rights convention completely organized by women in the western world. Topics discussed such as law and what role women played in modern society. One of the resutling factors of this convention was the Declaration of Sentiments that served as a foundation of the women’s suffarage movement. Such conventions happened on a regular bases, leading to annual events up until the start of the civil war. In the mid to late 1800’s Susan B. Anthony began her persuit of women’s rights by traveling across the country and lectured for the right for women’s vote. She also campainged for the end of slavery, for the right for women to own property and advocated for women’s labor organizations. On November 18, 1872, her sufferage efforts resulted in her arrest after she participated by voting in the presidential election on November 5, 1872. After her trial and conviction she was charged a $100 fine but never paid it, but continued in her determination in supporting women’s rights. It was fourty three years after Susan Anthonly’s arrest that Jeanette Rankin, a Montana Republican carried the distinction to be the first women elected...
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...The Evolving Women The role women play in our society is and has been an ever-changing one, from mother to doctor to soldier and everything in between. With increasing standards and demands on them to be the one who keep’s the family grounded and together in a chaotic society that thinks none to highly of them or their rights as citizens. I chose to focus on women’s changing roles during the time period from 1865 through 1920 and then through 1920 to this present day. The reason I chose to focus on the women of our history is because this was a very unstable time in history, due to the changing status of minorities in the culture at this time due to the end of the Civil War and the impending revolution for women’s rights with the passage of the 19th amendment. Dating as far back as the early 1800's women’s roles were consistently being challenged and questioned, it was not so much the women’s rights marches of the 60's but it was the beginning of that revolution. During the early part of the 19th century women’s character was separated with four basic attributes: piety, purity, submissiveness, and domesticity. Even the foreign visitors to America during this period found fault in American male’s attitude towards women, they thought males treated women as inferiors and subjected women to double standards. "By marriage, the husband and wife are one person in law; that is, the very being and legal existence of the woman is suspended during marriage." This is according...
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...brought before the United States Congress, petitioning suffrage be approved as a U.S. Amendment. But in 1886, the suggestion failed before the Senate. In 1890, the two organizations came together “to form the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA)” (“History.com Staff.” 5). Between 1890 and 1896, Idaho, Colorado, and Utah ratified the amendment. In 1900, as Stanton and Anthony progressed to pursue women’s suffrage at a greater level, Carrie Chapman Catt became the primary leader of the organization. Chapman Catt raised the NAWSA to a strong position, influencing several other states to approve the amendment, including New York and California. “On May 21,1919, U.S. Representative...
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...continued efforts trying to gain equal rights with men, women of all races had difficulties in getting respect for their rights. As women have always been looked down upon as less powerful and smart to men, when women began to try to make a difference and gaining equality, they had to start by taking small steps. This included having small discussion groups that later lead into larger groups that ultimately became conventions. As time passed by, people finally settled in with the idea of equal rights, later becoming the 19th Amendment. Although there have been many important events in U.S. history since 1900, the 19th Amendment must be kept in the new U.S. history textbook because politically, it gave women the ability to have...
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...One of the most debated subjects in society now is the topic of women’s rights. Women’s Rights is a topic that includes many different aspects, such as equal wages and equal access to health (“Women’s Rights” Gale). Women’s Rights should be acknowledged and implemented. While many believe that women’s rights should not and do not exist, others believe that America, as a whole, should be fighting back. Because of history, government, and the process of fighting back, it is easy to say that women’s rights should be examined and applied to everyday life. One important thing about women’s rights is the history. According to an article published in 2016, “The earliest known set of laws, Hammurabi’s Code, spells out certain rights of women, including...
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...The choice whether to have a child or children is a women’s right to privacy. It is the central right for a women to own her independence and to have the ability to determine her future just like it is for a man. According to Webster’s Dictionary abortion is the termination of a pregnancy after, accompanied by, resulting in or closely followed by the death of an embryo or fetus. The Roe vs. Wade decision to legalize abortion throughout the United States is in fact acceptable. Often in today’s society the topic abortion brings so much controversy and conflict to our human race it is thought upon to be a disgrace considering abortion murder. As abortion recognizes a women’s right to privacy to choose whether or not to have a child it simply expresses...
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...The U.S. Supreme Court ruling of Roe v. Wade was monumental for women’s reproductive right in America. For the first time in American history women would be able to access safe and legal abortions. Unfortunately while Roe v. Wade was a huge step in the right direction for women’s rights, access to abortions and the right to choose are still being taken away from women daily. Through TRAP laws, state allowed restrictions, the current government administration, and the rise of the alt-right movement it is becoming increasingly harder for women to have an abortion within the U.S. today. While Roe v. Wade was passed over forty years ago, there is still more work to be done and the immense need for action in order to secure women’s reproductive rights in the United States. Roe v. Wade...
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...For The People “Failure is impossible.” This is one of Susan B. Anthony's most acclaimed quotes. She proved to live by this quote throughout her entire life, by changing others lives. Susan B. Anthony grew up in a Quaker family with seven other children. Strong morals were instilled in Anthony at a young age. By the time she was seventeen, Anthony was actively working on social reform. She worked tirelessly until the age of eighty-six, when she passed away in Rochester, New York (“Susan B. Anthony Biography”). Susan B. Anthony had a strong voice that insisted on being heard in human rights, and was courageous enough to stand up for what she believed in. Susan B. Anthony was one of the main reformers of women’s rights in the 1800’s. She...
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...for many rights for women, including: equal pay, the right for abortion, the end of rape, the right for contraceptives, and many other important rights that men have ( or do not need to worry about). “The movement to end sexism, sexist exploitations, and oppression . . .” (Hooks 37) is known as feminism. Today people would call us feminist, but during the 19th and 20th century that term did not exist. These women and men were known as suffragettes or suffragists. The suffragettes who fought beginning in 1848, with Seneca Falls, all the way to 1920, when women achieved the right to vote, were labeled First Wave Feminist. Two key elements of the First Wave in U.S. Feminism were how different races and class divisions affected the feminist movement (Shaw & Lee). The movement of feminism was brought about by many: men, women, upper class women, African American men, and the divisions just keep going. Yet all these people believe in the same thing, so why cant they all stand together and profess it. If only it was that simple. Race was a key element of the first wave of U.S. feminism. Presented in the Documentary “Not for Ourselves Alone” viewed in class, a famous African American is introduced. He is a great African American male journalist who supported the movement for women’s suffrage and his name is Frederick Douglass. In the documentary Frederick Douglass stands and speaks at the Seneca Falls Convention supporting Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s’ petition for women’s right to vote...
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...Inequalities in women’s soccer (Women’s National Soccer Team; successful but not equal) Thesis: Although women’s soccer has come along way, as a result of Title IX, gender discrimination is still seen in women’s professional’s sports today. Over the last year, issues about pay, field conditions, and even feminism have surfaced as a result of this summers Women’s World Cup. I. Introduction a. Quote “I don’t want to be considered a great female athlete, I want to be a great athlete”. The idea of a professional female athlete is a fairly new concept that has only developed in the last century. b. Women’s soccer in relatively new to the U.S., however, the sport has been revolutionized by the tremendous success of the U.S. Women’s National Soccer...
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