07.04 Her Rights – Handout

Focus of Lesson Content:

·  Inspirations

o  By the 1830s, many women were active in reform movements

o  The Second Great Awakening inspired women to focus on solving social problems

o  Many Americans believed women to be better than men at guarding morality (“morality” means to refer to some codes of conduct put forward by a society, some other group, (such as a religion) or accepted by an individual for his/her own behavior)

·  Early Steps

o  Women believed it was their civic duty to improve society--they were active early in the antislavery and temperance movements

o  The antislavery movement derailed the push to win the right to vote for women

Participation in other reform movements helped strengthen the women's movement, because women's successes in them made people question the limitations placed on women in society

o  Society accepted women’s reform actions as long as women did not take men’s normal roles

o  Women could have meetings, publish essays, and speak in front of other women

o  However, they could not rise to leadership positions within reform organizations or speak to groups containing men

The Seneca Falls Convention in 1848 – Elizabeth Cady Stanton authorized the Declaration of Sentiments

·  Significant Steps in the Right to Vote for Women

o  In 1869, the movement reorganized specifically for suffrage

Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton formed the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) to focus on a constitutional amendment for women’s suffrage

Lucy Stone and husband Henry Blackwell formed the American Woman Suffrage Association (AWSA) to focus on passing laws at the state level

o  That same year in Wyoming, Louisa Swain was the first woman to vote in the nation

o  Wyoming was then a territory

o  The movement found it easier to convince the territories to include women in voting partly because their populations were so much smaller

o  In 1890, the NWSA and AWSA combined to form one national organization. Women across the nation would not all be able to vote until 1920, with the passage of the 19th Amendment