Elizabeth Cadistan, one of the leaders of the Seneca Falls Convention, remembered "We are a handful ... ...". At the conference, we reviewed the supporters of women's suffrage. Please. This is a long and difficult journey between the first tournament advocating women's rights and the 19th amendment to ensure women's voting rights in 1920. Victory will not be guaranteed until the last moment. In the meantime, ladies' lives ranging for several generations led women's voting rights. Proponents of voters are a group of people including public education to prove the legitimacy of women's voting rights for 50 years, direct lobbying for about 20 years, and intense radical actions to promote voting requirements I got a drastic change. People were divided into middle-sized and extremist camps, and their own political culture and images of women were created to promote 'voting for women'.
Women's vicarious rights Women's suffrage is the subject easily seen as a black mark in American history. There were many twists and changes throughout the history of women's voting rights, but the final result is not bad. In this article I will introduce some twists and turns and some main characters in this campaign. - Jane Adams, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cadistan. These women fought fiercely for the causes they believed to lived at the turn of the century. They know that they are discriminated against their sex and they refuse to accept it. The pioneers of these feminists paved the way for further reform and changed the structure of our society. They are fighting for a suitable cause, but many do not agree with the extreme view of these women.
In 1869, the American women's suffrage movement was divided into two major competing groups, the National Women's Corruption Association (NWSA) and the American Women's Society Association (AWSA). By the mid-1980s, it became clear that the leaders of the division-related movement are aging. Neither country has succeeded in convincing many states and federal governments to adopt women's suffrage. In 1878, Congress passed a constitutional amendment to present women "Anthony revision." In 1887, the Senate voted for the first time and completely defeated it. The Senate will not vote on the amendment for another 25 years.
The main role played by women of World War I and all identities weakened most of the American opposition to women's elections. The Federal Constitutional amendment on women's elections was submitted to the Diet in 1878 and 1914, but the amendment in 1878 was overwhelmingly defeated and the amendment in 1914 got no simple majority vote from the House of Representatives and the Senate did. For approval it is possible to send two thirds majority votes to the Legislature. By 1918, however, two major political parties claimed women's suffrage, and in January 1918 and June 1919 the House of Representatives and the Senate modified the majority of two-thirds respectively. On August 26, Secretary of State announced that the 19 th amendment became part of the US Constitution. The text looks like this: