Alice Paul was born on 11th January 1885 in Moorstown, New Jersey. Her father died when Alice was 16 years old, he was a businessman, a banker and property owner. Paul lives in Moorestown's small Quaker community. One of the beliefs of Quaker is equality between men and women. As a young girl Alice and her mother took part in Quaker's vicious rallies meeting. Alice Paul 's father gave them enough money so that they can attend an exclusive Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania. She graduated biology in 1905, but after she discovered politics in her older year she continued to attend the New York Charity Academy.
Alice Paul was 22 years old in the first 1907, 22 years old and started political activities in Birmingham, England. When she first traveled to the UK to gain experience in the field of social work by working at Woodbrook village, Alice Paul was the quietest and most conservative quaker first and foremost. But while staying in England, Alice Paul met a woman from Punkhurst, one of England's most extreme feminists. In order to raise public awareness of the issue of voting rights, "Pankhurst women consisting of mothers and two daughters have had a great influence on Alice Paul, Alice Paul said that these extreme actions were in the UK We believe that it caused great concern for the women's suffocation movement, so just two years after returning to the US in 1910, she adopted these same radical strategies and the concept of political responsibility in the United States started.
At this point in her political career, Alice Paul and Lucy Burns founded their own suffrage organization Lucy Burns is a friend and feminist known as Congress' female election association. After Alice Paul disbanded from NAWSA, she focused on leading the CU, known as the National Women's Party (NWP) in 1916. Under the guidance of Alice Paul, the National Women's Party is known for radical radical tactics to promote women's suffrage. The exercise ultimately persuaded Woodrow Wilson and Congress to pass the 19 th revision. One of the most important strategies taken by Alice Paul is picketting. On January 10, 1917, some NWP feminists moved along a single line document at Pennsylvania Avenue until they arrived at the gate of the White House. These women stood outside the door, quietly "raised a banner with words like Mr."