Women's voting rights of voting rights in the 1800s is the right or exercise of voting rights in public service. It is the foundation of autonomy that individuals freely demonstrate the desire to select people and ideas competing without fear of retaliation and to change the government. A person excluded from voting rights, or a franchise, excludes people from the basic means of participating in the political decision-making process. It is estimated that only 6% of adult men have voting rights in the United States at the time of preparing the Constitution.
The beginning of movement. Changes in women's social conditions in the early 1800's coupled with the concept of equality led to the birth of women's election campaign. For example, women began to receive more education and started participating in political reform movement. As a result, women began to ask why they were not allowed to vote. In 1848, one of the first publications on women's suffrage. Two reformists, Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, held the Women 's Rights Conference at Seneca Falls in New York where Stanton lived. Gender and women of the Convention adopted an "emotional declaration" calling for women to have equal rights in education, property, voting and other matters. This declaration modeled on the "Declaration of Independence" states that "These truths are self-evident, people are born equally ..."
Judith Earnhardt - "Right to vote for women" Dr. Earnhardt reviewed the influence of women's movement and organization such as the American Women's Election Association and the Women's Election Society. In the presentation, lives were brought to early defenders of women's rights by Elizabeth Kaldy Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, Lucy Stone and Julia Ward Howaw. ($ 500 plus fee) Tate McCauley - Kennedy year. Dr. Macquarie talks about the incident that touched the country during the John F. Kennedy administration. The speech included PigBay, the Cuban missile crisis, moon landing, civilian human rights, assassination of Kennedy. ($ 450 plus fee)