In the early 1800s, women were expected to be housewives. They had to get married and have children. Once there was the industrial revolution, women started working in the Lowell Mills. They were able to earn a salary. However, the working conditions were challenging. Some of the working conditions were having to work long hours, no safety precautions, and strict rules. Another challenging issue for women was voting rights. During the Seneca Falls Convention & Declaration of Sentiments, women gathered to advocate for their voting rights. Even though they advocated for their rights, they never became fully independent and didn’t have the same opportunities as men. Women did not have equal political, economic, and social rights compared to white …show more content…
Document 1 “The Rights of Women: Laws and Practices, Zinn Education Project” states “Women may not vote in any state in the union.” This quote explains some of the laws and conditions that Women were denied. The quote mentions that women could not vote which shows that white male citizens had more political rights compared to women. It’s political discrimination against women’s opportunities compared to men’s opportunities. This demonstrates that women did not have a say in any political voting. During the 1800s, women in the United States did not have equal rights compared to white male citizens. At this time in American history, women were not allowed to attend college, could not speak in public, and were paid half of the salary as white male citizens. Document 1 notes, “Based on British common law, a woman …show more content…
Document 2 states “The Life and age of woman, stages of woman's life from the cradle to the grave” and “The Life and age of man, stages of man's life from the cradle to the grave,” New York, 1848. James Baillie’s images, “The Life and age of woman, stages of woman's life from the cradle to the grave,” and “The Life and age of man, stages of man's life from the cradle to the grave,” show society's expectations for women. This source is describing society’s roles for women and men. The first image indicates that women were supposed to raise children and get married. If they would have to stay at home, it would limit their opportunities to go to college and get a good education. In the second image, the life of Men indicates that they become soldiers. While images of women and men corroborate on lifespan, they disagree on their roles in society. Men were recognized in society as more important because they were fighting in wars. In contrast, women would be expected to stay home and not be as recognized in society. Document 5, “Sojourner Truth, Speech at the Ohio Women’s Rights Convention, 1851” states, “That man over there says that women need to be helped into carriages and lifted over ditches, and to have the best place everywhere. Nobody ever helps me into carriages, or over mud-puddles, or gives me any best place! And ain't I a woman?” This quote explains how men treated white women
This was major for women's rights in the United States. Women were Protesting for decades before gaining this right making it worth all the struggle women went through. Many women actually believed that women should not gain the right to vote and were against the suffrage movement because they blamed women for how things ended up with their businesses. But in the 1800s women were expected to make children, cook, and clean. They were also constantly overlooked by their husbands and“did not have the rights to their children if they were divorced” while “all their income would go to their husbands” (Nashville Public Television).
Following the American Revolution and the separation from Britain, the main group that seemed to “hold all the power” were men, mostly white, of property. Many other groups during this time did not hold the same amount of power as the men. Women, in particular, suffered in terms of rights during and after the American Revolution. Between how women were to be seen in the eye of the public and their place in politics, women had very little rights.
By the time Jane Addams had taken her role as a prominent social reformer and women’s rights activist, some groups had already spent half a century trying to fight for equal woman’s rights. The battle for women’s rights would be a multigenerational one, with its beginnings set in 1848, at the first Woman’s Rights Convention in Seneca Falls. As stated in Elizabeth Stanton’s Declaration of Sentiments, “He has never permitted her to exercise her inalienable right to the elective franchise.” This is what the women’s suffrage movement would continue to argue, and slowly but surely, it would make increasing headway and headlines across the nation. Ultimately, equal women’s rights were achieved by the changing of public opinion and the combined efforts
The stereotypical view of women is that they should have multiple children, clean, cook, and be obedient. Women had no authority or independence, women who were married couldn’t own property, or work unless given permission from their
In the mid-1800s, many Americans had concerns about the issues occurring and the impact they made on the United States. To put an end to these numerous issues, many Americans decided to form groups, organizations, and also individuals. They would come up with a variety of strategies to make a change. One of the many issues was women rights. In the mid-1800s, women had a hard time being a woman back then.
They organized a gathering called the Seneca Falls Convention to fight for women’s rights and share their ideas to improve women’s lives. The Seneca Falls Convention was the first woman's rights convention that had a significant impact on the daily life of women.
Most have only gotten full equal rights within about the past one-hundred years, including women. There were many attempts for “equality”, such as the “Declaration of Independence”, however, it only originally seemed to include men. Stanton takes a stab at this very thing when she corrects one of the most infamous opening liners in history, “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal;”(Stanton, 79.) What she has corrected, is making the wording “men and women” as opposed to just “men.” Additionally, Stanton also addresses womens lack of the right to vote and lack of representation in the government and official offices, “Having deprived her of this first right of a citizen, the elective franchise, thereby leaving her without representation in the halls of legislation, he has oppressed her on all sides.
Before the mid-1800s, there was a focus on the notion that women's duties were to manage the home by taking care of their husbands and children. America's start of industrialization during the Market Revolution in the 1820s and 1830s created a demand for labor; filled by women, significantly changing traditional gender roles. However, women had lower wages than men, and they began to protest these wages through unions and the press, which ignited fragments of the first women's movements. A significant movement started with the Seneca Falls Convention, which took place at Seneca Falls, New York, on July 19 and 20, 1848. It was the first convention in America to focus on women's civil and political rights, also the introduction of the Declaration
In 1860 women were mistreated, especially black women. Women in the 1800s were treated unfairly compared to white men. Men saw women as angelic creatures and that they shouldn't be/ capable of being voters, legislators, free traders, divines, physicians, and lawyers. Until 1837, no college in the United States accepted women as regular students. Some women teachers were underpaid.
In the late 1800’s, women had a very small role in american politics. Only a small percentage of wealthy white men were allowed to vote and every other race and gender were not allowed. The question of Women’s suffrage was highly controversial due to the fact that many believed that women were inferior. The belief was that by giving women the right to vote, it would take away from their roles as wives and mothers.
Before there were laws protecting women and children they suffered a lot of unfair treatment. In 1832 Alexis De Tocqueville expressed how she felt about the democratic family in the United States. She described the American family as “haven of cooperation”. Her reasoning for this was, “because women in the United States did not look upon “conjugal authority” as a “usurpation of their rights, but attracted a sort of pride to the voluntary surrender of their own will,” Stanton’s generation of women reformers began to articulate the personal and professional sacrifices married women had to make for their subordination as wives.” In 1825 William Thompson families and citizens were aware of “white slave code”.
Women in the United States have been the subject of inequality for centuries. Since the country’s inception, have faced unjust social and economic discrimination, a lack of voting rights, limited educational opportunities, forced traditional gender roles, and the inability to own property. In the 1800s, women in the North began to reject traditional gender roles and saw their quest for equality like that of enslaved people, who were shackled and controlled by white men. Many abolitionist women began to challenge the male-dominated society they lived in by taking direct action by advocating for women's rights, and this fight for equality would eventually lead to massive reform in women’s rights and change American history for the better.
Throughout history discrimination has had a negative impact on people and has cause certain groups of people to suffer. Discrimination can be against people of different race, religion, gender and sexuality and in the late 1800’s women were one of the groups that were discriminated. Women had to fight hard to obtain the rights they now have in the 21st century and many of the women who fought for equal rights didn’t get to experience those rights since laws in their favor weren’t passed until years and years of fighting. In the late 1800’s American women were discriminated because they were not granted the same rights as men in the workforce, women had to be obedient to their husbands in their marriage and society had certain norms that women
They were to leave any hobby or job to take care of there family, and home. They weren’t entitled to a real education or to obtain professional career. Once married, they had no right to there own property, sign a contract or stay with their wages too top all of this inequality women weren’t allowed to vote. The injustice women were introduced to lead to the Abolition Movement and women 's suffrage.
Before this, the women’s jobs were to stay home, cook, clean and take care of the children. They weren’t allowed to work the same jobs as men or vote, and their husbands were the boss of them. It is said in The Declaration of Sentiments, Seneca Falls Conference, “The history of mankind is a history repeated injuries and usurpations on the part of man toward woman, having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over her… He has compelled her to submit to laws, in the formation of which she had no voice… He becomes, in marriage, for all intents and purposes, her master -- the law giving him power to deprive her of her liberty, and to administer punishment.”