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Pages 313-316 Women in Public Life
Chapter 9 Part 2 Pages Women in Public Life
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Terms to Know NACW Suffrage Susan B. Anthony NAWSA
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During the Progressive Period
Women expanded their role in Public Life Before the Civil War Women devoted themselves to their homes and families Upper class and middle class women did not normally work outside of the home
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Women and Work Poorer women had to work outside of the home
Women on farms had all the Household duties: cleaning, cooking, sewing, laundry, etc. AND took care of livestoce and often plowed and harvested
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Women in Industry Men’s labor unions rejected women
Women made about ½ the wages of men for similar work ½ of all working women were in the garment industry Long hours, poor wages, unsafe conditions
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But Women who needed jobs flocked to the towns and cities
By /5 of all American women worked 25% of them were in manufacturing
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Pink Collar Jobs Some required a High School diploms
By 1890 more women than men had graduated from high school Some even attended new business schools Bookkeepers, stenographers, typists
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Domestic Workers For those without skills or an education
Cleaning, washing, cooking and serving other families Many former women slaves were domestic servants By % of all working women were in domestic service
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Women and Reform Movements
Reform needed in the workplace Wages, Conditions, Hours The fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Co. 146 were needlessly killed
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By 1910 Women’s Clubs Middle-class women, many educated
Many took a leadership role in reform: Child Labor Prohibition Civil Rights for the Freed Black population Women’s Rights
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Higher Education for Women
New Women’s Colleges: Vasser by 1860s Smith and Wellesley by 1875 Columbia, Harvard and Brown did not admit women but DID open separate colleges for them
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By Late 19th Century Marriage was not the only option
About ½ of college-educated women never married Many devoted themselves to Reform Movements: the workplace, housing, education, food and drug laws
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African American Women
Founded the NACW: the National Association of Colored Women in 1896 Set up Nurseries, Kindergartens, reading rooms
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Seneca Falls Convention 1848
Wrote the Declaration of Rights and Sentiments Demanded equality across the board
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1869 The Movement Split Over the 14th and 15th Amendments which did not extend the rights of citizenship or the vote to women Some women continued to support the above and also work for their own amendment But others would not support the above because women were not included
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The NWSA National Women’s Suffrage Association
Founded by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton Others: Lucy Stone & Julia Ward Howe (Battle Hymn of the Republic)
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Those Opposed to Women Suffrage
Whiskey Distillers: worried that if women had the vote, prohibition would be next Those who employed child workers worried that women would put an end to child labor Others who like women in their traditional role
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Strategy for Suffrage 1. Through the state legislatures: 1869 Wyoming
1890’s Idaho, Utah, Colorado Then it stalled
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Strategies for Suffrage
Through the courts Test cases for citizenship and 14th Amend. In 1871 and 1872 the Courts ruled that women were citizens but they were not given the vote Anthony and others voted illegally 150 times in 10 states to test the law
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Strategy Women worked for a constitutional amendment Had to wait
The 19th amendment in 1920
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