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Monday, April 2, 2012
Women's Suffrage Cartoon 2
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Women's Suffrage Cartoon 1
Women's Suffrage Cartoon 3
Winning Suffrage in Texas
Texas:
- Lieutenant Governor William Hobby made a deal with the suffragists: If women campaign for him and prohibition, he will advocate women's suffrage
- 1918: Women could vote in primary elections
- Women campaigned for Hobby
- Hobby won governorship
- 1919: Texas was the 9th state to ratify the 19th Amendment
Women's Suffrage in Texas
- Women in Texas more conservative
- 1893-1896: Texas Equal Rights Association (TERA)
- 1903: Texas Women's Suffrage Association (TWSA), later called Texas Equal Suffrage Association (TESA)
- Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU): popular national group in Texas
Beginnings of the Suffrage Movement
- 1848- Seneca Falls Convention
- Women's rights meetings held on a regular basis
National American Women Suffrage Association
- Carrie Chapman Catt and the "Winning Plan"
- Anti-suffrage states: Pressure politicians to let them vote in local elections
A Public Sphere For Women
- Significance of women's clubs
- For others, introduction to political life and platform to advocate women's rights
The Club Women
- Most clubs were segregated
- Middle and upper class Black woman formed their own clubs
- Black women's clubs concerned with same social issues as white clubs as well as
- Segregation
- Popularity of women's clubs grew in 1880s
- Outlet for middle and upper class women
- Concerned with social betterment
- Education and school reform
- Settlement houses
- Planting trees
- Building hospitals
The "New Women"
During the Progressive Era, middle and upper class women took a more active role in reform movements. Why?
- Many activities moved out of the home and into factories or offices
- Children began school earlier
- Technological innovations made housework easier
- Declining family sizes
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