How Were Women Treated In The Late 1800's Essay

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The late 1800’s were a crucial time for women in America. Typically, during this time women were discriminated against in every aspect of day to day life. However, men already had the basic rights that women all around the world during the late 1800’s were fighting for. As well as this, women were mostly stereotyped and were not given the same opportunities as men in everyday life. Also, the men were expected to work outside the home for paid labor, as the wives were expected to complete simple household duties day to day and raise the children. However, women would eventually unite to gather organizations to fix the biased and unequal rights for women in society during that time. Altogether, women in America in the late 1800’s were treated …show more content…

In the 1800’s women were treated differently than men in an important duty as a citizen, voting rights. However one big conflict during this time was women fighting for their right to vote as only men could vote earlier in the 1800’s. The reason these women fought so hard, was to be considered a citizen and given equal rights that men had. A huge population would not be able to vote for basic rights, as well as for their president. Moreover, most of these women fighting were tired second class citizens only asking to be treated equal to the men. Abolitionist believed that women can’t be equal to men because women were seen as naturally weak, and inferior to men. However, the year of 1848 was the “year of revolutions,” (“Rights for Women, N.p. n.d.). Also, besides the Seneca Falls Convention, New York passed the first Married Woman’s Property Act, Anesthesia was in childbirth, and a new political party called the “Free Soil Party” was formed. Therefore, women set the largest movement in 1848, as societies’ attention was centered on woman’s rights. Altogether, women were treated differently than men and were denied basic human rights such as voting until 1920. This is unequal because the women in the late 1800’s did not have the right to vote as men …show more content…

In the late 1800’s a group of people from all over the United States joined together in New York for the annual “American Equal Rights Association.” Moreover, after many of the group members fled New York women from fourteen different states joined together in what was called the “Woman’s Bureau,” and created what was then called, “National Woman’s Suffrage Association.” As stated, “At the annual meeting of the American Equal Rights Association, held in New York, in May, persons were present form different parts of the country.” (William Lloyd Garrison, pg. 2). The NWSA was not an organization that sent women to represent the sate they were from. As a matter of fact many of the women who knew of the suffrage movement were oblivious to the organization. As stated, “They were not sent by any state or any society as delegates for any purpose.” (William Lloyd Garrison, pg. 2). Altogether, the purpose of NWSA was not for a public matter ad was kept quiet as a local society and not widely represented for their character, and was also controlled by local and personal interested. As stated, “The result was a close corporation, a local society, national only in name, not widely representative in its characters; the organ of a few persons, and controlled by local and personal interest.”

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